Genre: | Drama |
Teleplay: | Gerald Di Pego Charles Kuenstle Robert Biheller |
Story: | Charles Kuenstle Robert Biheller |
Director: | Robert Michael Lewis |
Starring: | Jackie Cooper Monte Markham |
Music: | Gil Melle |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Producer: | Harve Bennett |
Location: | Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California |
Cinematography: | Alric Edens |
Editor: | Les Green John Kaufman |
Runtime: | 73 minutes |
Company: | Silverton Productions Universal Television |
Network: | ABC |
The Astronaut is a 1972 American made-for-television science fiction film directed by Robert Michael Lewis and starring Jackie Cooper and Monte Markham. It follows a man who has been hired to impersonate an astronaut who died during the first crewed mission to Mars. The movie was made for ABC for its movie of the week franchise. Real-life astronaut Wally Schirra appears in a cameo role as himself.
Television coverage of Brice Randolph, the first astronaut on the surface of Mars, is interrupted, indicating that the signal has been lost. Shortly afterward, Eddie Reese is recruited and shown what happened after the TV signal was interrupted: Brice reported something penetrating his EVA suit and soon expired. The other astronaut lifted off alone.
NASA, fearing their project will be canceled, needs to keep it a secret until they have answers about what exactly happened. Reese undergoes surgical alterations and begins learning his role as Brice. Upon the arrival of the spacecraft back on Earth, the splashdown site is altered so that the press is unaware of Reese being brought to join the returning space crew. Reese, maintaining the cover, is now tasked with playing his role with the dead man's wife, Gail. Uneasy about being intimate with another man's wife, Reese unwittingly betrays himself to her, raising her suspicions.
Eventually, NASA determines what happened on Mars and is ready to let Reese out of the masquerade. However, Reese and Gail are willing to carry on as if he is Brice Randolph. Reese then hears from a boy, who asked for an autograph, that the Soviets have just launched their own mission to land on Mars. NASA does not warn the Soviets of the dangers that await them; however, Reese and Gail decide to reveal the truth.
Actor | Role | |
---|---|---|
Kurt Anderson | ||
Eddie Reese | ||
Col. Brice Randolph | ||
Dr. Wylie | ||
John Phillips | ||
Gail Randolph | ||
Don Masters | ||
Tom Everett | ||
Astronaut Higgins | ||
Carl Samuels |
AllMovies gave the move 2.5 out of 5 stars.[1] The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction stated that this largely-forgotten film is a major curiosity. It was aired when the Apollo missions to the Moon were still under way. The movie presents a negative view of NASA. According to the encyclopedia, a strong case can be made that Capricorn One plagiarized this film's central situation.[2]