79
Metascore
11 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Orlando SentinelJay BoyarOrlando SentinelJay BoyarFor those of us who will never go to the moon, watching For All Mankind may be as close as we'll come to fulfilling that ancient dream. If what the Hubble eventually sends back is nearly this splendid, it could actually be worth the wait. [17 Aug 1990, p.10]
- 91The A.V. ClubKeith PhippsThe A.V. ClubKeith PhippsIt’s breathtaking on two fronts: Reinert unearths stunning footage—far removed from the fuzzy copies used as B-roll in other documentaries—that captures the full scale of NASA’s accomplishment. But he keeps that footage grounded in the image and voices of the modest men and women who made it happen.
- 88Portland OregonianTed MaharPortland OregonianTed MaharThe length and delay of the project is evident from Brian Eno's participation. He composed and produced the subtle, evocative musical score for the film. [31 March 1990, p.C08]
- 75Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanEntertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanFor All Mankind certainly succeeds at evoking the ironically serene aesthetics of space travel. What it never quite captures is the accompanying human drama. In all likelihood, the film will be shown in classrooms for years to come, but it’s just possible kids will watch it and wonder what all the fuss was about.
- 75Tampa Bay TimesHal LipperTampa Bay TimesHal LipperThese are minor quibbles with a stunning achievement. For All Mankind rewrites history, creating a single glorious adventure from a generation of giant leaps for all mankind. [20 July 1990, p.7]
- 75Miami HeraldBill CosfordMiami HeraldBill CosfordThe film sequences of Earth from orbit, of the moon from the lunar lander, then of Earth again are breathtaking. They're disquieting, too -- the feeling of remoteness seems to boil up from the moon's surface as the explorers hop and stumble about in the lunar dust. You get that sense, during these best moments in the film, of the remarkable achievement it was. The thrill is back, in other words. [1 June 1990, p.G9]
- 70The New York TimesCaryn JamesThe New York TimesCaryn JamesWhat emerges is an amazingly fresh visual immersion in space, and a film that works far better when dealing with inanimate objects than with humans.
- 70Washington PostRita KempleyWashington PostRita KempleyFor All Mankind is a beatitude of praise, a homesick look at a healthy nation. That's why this history of "all systems go" and "roger that" is Oscar-nominated instead of "Roger and Me." The closest it comes to controversy is when it tackles the question of how astronauts go potty in space.
- 70Chicago ReaderFred CamperChicago ReaderFred CamperThe astronauts playfully mug for the camera, and the footage is spectacular, from a fiery liftoff montage to familiar but lovely shots of the earth from space to the moon's mysterious gray surface. But it's telling that a description of the problems of defecating in zero gravity is more interesting than astronauts' trite musings on “out of this world” views, and the ahistorical editing is occasionally irritating.
- 63Slant MagazineSlant MagazineIf not the screen’s ultimate portrait of space travel, For All Mankind remains a peerless planetarium show.