Great Lines


Last week some organization listed the best lines of all time from movies. A writer in my local paper followed up with his and readers favorites. Nothing from TRS! And this movie had some GREAT lines: Everything from "Spam in a can" to "No bucks, no Buck Rogers!" to "Who's the greatest pilot you ever saw?" to "Please, Lord, don't let me F-up" to dozens of others. If you like great one liners, TRS has them; another reason this movie is so good and still talked about all these years later. Even message boards such as this continue to generate posts despite the age of the movie.

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I have to agree with you. Along with a great and inspiring story, this flick has some of the best, perfect timing type of one-liners ever. "Dear Lord, please don't let me F--- Up" has got to one of the funniest parts of the movie. I was howling when I saw this part. What makes it even more funny is that Alan Sheperd is reportedly to have actually said that before the launch.

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According to Tom Wolfe, he did say it. In the book, I think Wolfe termed it "The Astronaut's Prayer."

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The NASA PR Man's "Gus Is Good." Upon discovering that Gus's middle name is Ivan.

Vice President Lyndon Baines Johnson: "GLADIOLAS!!!!"

Also: "Our German Scientists are better than their German Scientists"

Our German Scientists singing 'Lillie Marlene' after Shepard's first Mercury Flight.

Gus Grissom's "F*ckin' A, Bubba!"s and his immortal "Where's the hatch?" when the prototype capsule/spacecraft is unveiled to the Astronauts.

Veronica Cartwright's "Men are such.... A**holes!" While the boys burn hotdogs in the back yard.

Though you don't hear anything but laughter, you can just imagine what Cooper's wife and the Flight Nurse are talking about during the interview. While Gordo fidgets with a magazine outside.

"I like you, Kane... You're normal!" 'The Ninth Configuration'

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'you want a hot dog?'




I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, "... I drank what?"

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Well, my favorite line from this greatest of great movies comes from Levon Helm (with that wonderful accent and with that great Bill Conti music building underneath) as "the narrator"/Ridley: "They were called test pilots. And no one knew their names."

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"REQUEST PERMISSION TO RELIEVE BLADDER!"

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When Yeager is out testing, if I recall correctly, the X-2 or X-3. The scene is intercut with the Mercury astronauts being honored by Lyndon Johnson in Texas.

After Yeager crashes the plane, and Ridley and the driver of the ambulance are headed toward the crash... the driver thinks he sees someone.

DRIVER: Sir... over there. Is that a man?

RIDLEY: Yeah. You're damn right it is!

The shot cuts to Yeager, bloody and sooty... but still walking, confident that he's still got, "The right stuff."


Nature abhors a moron.
- Henry Louis Mencken

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Fantastic lines in this movie!

"They say there's a demon that lives the air, and anyone who challenges that demon will die. For his controls will freeze up, his plane will buffett wildly and he'll disintergrate. They said that demon lived at Mach 1 on the meter, 750 miles an hour, where the air can no longer move out of the way. They said he lived behind a wall that no man could penetrate, and they called it The Sound Barrier. So they built a small plane, the X-1, and men from all around came to the California High Desert to ride it...they were called test pilots, and no-one knew their names."

"The Romans controlled the world because they had roads. Later, the British ruled because they had ships. In the air phase we became dominant. Now the Communists have established a foothold in outer space. Pretty soon they'll have space platforms to drop nuclear bombs on us like rocks from a highway overpass. Now how the hell did they get one over us?"

"I for one do not want to go to bed by the light of a communist moon"

"Say Ridley, got any Beemers on you?"
"I might have me a stick"
"Well loan me a couple, will you, I'll pay you back later"

"Now this guy has all the qualities that we mentioned. At ease with heights, flames and good in the splashdown phase. Also he's available from the 12th."

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Just a minor correction, ubercommando. It's Beeman's, not Beemers. Us old guys who remember Beeman's gum from the 50's know this.

Check this link: http://thecandybaron.com/detail.html?2273

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When Shepard is in the capsule and gets frustrated by the launch delay: "Let's light this candle!" I still use that line when I want to get something started.

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My error... In the scene where Ridley and the Airman go in the ambulance to find Yeager in the desert near Edwards AFB, it was an NF-104A Starfighter.... from the rear, and without the extra tanks at the ends of the short wings, it bears a striking resemblance to the X-3 Stiletto, which Gen. Yeager had also taken through its paces as a test pilot.

However... I should have noticed... the X-3 is a twin-engine, not a single-engine:

X-3 Front: http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/images/x-3-E54-1228.jpg

X-3 Rear:http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/images/x-3-E55-01994.jpg

F-104 Front: http://www.geocities.com/~propilot/pictures/F-104.jpg

F-104 Rear: http://www.jetplanes.co.uk/pictures/f104/f104-ground.jpg

The NF-104A was a modified F-104 designed for aerospace training. It had a modified tail, larger wingspan and a 6000-lb thrust auxiliary rocket engine mounted on the tail just above the primary nozzle.

The first NF-104A was delivered to the Aerospace Research Pilot School at Edwards AFB, on October 1, 1963. The school's commanding officer was then Colonel Yeager.

On December 6, 1963, the first NF-104A set an unofficial world altitude record of 118,860 for ground-dispatched aicraft (taking off under its own power, unlike the Bell X-1). Maj. R.W. Smith later broke that record with an altitude of 120,800 feet.

On December 10, 1963, the second NF-104A, with Yeager at the stick, went out of control at 104,000 feet. It fell into a flat spin all the way down to 11,000 feet. Yeager managed to eject but was badly burned by the rocket motor of his ejection seat. An investigation later revealed that the spin was not caused by Yeager, but by a gyroscopic systems malfunction.

This is the event recaptured in Tom Wolfe's novel and Phil Kaufman's film adaptation of "The Right Stuff".


More info about the crash site (and photos): http://www.check-six.com/Crash_Sites/NF-104A_crash_site.htm


I am so Avatar's intellectual equal. - MrsO

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Avatar - Great post. Thanks fo providing the links, especially to the crash site page. It really brings the (real life) scene and the times to life.

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The line about Yeager being a man was the best line. You have to be brave as hell to do what the test pilots and astronauts did.

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The Mercury Astronauts were my boyhood heroes. I love this movie. The one thing omitted from the book is the definition that Wolfe gave of The Right Stuff. The Right Stuff is when test pilot is on the radio in a plane where something has gone terribly wrong and is plunging earthward, and the pilot keeps asking Base “Further instructions?”, until the radio goes dead. That, boy-o, is The Right Stuff.

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Ridley's comments after the first chimpanzee flight:
"There he is, Captain Ham! Grinnin' like a possum eatin' a sweet potater!"
"Does he look like the kind of guy who would put doo-doo in the capsule?"
"Ham in a can!"

as was mentioned before, Veronica Cartwright: "They're such...a--holes!"
then Pamela Reed's response: "Yeah, but they're useful a--holes!"

and of course, the Shepard's Prayer, even referred to in Space Cowboys.

For a really serious and poignant line, it would have to be Yeager:
"It takes a special kind of man to volunteer for a suicide mission, especially one that's on T.V."

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Wasn't that "Spam in a can"?

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One overlooked one that always amuses me:

"The Russians?! They're our ALLIES!"

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haha how bout when they are in the white house right after the russians launch the first rocket into space and they are talking about putting a man in space

the guy with the accent "I had in mind a chimp
Johnson "well what the hell is a JIMP?"

that line gets me everytime

or "starvoyager gus grissom I like the sound of that"

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"the guy with the accent "I had in mind a chimp
Johnson "well what the hell is a JIMP?"

that line gets me everytime"

Same here. I love that part. I also like when he says "We could design a pod." Johnson: "A POT!?!"

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Pancho Barnes: "We gotcher PRIME Pilots who get all the hot planes, and we gotcher pudknockers who DREAM about getting the hot planes. Now, what do you two pudknockers want, hmmmm?"

Gordo Cooper: "...Scotch?"

+++++

Cooper: "Y-you want WHAT in there!?"
...
Nurse: "The best results are obtained by fantasization accompanied by masturbation, followed by ejaculation."

+++++

Grissom: "Look at that--we're competing with Archie & Jughead!"

+++++

Trudi Cooper: "I told her you were attentive, stable, well-adjusted (sigh) I lied."
Gordo Cooper: "Attagirl!"

+++++

Reporter: "Gentlemen--do any of you go to church regularly?"
Shepard: "As far as going to church is concerned: I attend regularly!"

+++++

Shepard: "THAT, Sir, is a SPACECRAFT. We do NOT call it a capsule."

+++++

Shepard: "Wey-ell ... I'm a wetback NOW" ...
"All right, I'm cooler than you are--why don't you FIX your little problem and light this candle!?"

++++

Glenn: "Annie--are you listening? If you don't want the Vice President in there, then that's it: he is NOT coming in, not one toe! And I will back you up all the way on this, ONE HUNDRED PERCENT, OK? ... You tell them 'Astronaut John Glenn' told you to say that."

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Awww...you took my Pancho Barnes one.

"You said it, Curly.....ACK!"

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The drill here....is to see who can drill the brains out of Nurse Murch.

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Yeager, as Fred the barfly: "You guys wanna drink whiskey?"

Harry Shearer: "I'd like a Coke...in a clean glass."

"We all think your Jose Jimenez impersanation is A OK, but what you're doing with it is B A D."

Yeager, reaching Mach 2.1: "Sorry Scott"

"How much are we paying him?"
"About 217 dollars"
"A week?"
"A month"
(Perfect pause) "That's not bad."

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It's awesome to see Scott Glenn doing Alan Shepard doing Jose' Jimenez (and Bill Dana). Sorry if the lines aren't exact:

-I am Chief Astronaut of the United States. Interplanetary... uh... interplanetary... inter... My name Jose Jimenez!
-Now, Mr. Jimenez, I see that you have your equipment with you, is that a crash helmet?
-ooooh, I hope not!

-My name, Jose' Jimenez. When the pilots go in, they all look the same, when they come out, they all look deeferent...
-How's that? ...Friend I asked you a question!
-When they come out, they all look scared! ....(ahem!) Buenos dias Gonzales!
-Yeah! "Buenos dias" yourself!

-Mr. Jimenez, what is it that you consider the most important thing of being an astronaut?
-De most important thing of an astronaut... the most important thing is... the blast off. I always take a blast before. Otherwise I wouldn't go near that theeng!

-You're clear to land.
-Jose' Jimenez approaching...
-Say again?!
-My name Jose' Jimenez...
-Oh yeah, Shepard! You're clear to land. Some boys want to talk to you about becoming an astronaut.
-They want to make meee eento an astronaut? ooh, I hope not!

-You know, Mr. Shepard, me and my friends think your Jose' Jimenez imitation is... A-OKAY, but what you're doing with it... is B-A-D!
-Oh you're right, you're absolutely right!!

-Permission to relieve bladder!

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"When they go in, they all look the same...when they come out, they all look...different. When they come out, they all look scaaaared."

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Don't forget the line that summarizes the movie AND the book in seven (coincidence?) immortal words:


"Who's the best pilot you ever saw?"

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I also like another exchange during the unveiling of the "capsule"

German: Mmmm...ya...there could, maybe, be perhaps a window. Could be..." (taps side of capsule where window could be)

Grissom: No, that's where the hatch with the explosive bolts goes.

Some other good ones:

Pancho: Why Yeager, you old bastard. Don't just stand there in the doorway like some lonesome g**damn mouthsh*t sheephearder. Get your ass over here and have a drink.

The whole scene with Harry Shearer and Jeff Goldblum going through their list of "candidates"

Lyndon Johnson: "Get that mor-on off of there!"

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"It is about monkeys" or something like that. That line strikes to the core of the truth.

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LBJ rocking back and forth in his car

LBJ: Gladiolas, is there anybody that can deal with a housewife?.........LOL

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I like my siggy below...


"You got it all wrong. The issue here ain't p*ssy--- the issue here is monkey!"

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Anything by Harry Shearer and Jeff Goldblum as the NASA recruiters/gofers is hilarious...e.g.:

"IT'S CALLED SPUTNIK!" "We know, sit down!"

"If the Russians do put a man up there it will no doubt be one of these two men. most likely tthe one on the right..."
(simultaneously) "Gagarin"/"Titov"

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The line is more like:

"The issue here ain't pu**y. The issue here is monkey. We are the monkey."

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