Apollo 11 (2019) started with high-quality, high-def footage of what looked like some huge new machine on treads, slowly lumbering on, led by a foreman-looking dude in a hard hat. Then I got a gander at what it was carrying--a Saturn V, vertical, and fully prepped for action. At that point, I suspected I was in for something special. It didn't take long to confirm that.
Nothing in this masterful documentary is faked, recreated, narrated, or cheapened with politics. It plays as a feature movie of the entire event, from pre-launch till after capsule recovery, in the participants' own voices and actions, surrounded by media and onlookers (and puts First Man to shame, deservedly so). It was made possible by recently-outed archived footage on 35mm, 65mm and 70mm film, which looks like it was shot yesterday, as well as some 11,000 hours of audio, some never before released. The editing and composition are fabulous. It all comes together as well as the historic event and its top-quality record deserve.
I was alive then, and old enough to know what was happening. I remember the excitement of watching on a GE 13" B&W TV set and a Curtis-Mathes 25" color TV. This film brings it all closer and in more vivid detail than I've ever experienced. I wish I had seen it on IMAX.