Movie Review: “Apollo 18” Makes A Mess Out Of A Good Idea Dan Koelsch, September 3, 2011 This weekend, Dimension Films released Apollo 18, a found footage sci-fi thriller for which we have been covering the viral campaign. Read my full review after the break (warning: some spoilers). The premise of the film is that LunarTruth.com, a (fake) space conspiracy website, has obtained footage of the Apollo 18 mission to the lunar surface. What makes this footage so special is that officially Apollo 17 was the last manned mission to the Moon. Apollo 18 was a classified mission, and we see from the footage why that is. Lunar Truth has put together the footage with necessary editing, captions, and even spotlighting to better tell the narrative of what happened to the three astronauts who are on the Moon to install a device to spy on Russian communications (the film takes place in December of 1974 during the Cold War). However, before they can head back to Earth, strange things start to happen.I obviously don’t want to give too much away, but if you have seen the trailers, than you know that there is something else on the lunar surface with our protagonists, and that is where the horror lies. The whole Lunar Truth framing of the story is actually pretty smart, as it presents a good reason for audiences to be seeing classified information, as well as alleviating the lack of editing, focus, and clarity, that found footage could cause. The mission itself is designed to be documented, so we get lots of different cameras.I was excited for Apollo 18 simply because I love outer space and alternative stories that could find a way to fit into known history. The found footage aspect obviously intrigued me, as I had yet to see a true sci-fi film shot in this manner. As an entry into the found footage sub genre, Apollo 18 doesn’t deviate from the norm too much. The category became mainstream thanks to the likes of The Blair Witch Project, Cloverfield, and Paranormal Activity, with Hollywood studios finding the style especially useful for horror. By making the camera a character or at least part of the environment, the audience feels closer to the action, thus more vulnerable to scares. In fact, Apollo 18 shares a lot of similarities to Paranormal Activity in tone. While the multiple cameras help spice things up a bit, we are still left with a film that is mostly slow, has a lot of build up with lackluster payoff, and an impressive end to give us the creeps for a while.Apollo 18 has several things going for it. As implied above, if you liked Paranormal Activity, you will probably like this. There are plenty of moments where you’ll be gripping your seat, just waiting for something terrible to pop up on screen. Also, I found it to be very realistic despite the small budget, which is partly due to the style in which it was filmed. From my basic knowledge of space exploration history, it seemed to be dead on. I really liked the climax and the implication that the problem could be bigger than what we see in the film. The twist as to the “reason we’ve never gone back to the moon” is a bit silly when you think about it, but in the moment it’s really cool and it plays well on screen.My biggest issue with the film, probably ironically, comes from its filming style. We don’t get to see much thanks to the film emulating 1970s cameras and several convenient outages or scrambled signals. That would be fine for effect, but we also have a hard time keeping up with what’s going on, why the characters are doing what they are doing, and even hearing some of the dialogue when the astronauts are in spacesuits. The pace of the film is also dictated by the filming style. While I found all the necessary footage leading up to the moon landing itself fascinating, I know a lot of people will get bored with the first third of the film.Overall, while Apollo 18 might not have lived up to its potential to make a truly intelligent and scary sci-fi horror film using the found footage filming style, there’s enough little nuggets to make it worth watching, at least for us space (and conspiracy) nuts. 2.5/5 stars P.S. The Lunar Truth website and suspected viral site ApolloTruth.org are both down as of the writing of this review. Could this mean there was a big enough audience to crash their servers? We’ll have a full review of the Apollo 18 viral campaign later this weekend. Reviews Apollo 18Movie Review
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One of the lamest movies I’ve ever bothered to sit through. Don’t waste your time, decent Idea for a movie gone horribly wrong.
I love outer space movies. But it’s gonna take some major intelligence from movie land to top my all time fav Alien. I liked this movie. I’ll watch it again. Hoped for a little more. But is worth watching.
Truly dumb and not at all realistic. If the escaping pods exploded in space during a collision, there’d be no footage to find. I am sure NASA has many true and factual secrets, but this 18 mission is a hoax. I was not scared for even a nanosecond, especially after seeing how they ripped off the alien prototype from the Alien movie.
My husband says it’s not true, I on the other hand have to admit… It has me thinking. What happened to those 3 men whose bodies were never found?
Me and my family have been thinking about this since we recently watched it. I think that, while the possibilities are endless, it’s not true. But I also think that, given the right evidence, it could be true. My oldest sister says that just because the Alien Rocks (AR) haven’t had an outbreak of ‘illnesses’ they might not be able to funtion due to our atmospheric differences, oxygen, disseases, etc. does not mean that they couldn’t be, say, hibernating, evolving, adapting. My dad thinks it a load of crap. My middle sister was very spooked by it, the fact that the AR could be the reason that we’ve never gone back to the moon. I secretly agree with all of them. My only question is, which video blips were the real deal? My oldest sister’s boy friend said that his best friend went to lunartruth.com before the government shut it down and he said that the parts that show the video cameras zooming in on the rock moveing are the real thing. There are two movies I cannont watch-now made 3- and they are Zombie, Post-Apacolyptic, and now, Outerspace/Alien. Not Sci-Fi. If you agree with this, like it. I speak the truth.
Actually, we don’t know that the ships exploded. We were just told that there were coverup stories to their deaths. Also, it says that Apollos 18, 19, and 20 were cancelled due to budgeting problems. How do we know that Apollo 19 or 20 didn’t go to get the footage from the ships before they were, like, swallowed by a blackhole or something? Never forget to keep an open mind with every movie.
In 1974 I was 12 years old and lived in Titusville Fl. There was not a Apollo launch then. Those rockets would break windows each time they launched
The most disturbing aspect of the movie was that if none of the astronauts made it home to earth how did we get the footage? This was before the days of sending digital images, it was supposedly shot on kodachrome film!
I think that opollo 18 was about going to study the moon not to scare the piss out of people.Even the little kids that want to go to the moon.