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7 votes
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'A model of hope for the world': Twenty-five years after Rwandan Genocide, new film shows journey toward justice and healing
3 votes -
The rapid rise and slow fall of the Microsoft web browser
6 votes -
The general was female? ASU professor, colleague uncover 200-year-old mystery from the American Revolution
10 votes -
You can never go home to GeoCities again - The new video games Hypnospace and Wrong Box offer up complicated nostalgia for the internet of yesterday
4 votes -
The story of the 3dfx Voodoo1
8 votes -
A gallery of 80s political cartoons condeming video games
28 votes -
The Tezuka Revue: How an all-woman theatre troupe influenced the Godfather of Manga
3 votes -
Oh no! The depressing truth about the Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory workers
9 votes -
Why there's so little left of the early internet
2 votes -
When giant scorpions swarmed the seas
13 votes -
The story of the Rendition Vérité 1000
3 votes -
Time is a flat ferris wheel: The enduring legacy of ‘RollerCoaster Tycoon’
7 votes -
Ancient Greek music: Now we finally know what it sounded like
10 votes -
The History of Video | Veritasium
4 votes -
The Matrix at twenty: How the sci-fi gamechanger remains influential
13 votes -
A painting long thought to be a fake Botticelli turned out to be real. British conservators confirmed the authenticity of “Madonna of the Pomegranate” via X-ray and infrared tests.
7 votes -
The long, complicated, and extremely frustrating history of Medium, 2012–present
14 votes -
Recreating the World's Oldest Tart Recipe | Munchies
6 votes -
For sale: This massive, obsessive and (probably) obsolete VHS boxing archive
7 votes -
A history of pizza
11 votes -
Top Scores - From Pong to Red Dead: Can video game music change the way you play?
5 votes -
M-16: A bureaucratic horror story
8 votes -
Intransigence: A social history of the internet
5 votes -
From the clavichord to the modern piano
6 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: Darklands - The first CRPG ever released by MicroProse Software
5 votes -
A journey to the "Disappointment Islands", a remote area of Polynesia that hasn't had a visitor in decades
16 votes -
Vivian Cherry: A lifetime photographing New York's streets – in pictures
3 votes -
500 million years of climate history pinned on plate tectonics
9 votes -
The cigarette company that reinvented television news
3 votes -
From 2003 to 2007 a 24 year old Iraqi woman in Baghdad kept an online diary. In chronicling life under occupation the blogger "Riverbend" gave a perspective largely missing from English media.
15 votes -
Rudder issue that plagued the Boeing 737 throughout the 1990s
7 votes -
The lost worlds of telnet
17 votes -
Top ten books about building cities. From Mary Beard’s Roman history to Kim Stanley Robinson’s science fiction, Jonathan Carr chooses the best writing about citizens’ eternal challenges
3 votes -
The Morris worm at thirty
4 votes -
The fifteen-year hunt for Resident Evil 1.5 - How a community went to hell and back searching for the most coveted horror game ever cancelled
9 votes -
Bigger, saltier, heavier: Fast food since 1986 in three simple charts
8 votes -
Cook Islands to choose new indigenous name and remove any association with British explorer
8 votes -
ALOHAnet - The oft-forgotten Precusor to Wireless Communication
4 votes -
Retrohistories: The first "game over"
3 votes -
Apollo 11 is phenomenal, and gave me an existential crisis
Apollo 11 is a limited IMAX only engagement, at least for now, and I don't know how long it'll be in theaters. But while it is, I implore everyone to go see it.This movie left me speechless, and...
Apollo 11 is a limited IMAX only engagement, at least for now, and I don't know how long it'll be in theaters. But while it is, I implore everyone to go see it.This movie left me speechless, and not just in the sense of the footage being so incredible as to leave me without words, though that's certainly a factor. It's restored footage and audio of the Apollo 11 mission, for anyone that doesn't know, and it covers the launch, moon landing, and re-entry.
It's so easy for historical events to be looked back on and be seen as just that: events. Like a natural disaster or the existence of a waterfall or a canyon, so many battles, inventions, and human triumphs are stripped of humanity, remembered only as things that happened, not things people did. Apollo 11 has staggering to witness footage, yes, but it weaves that footage together with the human moments wonderfully. The scenes of the launch countdown or the lander making its descent are intercut and splitscreened with the footage of the NASA control centers, with names of all the teams, as audio of their conversations with the astronauts and recaps of what has happened and is going to play over the incredibly restored launch footage. Cuts to the crowd overlooking the Apollo 11 launch are also common in the beginning.
This is not an educational video, one to be seen for great understanding of the finer details of the mission. Apollo 11 instead acts as history in motion, with a perspective to the individuals and the event simultaneously. It's about the people that accomplished the amazing things you see. A display of the triumph of human spirit over the perceived rules of the world and the desire for understanding out world and breaking the limits that we thought were imposed on us. And yet, we as the viewers have a perspective that the people who actually accomplished the great things we see never did. The splitscreening helps to assign human beings to the awe inspiring footage in front of the viewer, yes, but at the same time it offers 2 entirely separated perspectives framed as one, one that the human beings being assigned to the footage never truly experienced in the moment. We have an intimate view of the control center with a simultaneous omnipotent-esque view of the mission in all of its glory. The viewer as the omnipotent being is true of most films to some degree, but the way in which the movie frames its central event, small and big at the same time, really highlights an omnipresent view that even those who lived through the launch never experienced in real time. It's a film of contrast between the individuals and the accomplishment of the collective, but in its control center voiceovers and constant splitscreens, it's really a movie that bridges the two contrasts.
Basically, I loved it in ways that, despite my extensive best efforts, I find difficult to describe. This line sounds corny, I know, but you owe it to yourself to see it on the biggest screen that you can, and I implore everyone to try to make time for it and find a true IMAX showing, if possible. The visuals alone may not have been the biggest thing that awed me, but they were certainly a huge part of it. And for anyone that's also seen it, what'd you think? I'd love to see other perspectives on this doc.
11 votes -
Pac-Man: The untold story of how we really played the game
10 votes -
Lessons from 6 software rewrite stories
10 votes -
Apollo 11 Guidance Computer Source Code for Command and Lunar Modules
15 votes -
From Guilty Gear to Dragon Ball: The thirty-year history of Arc System Works
3 votes -
An interesting essay about Lois Weber, once the highest-paid director in Hollywood, her works now all but forgotten
9 votes -
The history of Android
9 votes -
A brief history of saved games
6 votes -
Revolutionary War fighting ended in 1781. The last shots exploded two months ago.
10 votes -
POLYBIUS - The video game that doesn't exist
11 votes