Do You Have The Right Stuff? A Critical Overview of The Movie

Guest contributor Charles Wiebe writes:

Many films are instant classics such as: Gone With The Wind or the Lord of the Rings series. However, many of our most cherished movies have been sleepers; Bringing up Baby and Citizen Kane were both box office busts and required decades to achieve their current status. Classic movies must prove themselves by speaking to more than one generation.  So I think that at least one other commercial flop will eventually find its way into Hollywood’s Valhalla; I speak of Philip Kaufman’s 1983 Film, The Right Stuff.

Right-Stuff

Recently I happened upon an interview of Mr. Kaufman on Reelz Channel. He lamented all the bad fortune that befell the early efforts to promote his film. For whatever reason, The Right Stuff did not have it; a box office failure. However, since its release the film has gradually risen in stature, recently included among the American Film Institute’s 400 greatest films. I believe it is one of the finest American films and I am not alone. It has received some of the highest praise from many of the most respected critics as well as four Oscars (best: Sound, Sound Effects, Film Editing and Original Score.)

Kaufman has done a masterful job of adapting the film from Tom Wolfe’s novel about the early heroes of the U.S. space program; It was a time for great exploits; with a sense of panic in the air after the early success of Soviet efforts.

It is extremely rare when a film is able to portray, often with humor, great heroism and sacrifice and not become a trite exercise in flag waving. Vincent Canby in the New York Times states that “these men remain virtually flawless heroes, almost too good, decent and brave to be true, and it's a measure of how successful the movie is that one is inclined to believe it.” Kaufman is able to poke fun at the hype and pomp of the promotion of the early space program. Film scholar David Thomson writes that “He made a movie that was classical and subversive at the same time…bold, dangerous, and uncategorizable…maybe the last movie of the heroic 1970’s”

The Right Stuff is fashioned around the story of legendary WW II ace, Chuck Yaeger, he who truly possessed “The right stuff;” the intangible that all great pilots possessed; who systematically tests himself as well as his aircraft, continually ''pushing the outside of the envelope.'' He is brilliantly played in a taciturn, Gary Cooper-like manner by lanky actor/playwright Sam Shepard; capturing Yaeger’s West Virginia accent perfectly.

As the film wonderfully relates, in 1947 Yaeger became the first man in the world to break the sound barrier, which at that time was thought by many aeronautical engineers to be impossible. His knowledge of aircraft engines and airframes was unparalleled, but he was not picked to be one of the seven Mercury astronauts because he lacked a college education.

Among the other great performances in the film, by many actors who were relatively unheralded at the time, we have Ed Harris as John Glenn, Fred Ward as Gus Grissom, Dennis Quaid as “Gordo” Cooper, Scott Glenn as Alan Shepherd, Barbara Hershey as Glennis Yeager, Mary Jo Deschanel as Anne Glenn and Pamela Reed as Trudy Cooper.

In a bar scene filled with irony, Yeager, looking at the pictures on the wall asks tavern owner, Pancho Barnes (Kim Stanley) “what does it take” to get your picture up there? . She answered “you have to die, sweetie”

In one of many other memorable scenes “Gordo”Cooper (Dennis Quaid) playfully asks his wife (Pamela Reed) “Who’s the best pilot you ever saw?” much later in the film, he tries to answer that same question with a story about Yeager, but is interrupted; in the final scene, the question is finally answered.

Yeager’s theme runs throughout the film, culminating in one of the greatest montages in cinema; the final sequence in which the film cross-cuts between the heroic Yeager, trying for an altitude record in the sleek NF-104 Starfighter over the California desert; and the Mercury astronauts in Texas, being feted at a larger than life, LBJ-hosted barbecue featuring fan dancer Sally Rand performing to Claude Debussy’s sublime Clair de lune; finally we hear the rousing strains of Bill Conti’s Academy Award winning score.

The film runs over three hours, but does not seem nearly that long. It is as close to a prefect film as I have seen; containing everything you could want in a movie: great cinematography, extraordinary musical score, and well integrated vignettes of the astronauts’ family lives. The venerable Roger Ebert calls it an “adventure film, a special effects film, a social commentary and a satire…It’s a great film.” The Right Stuff is truly the stuff that dreams and legends are made of.

Chuck Wiebe teaches Film Studies at the Pittsburgh Campus of the University of Phoenix.  He has published over 60 articles on film as the National DVD Movies Examiner on www.examiner.com .  His work has also appeared in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. He holds a BA in Fine Art from West Virginia University, and an MA in Art History from The Pennsylvania State University.  He also studied at the University of Rome, Italy.  He believes that film is the most influential art form of our time.

 
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13 Responses to “Do You Have The Right Stuff? A Critical Overview of The Movie”

  1. Nathan Zimmerman says:

    Excellent review, except for one glaring error. It wasn't Yeager who asked Pancho Barnes the question about the photos on the wall, it was Grissom (or Cooper, my memory fails me at this moment). Teager would have known that, having been at Muroc well before the arrival of Grissom and Cooper. In fact, Yeager had a cameo as the bartender in Pancho's Happy Bottom Riding Club.

  2. TheManWhoKnows says:

    It was a girl in the bar. F---in-A, bubba! Hmmm. Does this mean that this affectionate tribute to this great film "screwed the pooch"?

  3. Chuck Wiebe says:

    Thank you Nathan for the kind comments; and thanks for pointing out my error. It was the girl in the bar, not Yeager, The Man Who Knows is correct. In a later scene, Gordo Cooper, not aware that photos are memorials to dead pilots, foolishly brags that his exploits will get his picture up there soon.

  4. lenny says:

    how this movie didnt beat terms of endearment for best picture is beyond me. i remmebr the hype then the fizzle at the box office. still a great film, one of the best of the 1980s!

  5. Mike v says:

    I love this movie--then and now. I remember wanting to see it when it first came out (I was a "fly boy" myself at the time). It faded at the theaters so fast, the only place I could see it was at one of those $1 movie theaters in Tacoma Washington. I think they had beer for sale there. I put it up there with the Godfather! I recently played the DVD for my 20-year-old son and he loved it too ("Wow, Dad, Dennis Quaid looks so young!"). I think his favorite parts were in the scenes in the President's meeting room.

  6. Michael Bate says:

    This is one of my all-time favorite films. When I saw "Apollo 13" I kept thinking how much better "The Right Stuff" is, and made a point to see it again.

    Hopefully this film will soon be available on Blu-ray.

  7. Gaiking6 says:

    I watched this movie on video so many times I have it memorized and can't watch it any more. I practically learned how to speak from it, but what it did give me was a lifelong love of music in film. I've hunted high and low for all the bits of music in Glenn's flight (Holst, Mancinni). I still don't have it all. But I can hum it to myself whenever I see the stars out at night.

  8. Ken A says:

    Thanks to Mr. Wiebe for giving this film the recognition it deserves. I was truly stunned that year that the hokey "Terms of Endearment" won everybody's award and I was taken with "Stuff" from the get-go. I also really think Sam Shepard's performance as Yeager deserved more recognition than it got.

  9. Grace says:

    I LOVED this movie!! Had the good fortune to see it in a theater (on "the big screen"). I remember thinking that it looses at lot when I saw it on the smaller TV screen years later.

  10. rita says:

    I love the movie too, and I can't believe you failed to mention the remarkable performance of Sam Shepard as Yeager. He epitomized the appeal of the fighter jock.
    Kim Stanley was wonderful as the pioneer aviatrix Pancho Barnes, and William Russ was fine as the renowned free-lance test pilot Slick Goodlin. What a great name for a fly boy.

  11. Mindy says:

    I ADORE this movie!!!!!!

  12. Mickey Tapp says:

    I grew up with the

  13. Mickey Tapp says:

    I grew up with the SPACE RACE , I love thiis movie

       

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