THE DISH
Hearty Fare For The Hungry Cineast
by Robert A. Nowotny
First, the good news:
THE DISH isn't about crazy Aunt Hildebeth's okra infested
homemade potato salad that she religiously prepared for every
bi-monthly Luthern pot luck dinner. Hallelujah…
Now, the great news:
This “DISH” is a beguilingly amusing and
entertaining Australian film that endearingly evokes the magical
days of arguably man's greatest scientific achievement
ever—the 1969 moon landing. Hallelujah all over
again…
Flawlessly directed by Rob Sitch, this gem of a movie features a
big dish (of the satellite kind), a big heart and some
surprisingly big ideas. Memorable scenes abound; one of my
favorites is when the U.S. Ambassador visits the gigantic radio
telescope in Parkes, New South Wales, at the crucial time it has
lost all contact with the Lunar Lander. Not wanting to fess up to
the situation, the four scientists (three Australians/one American
sent by NASA) revert to deceiving their esteemed guest by having
one pretend his is the voice of Neil Armstrong using a microphone
in an adjacent part of the structure. The Ambassador leaves very
happy and very impressed. “It sounded like he was in the
next room!” he declares later to a crowded gathering of
local dignitaries. But back at the ranch the pressure was building
to unbearable proportions.
Yes, Houston did have a problem. The one and only communication
link to this truly epic event in recorded history was a satellite
dish in rural Australia with a few bugs. And a few hundred sheep.
The sheep may not have cared, but virtually all of mankind did.
A small, but devout group of doubters still abound, questioning
whether or not the moon landing was real or the result of an
elaborate hoax of unprecedented proportions. Having said this, no
one should doubt nor question whether or not this is one of THE
best films on the shelves of your local video store. As Gary
Thompson of the Philadelphia Daily News declared, THE DISH is
“a movie of small steps that manages, in the end, to
make a giant dramatic leap.”
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