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» » When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions

Short summary

Narrated by award-winning actor Gary Sinise, WHEN WE LEFT EARTH is the incredible story of humankind's greatest adventure, as it happened, told by the people who were there. From the early quest of the Mercury program to put a man in space, to the historic moon landings, through the Soyuz link-up and the first un-tethered space walk by Bruce McCandless, this is how the space age came of age. The vivid HD series features vintage rushes and all the key onboards filmed by the astronauts themselves. The sequences are captured by cameras onboard the spaceships, enabling the series to tell the stories in a depth never seen before.

Gary Sinise himself, played the role of one of the astronauts from the Apollo 13 movie.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Binar
    A wonderful series about the US space program. This is the documentary that needed to be made about the world's first entrance into the last frontier. Superbly done, this is one of my favorite documentary series ever produced. Everything, from story to music is close to perfect. Because they knew they were making history, the scientists, engineers, astronauts and others had enough foresight to record everything on film. I imagine hours and hours and hours of footage exists. Until now, this footage had not been crafted into the compelling story that was waiting to be told. Told chronologically, the story starts early in the space program, with rockets barely able to take off, and often exploding. As noted in the film, the task was to use these rockets with people on the top to get to the moon. It's a journey that will be remembered for thousands of years; humans' first travels in space.
  • comment
    • Author: Eng.Men
    I was really impressed with this series. It is a very extensive look at America's space program, from it's infancy to the present. It is amazing the breadth of cooperation they received from the many people giving interviews, to the behind scene footages. I have been a long time follower of NASA and I learned a great deal from this program.

    Some of the more touching segments dealt with the Challenger and Columbia disasters. I think they handled covering these tragedies well - giving all the facts and not trying to gloss over the gross negligence involved, especially with the O-ring failure in Challenger. Even NASA employees gave scathing testimony concerning this.

    Gary Sinise does a great job narrating. He is perhaps best known from "Forest Gump' as Lt. Dan, and from CSI:NY. It is also interesting to note that he played Astonaut Ken Mattingly in "Apollo 13".

    The HD filming is breathtaking on the more modern film footage. Obviously, film taken from the 60's is not going to look great. But the recent footage from the shuttle flights is amazing, especially when Bruce McCandless flies in space with the jet back-pack, completely untethered from the spaceship... All I can say is WOW!

    It is great that the program not only highlights the great successes, but doesn't shrink away from showing the failures as well. I think it one of the more balanced programs I have seen regarding this. Often times, these programs can seem like propaganda pieces, but I didn't feel that here. Very well done!
  • comment
    • Author: Opilar
    Overall, I thought "When We Left Earth" was a fantastic, excellent and amazing mini-series that I would be delighted to own on Blu-Ray DVD, if it weren't for those Swedish buccaneers. Nevertheless, the inclusion of so much color-footage shot by the astronauts themselves was clever and made for breathtaking viewing, and that's the selling point that will probably get me to fork out for the gen. discs. It wasn't all peaches- and-cream, however, and I was genuinely disappointed with the cursory treatment given to Apollo 1, which only received approximately four minutes of very bland, formulaic coverage.

    There was no imagery from any of the three Apollo 1 crew-members' funerals or memorials or anything heroic, and I believe the producers dropped the ball and missed the chance to jerk a bit of genuine contrived emotion out of us. Their decision not to was difficult to accept and is the only sore point for me in an otherwise-excellent miniseries.

    If it was the case that there simply was no video footage available from the funeral and interment of Gus Grissom, for example, my apologies. But if ever there was an appropriate forum in which to display such coverage/footage, it would've been here.
  • comment
    • Author: Naril
    As a certified space geek, I'm not sure how I missed this when it first aired, but I just finished watching the whole series on Netflix and was very impressed.

    This series broke some ground that other similar documentaries have not. With respect to Apollo, perhaps the most novel thing was that they got Neil Armstrong to contribute commentary which he has steadfastly refused to do for any of the other documentaries such as "In the Shadow of the Moon" or "The Wonder of it All".

    The astronaut commentary in general was excellent. The examination of Mercury was far better than, say, The Right Stuff. The focus on the vital role that Gemini played in the development of the capability to land on the moon was also very welcome. I enjoyed hearing from astronauts like Jim McDivitt, who was actually more highly regarded than Armstrong in his class, who have been absent from similar documentaries. It was good to hear from Frank Borman and Bill Anders as well as they, too, have been absent for the most part. The tip of the cap to Skylab was good, too. Both Pete Conrad and Alan Bean have said they were more proud of their work on Skylab than on Apollo 12 where they walked on the moon.

    The coverage of the later years was excellent as well. Some nice work on the development of the Shuttle. Good summaries and insight into both the Challenger and Columbia tragedies. I had forgotten what a scandal the initial Hubble deployment was and how much effort it took to fix it (and how much was on the line with the repair).

    People have questioned the omission of Apollo 15 and David Scott from coverage and the commentary. I wondered about that as well and missed it as it was one of my favorite missions and, as others have said, was the first use of the rover. Those who posited that it had to do with the stamp scandal may be right. However,aside from NASA's collective memory being long, it may also have been a case that the Discovery Channel simply wasn't willing to pay him enough (or anything) for his appearance and he refused. That would be in keeping with the portrayal of him in Deke Slayton's autobiography.

    Some people have really been rough on the music for the series written by Richard Blair-Oliphant. I actually liked the music and thought it set a good background for most of the story. To each his own, I suppose.

    On balance, though, an excellent piece of work and a good orientation for anybody who would like an overview of NASA's manned space flight history. It's a shame that that history has come to a halt.
  • comment
    • Author: Gabar
    I thoroughly enjoyed watching this series. Unlike many shows on space exploration in which the focus is on space itself, this series was presented with an emphasis on the people who were involved to make it happen. Viewers are treated to personal behind-the-scenes trials and tribulations of space program from the perspective of the people who were there. Personal anecdotes and experiences are interspersed throughout the series. I often found myself saying, "Oh, I didn't know that." For example, describing what Allen Shepperd said to Mission Control before his first take-off was amusing.

    This is an American show produced from the American perspective. Sorry to break it to some people but contrary to worldwide belief, America is NOT the world's country. When America says "We" it doesn't mean Russia, Canada, Europe, China, and Japan too. America is entitled to tell its own history without having to include everyone else's too. Russia is welcome to produce its own space program documentary. And when they do, I don't expect it to include shots of Cape Canaveral or soundbites from John Glenn.
  • comment
    • Author: Lestony
    Every story has two halves: the material, and the way the teller tells it. In this case, though the end product was impressive, the Discovery Channel oversold this production to a point that bordered on inadvertent desecration. The storytelling itself was, all in all, very good (the fact that all the viewers know the ending is something that really couldn't be helped). However, I think the emphasis the Discovery people placed on the program's HD nature was silly. Most of the footage consists of either grainy, spotty film, or first generation video telefeeds that are so primitive I found myself impressed that they could work at all. The people of Earth were awed to see the twitchy, flickering image of Neil Armstrong on the moon in 1969. The "HD" billing the program got is something I can only attribute to the consumer zeitgeist of modern America.

    The second (and worse) mistake the Discovery Channel made was to air ads for the miniseries DURING the series BEFORE it had ended. I can't say why, but that really %*&&ed me off. Maybe it's just because I'd like to really bathe in the majesty of human existence for just a MOMENT without someone using it as a tool to sell me something. Yes, it's very nice that the single greatest artifact of human effort is now available on DVD and Blu-Ray at a discounted price. Get stuffed.

    And yet, marketing flaws aside, it really is an awesome story, and the people who made it did it well. I really was, as I had been promised, shown things I'd never seen before. I watched Richard Nixon talk to Niel Armstrong. I watched men use hardware supplies to innovate their way out of carbon dioxide poisoning. I watched the Challenger and the Columbia come down in chunks. I watched the Earth rise up from beyond the horizon of the Moon.

    I'm still amazed that this was all so recent that the principle characters are still alive, and to hear them talk was to feel the power. Niel Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin and the first President Bush and scores more spoke into the cameras of what they had seen, or done, or helped with. I actually realized that "the Establishment," as our rigidly organized government and its projects are often cynically called, was capable of miracles of its own.

    Bon voyage.
  • comment
    • Author: Jaiarton
    Let me start out with the good stuff.

    This miniseries was good in that it captures, 30 to 50 years later, the thoughts and experiences of those who were there. The modern footage -- the interviews with the astronauts and flight controllers especially -- does what historical documentaries do best: captures the words and experience of those who were actually there. I especially liked the interviews with Gene Kranz, Jim Lovell, and -- of all people -- the nearly hermit-like Neil Armstrong.

    That said, the "HD" sequences are, by and large, limited by the resolution of the original (what a surprise), and calling them "HD" is a hyperbole at best, disingenuous at worst. So the Discovery channel's hype about digging stuff out of the vault and getting an HD-worthy presentation of this vintage footage is just that: hype. There are some priceless shots, like the slow-motion ground test footage of the explosively-jettisoned Mercury hatch. But, by and large, the "unearthed" footage is stuff we've seen before.

    What I detested most, though, was the U.S.-centric view of the writing. The script for the Skylab sequences would lead you to believe that the U.S. orbited the first space station. The Apollo 8 mission planning and execution was triggered by the placement of a Russian moon rocket on their launch pad, but this is overlooked.

    So, obviously, the "we" in "when we left earth", is Americans.

    A historical distortion, at best.
  • comment
    • Author: Boraston
    Firstly. This documentary has a lot of great information and some great recordings from NASA's history. They are are must watch for any human being no matter in what documentary. But... it is made by amateurs.

    There is a an added shaky-cam effect to all the modern interviews. Why did they add it? I don't think anyone can answer this question. It also seems like they added it to the old recordings from their offices, but it could just be bad recordings. They also select the scenes where the old camera zooms? Why? I don't know. The worst thing is that we actually don't get to see any scene for over 10 seconds. But the average length of a scene is probably 3 seconds. And every scene is split up by small comments/interview segments. Why? Another thing is that they exaggerate everything. Everything is extremely dangerous, unsafe and stupid to even try... according to this documentary. They make something awesome and exiting seem more ridiculous than it actually is. Why? I don't know.

    It is very much worth seeing. But it is very badly made and should be remade. I love space and NASA so I gave it a 6. But it is an amateurish documentary. The documentary makers should be very much ashamed and NASA should be proud.

    • greetings, a Russia man.
  • comment
    • Author: Hilarious Kangaroo
    Great documentary, the best i have ever seen about us space exploration and space exploration in general. The pictures it shows are amazing and it is in high definition too.

    Also i really disagree with the previous review stating that this was only American journey. In the documentary it was clearly stated that without competition between Russia and America no one would have gone to space yet alone the moon so early. The astronauts in the documentary tried to send a message that the world is small, interconnected and that really the humans are one family. It is sad this message didn't reach the person who wrote that review. Anyway great documentary about great people.
  • comment
    • Author: Burisi
    This is one of a several "what we did then" historical retrospectives of the NASA human space flight program. In its favor, it includes interviews with Neil Armstrong himself, who was famously averse to such things, and even James McDivitt and Frank Borman, who are rarely seen. There is interesting footage of geology training and so on that will appeal to space buffs.

    However, the editing is done in the choppy and affected style of a rock music video, which quickly becomes extremely tiresome. The music is beyond awful, a mishmash of orchestral fake-dramatic boilerplate episodes, something like the trashy background sound of a video game. The narration is done in an irritatingly over-serious manner. Combined with the bad music, it is nearly impossible to get through this series without turning the volume off and just enjoying the views. Unfortunately, the best part of the series is hearing the astronauts in their own words, and you can't do that without slurping down the treacly music and Commander McBragg narration as well. Ultimately, this sinks the series, which is a shame.

    Some day, this material should be re-edited without much music, because none is needed, or at least, it should be kept to a bare and spare minimum. One wonders where they find the composers of this trash and how they manage to get themselves paid.

    Gary Sinese unfortunately also lacks the vocal authority for documentary narration. But that is a minor quibble.

    -drl
  • comment
    • Author: Buzalas
    After I first binge watched this on a free streaming platform, I went to Amazon to purchase it because I could not imagine ever not having access to rewatch whenever inwanted. Basically even though at the time I watched it, it was free I turned around and paid $ to have it forever. Stop reading this stupid review and watch it.
  • comment
    • Author: Shan
    I grew up with the space program, being born a month to the day after John Glenn's historic flight, and remember watching the moon missions on TV. I especially enjoyed the stories of the Mercury, Gemini & Apollo programs. There was 2 major flaws in the series, and that was the omission of Apollo 15, and the very brief mention of Apollo 1. People will think that Apollo 16 was the first to use the LRV, but it was Apollo 15. and to virtually bypass Apollo 1 is a crime against the memories of Gus, Ed, and Roger. Sad, really. but overall it's the best space documentary I've seen. And the appearance of Neil Armstrong makes it worth watching.
  • Series cast summary:
    Gene Kranz Gene Kranz - Himself - Flight Director / - 7 episodes, 2008-2009
    Gary Sinise Gary Sinise - Narrator 6 episodes, 2008
    Jim Lovell Jim Lovell - Himself / - 5 episodes, 2008-2009
    Eugene Cernan Eugene Cernan - Himself / - 5 episodes, 2008-2009
    Buzz Aldrin Buzz Aldrin - Himself / - 6 episodes, 2008-2009
    Christopher Kraft Christopher Kraft - Himself / - 4 episodes, 2008-2009
    Neil Armstrong Neil Armstrong - Himself / - 5 episodes, 2008-2009
    Frank Borman Frank Borman - Himself / - 3 episodes, 2008-2009
    Jay Barbree Jay Barbree - Himself - Space Correspondant 3 episodes, 2008
    Charles Duke Charles Duke - Himself / - 3 episodes, 2008-2009
    Bruce McCandless II Bruce McCandless II - Himself / - 3 episodes, 2008-2009
    John Young John Young - Himself - Apollo 16 / - 5 episodes, 2008-2009
    Jim McDivitt Jim McDivitt - Himself / - 3 episodes, 2008-2009
    Story Musgrave Story Musgrave - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 2 episodes, 2008
    Jeffrey Hoffman Jeffrey Hoffman - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 2 episodes, 2008
    Glynn Lunney Glynn Lunney - Himself - Flight Controller / - 2 episodes, 2008
    Ed Weiler Ed Weiler - Himself - Chief Scientist, Hubble 2 episodes, 2008
    Bill Anders Bill Anders - Himself / - 2 episodes, 2008-2009
    Susan Borman Susan Borman - Herself / - 2 episodes, 2008-2009
    Robert Gibson Robert Gibson - Himself - Shuttle Commander 2 episodes, 2008
    Barbara Morgan Barbara Morgan - Herself - Shuttle Astronaut 2 episodes, 2008
    Valerie Anders Valerie Anders - Herself / - 2 episodes, 2008-2009
    Robert L. Crippen Robert L. Crippen - Himself - Shuttle Pilot 1 episode, 2008
    Alan Bean Alan Bean - Himself - Apollo 12 1 episode, 2008
    Fred Haise Fred Haise - Himself - Apollo 13 1 episode, 2008
    Milt Heflin Milt Heflin - Himself - Flight Director 1 episode, 2008
    John Glenn John Glenn - Himself - Mercury Astronaut 3 episodes, 2008
    Kathryn Thornton Kathryn Thornton - Herself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Jerry Linenger Jerry Linenger - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Scott Carpenter Scott Carpenter - Himself - Mercury Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Joe Kerwin Joe Kerwin - Himself - Skylab 2 1 episode, 2008
    David Wolf David Wolf - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Scott E. Parazynski Scott E. Parazynski - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Scott D. Altman Scott D. Altman - Himself - Shuttle Pilot 1 episode, 2008
    George Bush George Bush - Himself - 41st President 1 episode, 2008
    Lowell Grissom Lowell Grissom - Himself - Gus Grissom's Brother 1 episode, 2008
    Al Worden Al Worden - Himself - Apollo 15 1 episode, 2008
    Jim Lewis Jim Lewis - Himself - Helicopter Pilot 1 episode, 2008
    Michael E. López-Alegría Michael E. López-Alegría - Himself - ISS Commander 1 episode, 2008
    Ken Bowersox Ken Bowersox - Himself - Shuttle Commander 1 episode, 2008
    Owen Garriott Owen Garriott - Himself - Skylab 3 1 episode, 2008
    Steve Hawley Steve Hawley - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Jon Clark Jon Clark - Himself - Shuttle Flight Surgeon 1 episode, 2008
    Kathy Sullivan Kathy Sullivan - Herself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Evelyn Husband Evelyn Husband - Herself - Wife 1 episode, 2008
    Loren Shriver Loren Shriver - Himself - Shuttle Astronaut 1 episode, 2008
    Michael Collins Michael Collins - Himself 3 episodes, 2008-2009
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