21 reviews
Someone wrote a profoundly racist rant against white people in his or her review. I do not view all rich white men as evil, but I consider Jeff Bezos the embodiment of pure evil. I skipped beyond every biographical detail about him and his opinions about the flight. I could not care less.
But I loved to see Shatner's reaction to the things that he viewed. It was moving and touching. He was honest and raw about his feelings throughout the entire documentary.
I am also glad that they added a lot of Glen de Vries footage. He died shortly after this experience. RIP.
But I loved to see Shatner's reaction to the things that he viewed. It was moving and touching. He was honest and raw about his feelings throughout the entire documentary.
I am also glad that they added a lot of Glen de Vries footage. He died shortly after this experience. RIP.
- M_Exchange
- Jan 14, 2022
- Permalink
Interesting. Definitely worth watching for William Shatner and Star Trek fans. But a little slow and anticlimactic, and somewhat disappointing overall. Once is enough.
- wtprincetx
- Dec 20, 2021
- Permalink
A few are doing what the vast majority of us can only dream of. That's true. But, I really enjoy watching these people do it! Because space is and remains a place of longing. And I don't think space travelers are neglecting Earth. On the contrary, almost everyone sees their vulnerability from a distance. And I can gladly overlook the fact that Jeff Bezos and his company are presented in a good light. In a way, they deserve it.
- DasGlasperlenspiel
- Mar 6, 2022
- Permalink
I am so happy for Bill. When I think back to when I was a child I would never have imagined that he would go to space and go as a Ninety year old man. What a capstone to a life well lived. I was wondering about the behind the scenes of how it came to be and if you are also interested in this you will enjoy this.
Shatner's words when he landed.
So would you? Would you go if you had the opportunity?
I think it is quite poetic that the star of a culturally iconic TV series many of us have watched over and over for years had a chance to experience this short flight. Good for him.
Tastefully done documentary. Watch and enjoy. I did.
So would you? Would you go if you had the opportunity?
I think it is quite poetic that the star of a culturally iconic TV series many of us have watched over and over for years had a chance to experience this short flight. Good for him.
Tastefully done documentary. Watch and enjoy. I did.
- dertwonshuw-51350
- Dec 16, 2021
- Permalink
I watched it live and seeing Shatner was incredible. He was extremely brave to make such a trip and it was truly an amazing high point in his life.
But watching Bezos ignore Shatner's first words out of the capsule and interrupting what he was trying to say to run over and grab a bottle of champagne to spray everyone just made me want to throw up. He's disgusting.
But watching Bezos ignore Shatner's first words out of the capsule and interrupting what he was trying to say to run over and grab a bottle of champagne to spray everyone just made me want to throw up. He's disgusting.
It was basically 45 minutes which is the perfect time for this type of documentary. Not a lot of fluff. Let's get down to it.
Amazing thing is Shatner is 90, and he's got the old person's skin and boy but his mind is still that of a 40 year old. No slowing down or hard to process ideas. He speaks well and it's impressive. He's a young 90 and it was great to see him do this because he really appreciated it and that was nice.
No big ego or "I deserve this." Just an actor who wants the planet to be healthy and cares about it who got to do something great. Well done.
Amazing thing is Shatner is 90, and he's got the old person's skin and boy but his mind is still that of a 40 year old. No slowing down or hard to process ideas. He speaks well and it's impressive. He's a young 90 and it was great to see him do this because he really appreciated it and that was nice.
No big ego or "I deserve this." Just an actor who wants the planet to be healthy and cares about it who got to do something great. Well done.
- On_The_Mark
- Dec 26, 2021
- Permalink
When they actually go into space, the younger crew/passengers float around for a few seconds inside the weightless capsule, while Shatner seems nervous, poor guy, holding himself down like he doesn't want to float around (after all, he's 90 and overweight) (he looks like he's sitting on a toilet)...
The "space trip" is all very quick, and very awkward... staged and awkward...
Then when they land, Shatner has to try explaining something that he says he cannot explain; but what he does say is just about all we have, since we, the audience, really saw nothing, experienced nothing...
We didn't even experience them experiencing...
As for the fifty-minute buildup, including a a "last minute problem," it was as contrived as all documentaries that need to have the same kind of suspense as movies, because they ARE movies...
Meanwhile for a Documentary there's hardly anything documented except the fact Bezos is a Star Trek fan and Shatner, well, he starred on Star Trek (they also show a cool Outer Limits)...
And for a Reality Show it's not very real nor all that fun or involving (except for an instant when one of Shatner's daughters bluntly tells him he's too old to go into space; but before this real moment can grow we cut to another segment)...
Plus there's the whole Global Warming lecture from Shatner "30 days later" and this is all a way for Bezos to contradict his critics who say he's just doing this because HE CAN... (And that is WHY he's doing it) (Shatner says that Bezos wants to put all the industries polluting Earth into space... so he wants to pollute space?)...
All in all, Shatner-in-Space didn't seem authentic, and is merely a prolonged news story about the party trick of sending a sci-fi actor into space (next step, send Bryan Cranston into a legitimate meth lab)...
As a person, Shatner seems an endearing kind of guy... a little loopy but that works for his legendary offbeatness... he's the kind of actor everyone likes even if they bag on him...
But this all kind of came and went, an afterthought, really, just like the going-to-space experience seemed to for Shatner...
Now had he done a spoken-word of Bowie's Space Oddity up there instead of hearing the female passenger repeat "Oh my God!" twenty times, that might've added something but, in all seriousness, the trip into space needs to be longer because frankly, it seems a big waste of everyone's time and money.
The "space trip" is all very quick, and very awkward... staged and awkward...
Then when they land, Shatner has to try explaining something that he says he cannot explain; but what he does say is just about all we have, since we, the audience, really saw nothing, experienced nothing...
We didn't even experience them experiencing...
As for the fifty-minute buildup, including a a "last minute problem," it was as contrived as all documentaries that need to have the same kind of suspense as movies, because they ARE movies...
Meanwhile for a Documentary there's hardly anything documented except the fact Bezos is a Star Trek fan and Shatner, well, he starred on Star Trek (they also show a cool Outer Limits)...
And for a Reality Show it's not very real nor all that fun or involving (except for an instant when one of Shatner's daughters bluntly tells him he's too old to go into space; but before this real moment can grow we cut to another segment)...
Plus there's the whole Global Warming lecture from Shatner "30 days later" and this is all a way for Bezos to contradict his critics who say he's just doing this because HE CAN... (And that is WHY he's doing it) (Shatner says that Bezos wants to put all the industries polluting Earth into space... so he wants to pollute space?)...
All in all, Shatner-in-Space didn't seem authentic, and is merely a prolonged news story about the party trick of sending a sci-fi actor into space (next step, send Bryan Cranston into a legitimate meth lab)...
As a person, Shatner seems an endearing kind of guy... a little loopy but that works for his legendary offbeatness... he's the kind of actor everyone likes even if they bag on him...
But this all kind of came and went, an afterthought, really, just like the going-to-space experience seemed to for Shatner...
Now had he done a spoken-word of Bowie's Space Oddity up there instead of hearing the female passenger repeat "Oh my God!" twenty times, that might've added something but, in all seriousness, the trip into space needs to be longer because frankly, it seems a big waste of everyone's time and money.
- TheFearmakers
- Dec 14, 2021
- Permalink
Mr Shatner came across as warm, witty, humble and intelligent. He was visibly moved, in fact brought to tears, by his experience.
Excellent programme.
Excellent programme.
- nickbourne-00142
- Oct 6, 2022
- Permalink
- gjenevieve
- Jan 15, 2022
- Permalink
I never watched Star Trek, but I know William Shatner from Boston Legal and thought he was great in that.
As for this documentary, I did enjoy the few minutes of footage of the flying phallus shooting off the planet, the views of Earth outside the windows and the weightless antics of the occupants, along with Shatner's reaction afterward.
We also learn that Jeff Bezos, environmentalist extraordinaire, plans to transfer the polluting industries of Earth to space so as to make Earth pristine again. That sounds totally realistic, non-polluty, affordable and achievable, and what could possibly go wrong?
In the meantime, I guess astronaut Bill can sit on his porch, stare up at the sky, reminisce and wonder if one of those planes flying overhead are carrying one of the billions of packages Amazon deliver here on the terrestrial realm.
As for this documentary, I did enjoy the few minutes of footage of the flying phallus shooting off the planet, the views of Earth outside the windows and the weightless antics of the occupants, along with Shatner's reaction afterward.
We also learn that Jeff Bezos, environmentalist extraordinaire, plans to transfer the polluting industries of Earth to space so as to make Earth pristine again. That sounds totally realistic, non-polluty, affordable and achievable, and what could possibly go wrong?
In the meantime, I guess astronaut Bill can sit on his porch, stare up at the sky, reminisce and wonder if one of those planes flying overhead are carrying one of the billions of packages Amazon deliver here on the terrestrial realm.
If you love space and love this planet then watch Shatner in Space....some people talk about dumb stuff like the shape of the vessel or billionaires going to space, Blue Origin is clearly about so much more than that.
What can you really say about this kind of insipid self-indulgence that only exist to appeal to the absolute worst kind of weird nerd culture, people who aren't even capable of understanding the things that they have centered their entire personality around?
It never ceases to amaze me the way people are capable of dumbing down media that possesses some genuine level of depth in turning it into the most vapid thing imaginable. Am I expected to actually see a meaningful connection between this sad little vanity project from the recently divorced world's richest man and a speculative fiction TV show about humanitarianism where money doesn't even exist? It's shameful and embarrassing.
It never ceases to amaze me the way people are capable of dumbing down media that possesses some genuine level of depth in turning it into the most vapid thing imaginable. Am I expected to actually see a meaningful connection between this sad little vanity project from the recently divorced world's richest man and a speculative fiction TV show about humanitarianism where money doesn't even exist? It's shameful and embarrassing.
- ecmelton-186-105049
- Jan 6, 2022
- Permalink
A trekky through and through, it was lovely seeing Bill soar. I can't wait until flights last longer, safely. The comments about saving the earth I felt and share. Thanks Jeff Bezos for following your dream snd helping us get cliser to real space travel.
- 2Pass_Time
- Dec 25, 2021
- Permalink
At 90 years of age, William Shatner, the actor, finally gets to leave planet Earth after many years of portraying a starship captain. As he looks down at Earth through the capsule's window, he sits, overcome with emotion, while his crewmates are gleefully bouncing around enjoying their weightlessness. Perhaps it takes advanced age to be able to understand the deeper meaning of such a journey. This documentary enables us to experience it through the eyes of William Shatner, to understand why such a short trip into space means so much more than just getting high enough away from Earth's gravity to be able to float around.
- searchersd
- Dec 14, 2021
- Permalink
I love William Shatner, what a great guy, watching this made me emotional, seeing him in space was so heartwarming,I loved ever second of it, also Jeff Bezos I really did not know much about him except he is very wealthy , I really liked him and like what he is doing , this is a must watch , I can not recommend enough if you are a space or shatner fan .
- joanneeccles-55847
- Dec 14, 2021
- Permalink
I had higher hopes for this film. It didn't really delve into anything in a deep meaningful way that you would expect from a documentary. It briefly touched on Shatner's legacy, and the plans for Blue Origin, but other than that it kind of was just a bunch of rich people having fun playing astronaut.
- fischer_patrick
- Jan 26, 2022
- Permalink
I saw those Star Trek movies and other spacy things like The Astronaut's Wife (1999) and I know that there is a possibility that Shatner may have been exchanged.
Someone may think of this as a big commercial; in reality, it is excellent timely documentation while the people and the places still exist. With one exception Glen de Vries.
I met Jeff Bezos for a few minutes in 2004 at Amazon and he seemed like a standup guy. Very interesting and at that time Amazon let you take your dog to work. It seems strange to watch him in this program and think back.
This flight is tied to history with scenes and photos from past TV programs as some are:
Archived ABC news coverage
Footage from the Twilight Zone
Footage from Star Track
Outer Limits ----- Now watch these programs and tell me if it is the same Shatner.
Someone may think of this as a big commercial; in reality, it is excellent timely documentation while the people and the places still exist. With one exception Glen de Vries.
I met Jeff Bezos for a few minutes in 2004 at Amazon and he seemed like a standup guy. Very interesting and at that time Amazon let you take your dog to work. It seems strange to watch him in this program and think back.
This flight is tied to history with scenes and photos from past TV programs as some are:
Archived ABC news coverage
Footage from the Twilight Zone
Footage from Star Track
Outer Limits ----- Now watch these programs and tell me if it is the same Shatner.
- Bernie4444
- Jan 25, 2024
- Permalink
- becca_cardinal
- Sep 15, 2024
- Permalink