Doroga k zvezdam (1957) Poster

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10/10
Amazing!
LJ2730 June 2009
This is a Soviet documentary about space exploration and since I don't speak Russian, I have no idea what was said or how accurate it was but the visuals alone make this worth seeking out and it's a hard one to track down but keep looking - it's worth searching for. The copyright on the film itself is 1957 but it probably didn't get shown outside Russia until 1958. ROAD TO THE STARS has some of the best miniature photography I have ever seen. The scope of what they portray will truly fill you with a sense of wonder. It will seem a little dated obviously but that's okay. The science part is pretty dull but stay awake for the fine special effects. Watching ROAD TO THE STARS, I felt as if I had uncovered some buried priceless treasure.
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9/10
Fascinating Soviet documentary from the dawn of the space age
jamesrupert20144 April 2019
Released just after historic 1957 launch of Sputnik 1, the film recreates the work of early rocket developers (including American Goddard) with a focus on Soviet space pioneer Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. The biographical material is well made and interesting (as are the brief lessons in physics, ballistics and aeronautics) but the second half of the film, which speculates on the future of space exploration, is outstanding. The first manned flight (including 'space-walks') is predicted to carry three cosmonauts into orbit and the zero-G effects are incredibly realistic (apparently Kubrick used similar clever wirework in '2001 A Space Odyssey' (1968)). The film is extremely optimistic about the future of space travel and there is an excellent scene of gantry after gantry raising a row of streamlined rockets into takeoff positions. The segment about life on the rotating space station is also very well done (although being allowed to take your cat with you seems a stretch) with thought given to the kinds of research opportunities such a station would provide. The film closes with an excellent depiction of a manned lunar landing, the establishment of a lunar base, and the beginning of interplanetary exploration. While the images of the future don't match the reality (as of 2019), there is a shot of the first 'footprints on the moon', prefiguring one of the most famous images to come from the Apollo 11 landing twelve years later. 'Road to the Stars' is the best, most realistic, depiction of the future of space travel as envisioned at the optimistic dawn of the space-age that I have ever seen. Excellent at many levels.
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9/10
Mysteriously ahead of its time
ivorybow18 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
What is fascinating about this film is how excellent for that time period the special effects are. The rocket plume, the sticky dust on the moon Buzz Aldrin reported, the sunlight effects in an orbiting ship, and in particular, the scenes of weightlessness. It's an anomaly for that time, almost a bit mysterious. However, I don''t believe Kubrick copied any of this anymore that present artists build on the past, rather he worked with Arthur C. Clark. I checked out a few other cold war era Soviet Scifi, and found that, at least the ones I looked at, delivered a much more open minded approach to other planets having life. Also many of the cosmonauts and inhabitants of space stations are women, at a time when in America that has not yet occured. This film provides a rare look into the culture of scifi of the Soviet era. And, it's highly entertaining.
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