Watch: Capricorn One 1977 123movies, Full Movie Online – Charles Brubaker is the astronaut leading NASA’s first manned mission to Mars. Seconds before the launch, the entire team is pulled from the capsule and the rocket leaves earth unmanned much to Brubaker’s anger. The head of the programme explains that the life support system was faulty and that NASA can’t afford the publicity of a scratched mission. The plan is to fake the Mars landing and keep the astronauts at a remote base until the mission is over, but then investigative journalist Robert Caulfield starts to suspect something..
Plot: In order to protect the reputation of the American space program, a team of scientists stages a phony Mars landing. Willingly participating in the deception are a trio of well-meaning astronauts, who become liabilities when their space capsule is reported lost on re-entry. Now, with the help of a crusading reporter, they must battle a sinister conspiracy that will stop at nothing to keep the truth.
Smart Tags: #astronaut #conspiracy #paranoia #on_the_run #survival #mars_landing #faked_death #nasa #hoax #escape #investigative_reporter #desert #manhunt #exploding_helicopter #crop_duster #aerial_combat #helicopter #airplane #chase #surprise_ending #biplane
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6.8/10 Votes: 22,949 | |
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38/100 | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 364 Popularity: 12.081 | TMDB |
An ’70’s favorite.
Even though this certainly isn’t the best movie you’ll ever see, it’s still a movie that is a perfectly entertaining one. It makes this movie one of my favorite movies to watch from the ’70’s.The movie has a really great premise, that provides the movie with plenty of thriller elements and action. It has a lot of elements in it that always make ’70’s movies such great ones to watch. It’s a movie with a conspiracy story but luckily the movie decides to be more entertaining with it than heavy or serious really.
It’s really mainly the concept and main story that makes this movie an interesting one as well as entertaining. It doesn’t always make the movie the most believable one to watch out there but in this particular case that hardly matters at all. It’s such a great and entertaining movie that you’re basically willing to forgive everything that is less great about it. It’s a movie that I have always enjoyed watching and always will.
Some of the action is really memorable. The plane and helicopters chase in this movie is pretty insane and was obviously very dangerous for all of those involved with it. No way they’ll ever do a sequences like that again now days, with all those heavy regulations for stunts and of course the availability of CGI this present time. But of course as you can expect from an ’70’s movie, there also is plenty of action involving cars and other great action stuff.
What also really uplifts the movie and its action and entertainment value is the great musical score by Jerry Goldsmith.
It’s a really well made movie, that got directed with lots of pace by Peter Hyams, who has always been at his best directing action stuff, even though most of his movies aren’t exactly among the greatest, this one not included. It also had some real nice camera-work by Bill Butler.
The movie also has a pretty nice cast with Elliott Gould, Hal Holbrook, James Brolin, Sam Waterston and O.J. Simpson involved. Perhaps it’s true though that the movie is lacking a clear main character and the movie isn’t always clear with on which character it is going to focus with its main plot. Karen Black and Telly Savalas also make some small, almost cameo like appearances in this movie.
One of the most entertaining ’70’s-flicks out there.
8/10
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Capricorn One: a real Gem-ini of a movie. I’m Apollo-ed that it’s not rated higher.
“Capricorn One” is one of the last great 70s thrillers, alongside “The China Syndrome”, “The Andromeda Strain”, “Coma”, heck maybe even “The Exorcist”. Perhaps taking their cues from Stanley Kubrick (2001: A Space Odyssey, Clockwork Orange, etc), all of these classics are presented with an artistic, slightly off-kilter, brightly creepy vibe that encapsulated the end of 60s flower-power optimism and the beginning of 70s cold cynicism.Stylistic examples include wide angle shots and slow, mechanical camera movements that give the viewer a disturbing feeling of voyeurism or disconnection from humanity (à la “Open the pod bay doors, Hal.” “I’m sorry, Dave, I’m afraid can’t do that.”). This quiet yet bone-chilling style is the opposite of MTV-type filmmaking which made heavy use of flashy, closeup, disorienting camera shots cut together so quickly that you feel like someone slipped some magic pixie dust in your Kool-Aid. No, the 70s classics, in particular “Capricorn One” and other films by Peter Hyams, instead give you long, deliberate shots from a distance, allowing you to absorb every bizarre detail that was meticulously laid out for you.
If you get bored easily, then this isn’t for you. But if you’re looking for a film that slowly reels you in without any gimmicks, carefully building momentum for the 1st hour leading to an explosive, roller-coaster finale, then look no further. It’s best if you know nothing about the story, so I won’t say anything about the plot except that it centers around a mission to Mars. But this is not a sci-fi flick, it’s closer to a political thriller.
“Capricorn One” won’t necessarily scare the pants off you like some of the other films, but the story will definitely keep you on the edge of your seat wondering what’s going to happen. The director never telegraphs the ending, so you’re never quite sure if things will turn out good or if it’ll be a miserable tragedy. You have to ride it out to the very last scene.
Two things won me over immediately. First is the careful, artistic approach to cinematography which is evident in the opening scene: a slow rusty sunrise behind the colossal silhouette of the Capricorn spacecraft. Many other shots are as powerful, whether they’re outdoors or indoors. Hyams frequently does a neat little trick where he establishes a shot and leaves the camera where it is but slowly, over the course of 2 minutes or more, moves the camera in or out of the action, creating a thick suspense.
The 2nd thing that won me over was something many thrillers overlook: HUMOR. There are some priceless scenes that had me rolling, and it’s all due to the great script and lines delivered by great actors. Telly Savalas makes an appearance as a grumpy old airplane pilot, and his rapid fire volley of dialogue with Elliot Gould is like something straight out of a Cary Grant-Catherine Hepburn comedy. Another hilarious rapid-fire comedic scene is Elliot Gould arguing with his boss, played by David Doyle (“Bosley” on the original Charlie’s Angels). Big laughs without disrupting the tension of the story. It takes a bold filmmaker to put such comedy in a serious film, and Hyams & his acting troupe succeeded brilliantly.
A final note that’s worth mentioning: there’s a scene where a snake meets with an unfortunate fate. While the snake is real (hats off to James Brolin for having the guts do the scene), the snake’s stunt double was a dead carcass they had found. No snakes were harmed. So animal lovers as well as 70s thriller lovers, have no fear. Once you start watching “Capricorn One”, nothing will make you Sat-turn the channel! (wow that was lame)
Original Language en
Runtime 2 hr 3 min (123 min), 2 hr 10 min (130 min) (original) (Japan)
Budget 5000000
Revenue 12000000
Status Released
Rated PG
Genre Action, Adventure, Drama
Director Peter Hyams
Writer Peter Hyams
Actors Elliott Gould, James Brolin, Brenda Vaccaro
Country United States, United Kingdom
Awards 5 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix 4-Track Stereo (35 mm magnetic prints), 70 mm 6-Track (70 mm prints), Mono (35 mm optical prints)
Aspect Ratio 2.20 : 1 (70 mm prints), 2.39 : 1
Camera Panavision Panaflex Gold, Panavision C-Series and Cooke Lenses, Panavision Panaflex, Panavision C-Series Lenses
Laboratory Consolidated Film Industries (CFI), Hollywood (CA), USA (processing)
Film Length 3,380 m (Sweden)
Negative Format 35 mm (Eastman 100T 5247)
Cinematographic Process Panavision (anamorphic)
Printed Film Format 35 mm, 70 mm (blow-up)