What Does an Astronaut Farmer Grow?
Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
TBS or PBS or possibly somebody with PMS recently had a marathon where they played a couple rocket-ship movies back to back and then did it again an hour later. One of those movies was ‘The Astronaut Farmer’ staring Billy Bob Thornton.
I watched it.
If you haven’t seen the movie, I’ll tell you what it is about. It’s about this good ‘ol boy Charles Farmer who wants to become a spaceman. He is pretty pumped up about being in the airforce and NASA when he is young, but he quit that because life was hard. Also his dad had shot himself, but mostly because life was hard.
It often is for quitters.
So Farmer decides that the best way to keep his dreams rolling is to build a rocketship in his barn and then blast himself off into space. His twelve year old son who he would actually name Shepard, as in Shepard Farmer, is commanding the laptop-slash-”mission control”.
Farmer decides that his dreams are so important that it doesn’t matter what happens to his family. I’m sure he would have sold off his wife and kids if it meant he could sit in his little tin can somewhere off in space. He literally risks the farm to buy more rocket-ship parts. The ranch is almost foreclosed. His wife gets mad.
It really sucks if you saw the preview for this movie. Knowing that everything is going to work and he goes to space safely makes everything kind of… pointless. You just waste time waiting for the movie to progress far enough to see it.
The movie would have helped if there was a little conflict between Farmer and Shepard. Just a little something to liven it up. Farmer’s family eats up all of the lines about space travel. They let him blow all of the money buying aluminum and fuel and weird crap. They support him 100% and do not question him at all. Other than the 30 second scene where the wife finds out they have no money and quickly forgives and forgets.
A disagreement between the son and Farmer would have helped to make the characters a little more real. Sure the boy’s dad was his hero and all, but still a little thinking on his part would have been nice.
I can’t really harp to much more on Farmer, because everyone wants to go to space. Furthermore every dork who has ever build a model rocket has thought about making one that will launch a person.
My friend and I had an elaborate plan to build rockets. They would start out small, but would progress larger and larger and with more advanced payloads. First we were going to launch an egg. When we mastered that we would launch a mouse. When we mastered that we would launch a person. There was talk about sending a dog after the mouse, but we didn’t have the money to buy a dog (or however many dogs it would take) for the cause. I’m not sure how we planned to afford a human launch if we couldn’t afford a $50 crossbred mutt.
We never made it to the egg launch, the rocket that we made to do that was so crappy that it pretty much killed our dreams right on the spot. There was no way it would even hold together until we got to the launchpad. It could hardly even hold together on the kitchen table.
Farmer could have certainly taken the advice of a couple 10 year olds, let the dream die.
Waking Ned Devine is a movie that came onto my radar about a year ago. One of my friends was watching it as I was using a computer not far off. When he watched it, I was around for about five minutes during the middle of it before running off to go see Legally Blonde 2, or do something equally as stupid.
I really liked this movie. I was worried that it would only be a so-so movie, but it turned out to be great.
The movie is about a young tribal guy who hates bears and must learn to love bears. When he is given his ‘life totem’ which will tell him how to act and live, it is the loving bear. This makes him so mad that he goes and throws rocks at a bear. The bear says ‘Stop it’ and the boy’s brother falls off of a cliff.
It isn’t that it has been quoted a billion times, that’s certainly not the case at all. In my opinion there were not a lot of great lines in the flick. But the movie is widely known enough to be claim cult pseudo-classic. I’m not quite sure if it is one or not. People talk about it existing, I think just for the sake of it being a novel idea. A documentary (or rocumentary as it calls itself) about a band that actually doesn’t exist? Brilliant!