Apollo 13 (1995) Poster

(I) (1995)

Googy Gress: RETRO White

Quotes 

  • R.E.T.R.O. White : Flight, we are looking at a typhoon warning on the edge of the prime recovery zone.

    Gene Kranz : Say again, RETRO?

    R.E.T.R.O. White : Flight, we are looking at a typhoon warning on the edge of the prime recovery zone. Now, this is just a warning, it could miss them...

    Gene Kranz : Yeah, only if their luck changes.

  • Gene Kranz : Gentlemen, at this moment, I want you all to forget the flight plan. From this moment on, we are improvising a new mission: How do we get our people home?

    [Goes to the chalkboard, draws a big circle representing Earth, another smaller circle representing the moon, then draws a line from the Earth to just short of the moon] 

    Gene Kranz : They are here. Do we turn them around, straight back, direct abort?

    [NASA controllers instantly start arguing] 

    Jerry Bostick - FIDO White : No, sir! No, sir! We get them on a free-return trajectory. It's the option with the fewest question marks for safety.

    Gene Kranz : I agree with Jerry. We use the moon's gravity, slingshot them around.

    R.E.T.R.O. White : No, the LEM will not support three guys for that amount of time. I mean, we've got to do a direct abort. We do an about-face, we bring the guys right home, right now.

    Booster White : Get them back soon, absolutely.

    Jerry Bostick - FIDO White : Look, we don't even know if the Odyssey's engine's even working. If there's been serious damage to this spacecraft...

    GUIDO White : They blow up and they die!

    R.E.T.R.O. White : That is not the argument! We're talking about time!

    [Controllers argue again] 

    Gene Kranz : Okay, hold it. Let's hold it down. The only engine we got with enough power for a direct abort is the SPS on the service module. From what Lovell has told us, that could have been damaged in an explosion, so let's consider that engine dead. We light that thing up, it could blow the whole works. It's just too risky. We're not going to take that chance. About the only thing the command module is good for is reentry, so that leaves us with the LEM, which means free-return trajectory. Once we get the guys around the moon, we'll fire the LEM engine, make a long burn, pick up some speed, and get them home as quickly as we can.

  • Gene Kranz : [agreeing to shut off the LEM's power]  Now, in the meantime, we're gonna have a frozen command module up there. In a couple days, we're gonna have to power it up using nothing but the re-entry batteries.

    GNC White : That's never been tried before.

    R.E.T.R.O. White : Hell, we've never even simulated it before, Gene.

    Gene Kranz : Well, we're gonna have to figure it out. I want people in our simulators working re-entry scenarios. I want you guys to find every engineer who designed every switch, every circuit, every transistor, and every light bulb that's up there. Then I want you to talk to the guy on the assembly line who actually built the thing. Find out how to squeeze every amp out of both of these god damn machines.

    [going to the chalkboard and drawing a dotted line from where the crew currently is down to Earth] 

    Gene Kranz : I want this mark all the way back to Earth with time to spare.

  • Jerry Bostick - FIDO White : Flight, we're still shallowing up a bit in the re-entry corridor. It's almost like they're underweight.

    Gene Kranz : Now, how could they be underweight?

    R.E.T.R.O. White : We didn't land on the moon.

    Gene Kranz : Rocks?

    R.E.T.R.O. White : That's affirm.

See also

Release Dates | Official Sites | Company Credits | Filming & Production | Technical Specs


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