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HBO's From the Earth to the Moon wouldn't be the same if it premiered today


https://www.indiewire.com/2019/07/hbo-from-the-earth-to-the-moon-miniseries-very-different-apollo-missions-1202157853/

All 12 episodes of the epic 1998 miniseries is being re-released this week in a remastered format. If aired today, however, From the Earth to the Moon wouldn't be the same, says Ben Travers. It would be shorter. It would be darker and more cynical. It also wouldn't be the big event it was on HBO in the 1990s.

https://www.vox.com/culture/2019/7/5/20681752/from-the-earth-to-the-moon-hbo-apollo-miniseries

The 12-part miniseries from Tom Hanks, Ron Howard and Brian Grazer arrived in spring of 1998, which was HBO's breakout year. In honor of the moon landing's 50th anniversary, HBO has released a new remastered edition of From the Earth to the Moon. "What’s interesting about From the Earth to the Moon is how different it is from almost any miniseries that would be made today," says Emily Todd VanDerWerff. "Yes, certain actors recur as certain characters. But the series is, by and large, defined by how every episode focuses on the story of Apollo from a completely new perspective. Take, for instance, the second hour (probably the best installment of the series), which is scripted by the wonderful TV writer Graham Yost and directed by longtime TV hand David Frankel. Its subject is putatively the Apollo 1 disaster, in which three astronauts burned to death in their capsule before the rocket had even launched. But rather than portray this tragedy as a visceral, gory horror, Yost and Frankel look away from it, choosing to instead depict the government inquiry into what happened. It’s not a disaster movie; it’s a mystery. And by making that shift, events we might have already known about become fresh and new to us."

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Not only that, they would re-write the story so that the astronauts were black, Asian, Mexican, Russian, Muslim, and women. And we certainly can't have all of that Jingoistic Nationalism driving the space program.

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There are 21st century productions of the Apollo program that still depict events as they happened, not as you think they would be written. First Man is an example. None of the astronauts were depicted as non-white.

You're grasping at straws and coming up short.

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there are no trans in it.

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