A man narrates stories of his life as a 10-year-old boy in 1969 Houston, weaving tales of nostalgia with a fantastical account of a journey to the moon.
Milo Coy
Stan
Jack Black
Grown Up Stan (voice)
Lee Eddy
Mom
Bill Wise
Dad
Natalie L'Amoreaux
Vicky
Josh Wiggins
Steve
Jessica Brynn Cohen
Jana
Sam Chipman
Greg
Danielle Guilbot
Stephanie
Zachary Levi
Kranz
Glen Powell
Bostick
Larry Jack Dotson
Grandfather
Mona Lee Fultz
Grandmother #1
Jennifer Griffin
Grandmother #2
Holt Boggs
Sam The Rocket Man
Reese Armstrong
Tony
Natalie Joy
Music Class Teacher
Suzanne Deal Booth
Science Teacher
Chris Olson
Principal Cowan
Samuel Davis
Pinball Buyer
Mia Gonzalez
Statue-Maker Kid
Brian Villalobos
Bales
Chris Zurcher
Jack
Alexander Fink
Kid on Astroway
Zia Kinzy
Young Lady on Astroway
David DeLao
Mr. St. George
Noah Randall
Drive-In Employee
Athena Wintle
Mindy
Xavier Patterson
Emanuel
Nick Stevenson
SIMSUP
William Carroll
Abominable Snowman
Avery Joy Davis
Lisa (uncredited)
Christian Moran
Hoodlum (uncredited)
Nicholas Andrew Rice
NASA Controlman (uncredited)
Keslee Blalock
AstroWorld Kid (uncredited)
Brent A. Riggs
Service Station Attendant (uncredited)
P. Michael Hayes II
SIMSUP (uncredited)
Flint Nattinger
Laughing Boy (uncredited)
Director, Writer
Richard Linklater
August 27, 2022
7
Apollo 10½ is vintage Richard Linklater — a rotoscopic, wistful, Wonder Years/A Christmas Story slice-of-life set in a very specific time and place, and yet uncannily atemporal and universal (Bewitched, Get Smart, Batman, Gilligan, I Dream of Jeannie, The Addams Family, Hogan’s Heroes, etc., along with a few classic films and historically relevant newscasts, are briefly yet lovingly recreated).
The Moon landing itself retains much of its impact even as a rerun; one of the relatively very few historical milestones that we can actually revisit as it happened because, as the movie points out, it “has been played out before our very eyes by this miracle that happily came along at the same time as man’s exploration of space — television.”
Of course, nothing can compare to actually watching it live, and in that sense it might be a bit more difficult to connect emotionally, especially for those of us who hadn’t even been born at the time; on the other hand, the film is not about the landing so much as it is about the sense of awe surrounding it — an emotion that any human being who isn’t a hopeless cynic can identify with, and of which the movie has a seemingly endless supply, thanks to its arresting visuals and poignant dialogue.
Speaking of visuals, few filmmakers have put rotoscopy to better use than Linklater, and Apollo 10½ is proof that this technology need not be confined to fantasy or science-fiction (the director himself had previously dabbled in the more fanciful possibilities of this aesthetic, with the surreal Waking Life and the dystopic A Scanner Darkly) — and indeed this film could reasonably be described as science-fact.
Moreover, and in spite of its space age-mania theme, this is a grounded, down-to-earth story — and that’s precisely why the movie’s only faux pas is a half-baked subplot wherein the nine-year old hero is recruited by NASA to test out an accidentally undersized lunar module (hence the title).
Linklater does hint that this could be a figment of the character’s imagination, but it nonetheless sticks out like a sore thumb among the sundry homespun vignettes of life in NASA-adjacent South Houston.
The plot point is introduced at the very beginning, and even as the action quickly settles into a comforting pattern of pleasant everyday-ness that is equal parts small town and city of the future, you can’t bring yourself to completely enjoy the full extent of this sweet uneventfulness, dreading in the back of your mind the moment when the script picks up where it left off (admittedly, I’m splitting hairs).