TRADITIONAL TRIUMPH
A scene from 'October Sky'
Courtesy Photo
"OCTOBER SKY"
**** stars 110 minutes | Rated: PG
Opened: Friday, February 19, 1999
Directed by Joe Johnston

Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Chris Cooper, Laura Dern, William Lee Scott, Chris Owen, Chad Lindberg, Natalie Canerday



This film is on the Best of 1999 list.


 COUCH CRITIQUE
   SMALL SCREEN SHRINKAGE: 30%
   LETTERBOX: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Very simple and traditional in its appeal, this movie may feel right at home on video because it feels like the kind of old-fashioned movie you've only seen on TV anyway. Other modern equivalents in spirit: "Apollo 13" and "The Right Stuff." But like those films, the sweeping photography of "October Sky" loses something in the translation to video.

   VIDEO RELASE: 7/27/99
 DVD SPOTLIGHT
2005 Special Edition
This new DVD has been beefed up with a geek's delight commentary track by the real Homer Hickam, who fills in a lot of detail about his upbringing and provides reflections on what's historically accurate (95% - including everything that seem cliched), what was creative license, what is scientifically dubious, and how he feels about all that.

Hickman and his friends depicted in the movie are also the subject of a standard-issue 30m behind-the-story feature about the real events depicted in the movie.

OTHER NOTABLE BONUS MATERIAL
Making-of focused on location shooting & featuring Homer Hickman. Trailer. Production notes that provide a lot of background.


  BUY IT HERE

SOUND & PICTURE
5.1 Dolby; 2.35:1 (16x9 enhanced)
Both are crisp & clean
DUBS: French
SUBS: English

DVD RATING: ***



 OTHER REVIEWS/COMING SOON
 
  • Biographical
  • Joe Johnston
  • Jake Gyllenhaal
  • Chris Cooper
  • Laura Dern
  • William Lee Scott


  •  LINKS for this film
    at movies.yahoo.com
    at Rotten Tomatoes
    at Internet Movie Database
    Old-fashioned story of a teenage rocket-builder, "October Sky" is a classic in the making

    By Rob Blackwelder

    Although "October Sky" is a film with no surprises from its soundtrack of '50s rock 'n' roll standards to its triumph over adversity themes, this teen-years biography of a NASA scientist who got his start building rockets in his basement is so full of spirit and letter-perfect filmmaking that I defy anyone to watch this movie without getting a tingle in his or her heart.

    Thrilling in the best sense of the word, traditional without being corny and with a script, photography and symbolism that could be the basis of a film literature textbook, "October Sky" is a classic in the making. It's just a pity it wasn't released in time for Oscar consideration.

    The picture stars Jake Gyllenhaal as Homer Hickman, a coal miner's son determined to break away from his assumed destiny following in his father's bleak and dangerous subterranean footsteps.

    Inspired by the launch of Sputnik in 1957, Homer buddies up to his high school's zit-encrusted and bespectacled class nerd (Chris Owen) to pick his brain about physics then recruits a couple more friends to help him build and launch crude rockets, eventually garnering the curiosity of his whole town and the ire of his unsupportive pop (Chris Cooper), who, naturally, sees Homer's ambition as an ill-fated pipe dream.

    The defining moment in "October Sky" comes half way through the movie when Homer is left to fend for his family after his father is severely injured in the inevitable mine cave-in. Homer sees his dreams dashed and surrenders to the fate his father always had in mind for him. Hard hat on, pick ax on his shoulder, he's about to go down into the tunnels for the first time.

    The steel mesh industrial elevator rattles to life and he begins his descent into the pitch black shaft. It is night, and as he looks through the wire-frame roof of the elevator car, Sputnik shoots across the starry sky overhead. The camera returns to Homer's face, dejected and momentarily resigned to what seems to be his lot in life.

    Like the opening shot of "Contact" that takes us on a three-minute tour of the universe to show us just how small we are, this brilliant 60-second sequence summarizes the entire picture in one flawless and powerfully symbolic sequence.

    Directed by Joe Johnston ("The Rocketeer"), almost every moment of "October Sky" breathes with this kind of gifted and timeless filmmaking. The film has a perfect story arc, almost mathematical in its precision, and puts the all-but-trite montage technique to good use in a sequence of launch pad misfires, minor triumphs and moonshine-based fuel experiments.

    Johnston knows how to be subtle -- Homer's mother spends her spare time painting a mural of Myrtle Beach on her drab kitchen wall, which goes almost unnoticed until a bullet pierces the window and lodges in her synthetic ocean during a union dispute. He also knows when to pull out all the stops, adding triumphant orchestration when a coal-dusted Homer rediscovers his inspiration and emerges from the cinematically foreboding and constricting coal mine to rededicate himself to rocketry.

    Gyllenhaal's performance, while overly wide-eyed in the tradition of 1950s-style dreamers, is so easy to rally behind that every time one of his missiles sears into the sky, the audience feels the same rush he feels.

    As always, Chris Cooper ("The Horse Whisperer," "Lone Star") stands out in his native ability to play the honorable but imperfect hero type. He gives incredible depth to what might have been just another emotionally distant father, who finally shows his affection by attending his son's last rocket launch.

    In fact, everyone in the supporting cast of working-class American Joes and Norman Rockwell teenagers contributes to the story, some with small sub-plots of their own, like Laura Dern as a Hodgkin's-stricken teacher who is Homer's most enthusiastic cheerleader.

    From a film theory point of view, "October Sky" is a 10 -- a shining example of nearly flawless filmmaking, brilliant in script and execution. But more than that, it proves that a movie can be 100 percent traditional and still be fresh and exciting.

    There is so much more I could say about this movie. It's just peppered with both understated and towering cinematic master strokes. But suffice to say, if Johnston, who seems to have a classical bent to his style in movies like "The Rocketeer" and "Jumanji," can continue to turn out movies this engaging with this kind of home-spun sensibility, he could be the Frank Capra of the 21st Century.




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