

遠い空の向こうに
"宇宙に思いを馳せた少年の夢。それは、ロケットを飛ばすこと!"
Trailer
Overview
1957年10月、ソ連が人類初の人工衛星スプートニクの打ち上げに成功した。ウエスト・ヴァージニア州の炭坑の町コールウッドで、その美しい軌跡を見ていた青年ホーマーは、自らの手でロケットを打ち上げたいと思い、級友3人とともに本格的なロケットづくりにとりかかった。
製作費: $25,000,000 (38億円)
興行収入: $34,698,685 (52億円)
純利益: $9,698,685 (15億円)
配信サービス
Cast
Reviews / 口コミ
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TMDB ユーザーの口コミ
<em>'October Sky'</em> got me in the feels. I tend to (unintentionally) be a bit of a hardnose when it comes to fiction (even if a biopic) making an impact, but it does occasionally happen and this is one of those times. Weirdly too, because it is cheesy/cliché/whatever, but it worked tremendously for me. I felt my heartstrings tug a fair number of times throughout, culminating with those lovely final few scenes; I was actually welling up, would you believe? Any longer and tears may have been shed <i>*shudder*</i>. I've basically only seen one movie this last month - what has the break done to me?! Humour aside, I did love this though. I've said it before, but to be honest if you give me what I consider to be great cast performances then I'm practically sold on the film upon that coming to fruition. Jake Gyllenhaal is terrific (this still doesn't surpass <em>'Source Code'</em>, mind) as lead. Chris Cooper is ace, as are Laura Dern and Natalie Canerday. Chris Owen (Sherminator!), Chad Lindberg (Jesse!) and William Lee Scott (eh... well, Roy Lee as of now!) are good supports to Gyllenhaal as well. Even the likes of Elya Baskin and Randy Stripling add needed small bits. The music is good too, especially towards the end; early on it kinda goes with what I said about the flick being a tad cheesy and/or cliché. I would describe the movie as that to be frank, but that is more endearing than anything else. I'm fine with those things if it works, which it pleasantly does here. Joe Johnston really went back-to-back with this and <em>'Jumanji'</em>. Impressive!



























