Space Cadets
Space Cadets
| 07 December 2005 (USA)
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    Reviews
    Stoutor

    It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.

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    Lidia Draper

    Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.

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    Taha Avalos

    The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

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    Skyler

    Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.

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    Jackson Booth-Millard

    For a short reality show type programme, this was a pretty essential thing to see. Basically they take nine ordinary members of the public, and the producers and Johnny Vaughn are going to convince them that they are going to Russia to become astronauts. Three people also joining these nine are three actors to make sure nothing goes wrong. After at least a week or so of training the four chosen, one being an actor, are made to think they are really going to space for a little while. When it is all over and they have experienced no weightlessness (they were told why) they finally found out it was all fake. The three that were genuine were pretty gutted, amused and obviously gullible. Good!

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    churchofsunshine

    The simple concept behind this show is to grab a bunch of Reality TV wannabes, don't tell them exactly what show it is they've applied to be on, weed out all the people with half a brain, and tell the people that are left that the Russians are two years ahead of Richard Branson in the Space Tourism business, and that four of the lucky "contestants" will win the chance to become the United Kingdom's first ever "space tourists" and get a trip on "Earth Orbiter One" into outer space.Those of you reading this with half a brain will probably already be aware that this has to be a hoax, and you are quite right. The would be "cadets" are fooled into thinking they have been flown to Russia for 3 weeks "training", when in fact they haven't even left the UK, and that "Space Orbiter One" is actually a simulator prop left over from the Clint Eastwood movie "Space Cowboys". The question is, how far can Edemomol (the people behind "Big Brother") and Channel Four push their luck before the "cadets" cotton on and realise they've been had? There are certainly plenty of "plot holes" within the program, which begins its ten episode run by giving us some idea of how the producers converted a disused American airbase in Suffolk into a Russian space facility by cleverly changing all the plug sockets and sticking up Russian signage everywhere and going on a shopping trip to Moscow to buy up genuine Russian products such as shampoo, tampons and toilet paper. Actors were hired to play Russian guards and space lecturers, with one of the few concessions to reality being to hire "Val", a genuine former KGB agent and fitness expert to put the "cadets" through their paces. "Hang on a moment.." I can hear you saying, space travel takes a lot longer than three weeks to prepare for, and what about weightlessness in space and zero gravity? How are they going to simulate that? That's why they were very selective in who they picked for this show in the first place. The "cadets" are told that they are not going into "outer space", but are in fact going into "inner space" on the outer edges of the atmosphere, and that in any case, the ship has been fitted with "artifical gravity generators". Rather surprisingly, these "cadets" brought this story without question, along with many others along the way - 80% of what they were told was true, but about 20% was complete bulls**t. White Lycra bodysuits were purchased from fetish-wear and sex shops and presented to the "cadets" as genuine space-wear, and they were told that the Russian city of Minsk was named after a pioneering space monkey called "Minsky". Just to make sure that there weren't too many doubts among the "cadets", three actors were planted among their number very early on with instructions to help dispel any doubts the contestants might have and try and convince them it is all real.Having chosen the four lucky "winners" (actually three contestants and one of the actors), they launch off into space for a five-day mission and 24/7 "Big Brother" style live coverage, which rather inevitably includes a number of fake "tasks" (or experiments) designed to help liven up an otherwise boring space mission. As gullible as ever, the cadets became convinced that it is possible to generate electricity in space by way of a kiwi fruit! The final insult came with a fake funeral for a fictitious Russian TV dog actor called "Mr Bimby" and a hopelessly staged "accident" with the ashes resulting in a dust-buster being used to clean up the mess. By this point, the "cadets" had already started to wise up. Presenter Johnny Vaughn moved in not long after and revealed the hoax. It's hard not to feel sorry for them in some ways, but for each day they spent in "space", each contestant earned £5K (£25K each) and they will actually be taken to Russia for real and receive the next best thing to a real space-flight, a trip up on the "vomit comet" aircraft that NASA and Russia use for their real space-training of astronauts. At the end of the day then, the "cadets" did quite well out of this show, even if the viewing figures on C4 were a complete disaster. This show definitely had its moments. I quite enjoyed it. 7/10

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