Share:

Facebook
X
Pinterest
LinkedIn

Category: Fiction
Reviewed by: Ken Murphy
Adapted from Ken’s Out of the Cradle website with permission
Title: The Astronaut Farmer
Actors: Billy Bob Thornton, Virginia Madsen
Director: Michael Polish
NSS Amazon link for this DVD
Format: DVD
Run Time: 104 minutes
Studio: Warner Home Video
DVD Release Date: July 10, 2007
ASIN: B00005JPLE

One of the perquisites of being a member of a space organization like the National Space Society is that often we get invites to special events not available to the general public. This was how some members of the North Texas chapter, of which I am a member, got to see The Astronaut Farmer before it was released to the general public.

Astronaut Charles Farmer had to put aside his childhood dream of spaceflight after his father killed himself and Charlie had to return home to assume the note on the family ranch. We’re introduced to Charlie while he’s out rounding up a stray calf while trying out his new (old) spacesuit. We quickly meet his kids, Shepard, Stanley, and Sunshine, as well as his wife ‘Audie’ who works at the local restaurant in the tiny one-light town of Story, TX. Or has he put aside his dream?

It turns out the man is building a Mercury-Atlas rocket in his barn, just like the one that sent the first Americans into orbit. This is the real deal, fine American milling and the works. He’s spent years building it, and is nearing completion, but the real world keeps intruding. He’s getting behind in the mortgage on the ranch. Members of the local community start questioning his sanity. When he starts sniffing into buying the rocket fuel, the Feds decide to take a look at what’s going on down in Texas.

Well, you know how us small-town Texas types are (pre-Dell Round Rock, myself), when self-important types from the coasts start getting pushy, we start getting a little…testy, or feisty, or otherwise gettin’ our hackles up. The pressures keep mounting, and how can a man have faith in himself when no one else seems to believe in him?

But he’s an American, and liberty is his birthright. He’s done no wrong. If he gives up his dreams, what will his children have to look up to? Can Charlie live with being a failure to his children the way his father was to him? Can the power of love conquer all?

This is a solid, meat & potatoes, middle-American, red-blooded, real person movie. A lot of the characters have less-than-perfect teeth. The women are pretty, but not necessarily Hollywood gorgeous. The characters have real-world problems to work through, and it reminded me in many ways of October Sky. This is a solid story-telling movie about a man building a rocket, not just for himself or his dream, but to show his children the heights they can achieve if they are strong and work hard, one of the deepest cultural values here in the U.S. I’ll definitely be adding the DVD to my extensive Lunar Library.

The movie was still good the second time around.

© 2006 Kenneth Murphy

Ken Murphy is an investment analyst and underwriter for a private bank in the Dallas area and was co-chair of NSS’s 2007 International Space Development Conference.

Please use the NSS Amazon Link for all your book and other purchases. It helps NSS and does not cost you a cent! Bookmark this link for ALL your Amazon shopping!

NSS Book Reviews Index

Share:

Facebook
X
Pinterest
LinkedIn
Picture of By Jim Plaxco

By Jim Plaxco

Leave a Comment

Search
Categories
future 1

Don't Miss a Beat!

Be the first to know when new articles are posted!

Follow Us On Social Media

JOIN THE
GREATEST ADVENTURE

Give The Gift Of Space: Membership For Friends and Family

Book Review

Archives


Hilton McLean Tysons Corner, McLean, Virginia
June 4 - 7, 2026

Recent Blog Posts

By Burt Dicht NSS Managing Director of Membership Image: Crew-12 emerges from the Operations & Checkout Building at KSC, as they prepare for the drive

The National Space Society invites you to two Space Forums Scroll down for the second Forum with Astronaut Greg Chamitoff Separate registrations for each Forum

By Burt Dicht NSS Managing Director of Membership Early in my career as an aerospace engineer at Northrop, I had the rare opportunity to be

Opinion By Burt Dicht NSS Managing Director of Membership Image: Artemis II and Full Moonrise, Feb. 1, 2026; photo by Burt Dicht Last week, I

Join the In-Space Physical AI Workshop on February 11–12, 2026, at The Ion in Houston. Organized by Rice Nexus with partners including NASA, Purdue, and

By Burton Dicht NSS Managing Director of Membership On the morning of January 28, 1986, I had just left a design review. At the time,

Nye Passes the Torch to Jennifer Vaughan After 15 Years Leading the Organization Photo of Bill Nye courtesy The Planetary Society After 15 years of

“We’re looking for amazing business plans that address some part of the human expansion into space.” — Isaac Arthur, NSS President The National Space Society’s

Your Doorway to New Worlds