Man and the Moon 1955 DISNEYLAND CARTOON (FULL)

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AceBoogyStacks

AceBoogyStacks

Күн бұрын

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Contains copyrighted material, the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. I have determined this to be "fair use" of the copyrighted material as referenced and provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law
space, history, educational/entertainment

Пікірлер: 580
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
Mars and Beyond @ kzbin.info/www/bejne/qHm2d5ePa856r5o
@JamesSimmons-d1t
@JamesSimmons-d1t Ай бұрын
Science fantasy. We may send a few to Mars...they cannot come back alive. Remember, Musk is insane, delusional racist.
@RaikenXion
@RaikenXion Ай бұрын
The *Truth* is so much darker than people realize here. America's "Space Program" was shut down purposefully because advanced technology was kept hidden away from the American Public, and the US Deep State did not want to share anything with their "enemies" the Soviets. It's why JFK got took out, he was thinking of the bigger picture here, about *Humanity*. About ending war with neighbours and working toward a joint endeavour into Space. Even Von Braun eventually learned the truth, that the *Kabal* the Deep State will use everyone and anyone, he dreamed of Mankind reaching Mars. He even wrote a sci fi story where the main character was called - "Elon" and went on to lead a new Kingdom on Mars.
@RaikenXion
@RaikenXion Ай бұрын
The "Moon Landings" were filmed secretly by Stanley Kubrick, but the Astronauts did go to the Moon, just not the way the public were led to believe. This is why Aldrin, Armstrong those Astronauts appeared nervous at that press briefing. The technology is far advanced than just Nuclear powered "Space Rockets". The Nazis worked in some very dark Science, Satanic things when splitting the atom. Von Braun knew about this. The Russians got most those scientists during Paperclip; the US got the best of the bunch.
@kevinmichaelcallihansr5053
@kevinmichaelcallihansr5053 Ай бұрын
THANK YOU KINDLY, WONDERFUL WARD KIMBALL AND ALL CAST AND CREW 10 RATING CALSON ASSOCIATES CIRCA 1920 🐬🐬🐬🐬🐬🐬7 FUN FOR ALL AUDIENCES.
@kevinmichaelcallihansr5053
@kevinmichaelcallihansr5053 Ай бұрын
Thank you kindly while reading about favorite writers of President Jimmy Carter: on scientific subjects was Stephen Jay Gould, "most enjoyable" Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History. Wonderful visuals and audio is exceptional, thanks again because I should enjoying the descriptions noted at birth 1955 LV fun we enter Life innocent without sin. Mankind film history depicts a better side of science because of WALT DISNEY and Cast and Crew here noted as a template of strategy architectural designers who understand a vacuum where we do not breathe nor are we alien to the ideas about how space travel allows writers to entertain Utopia exploring adventurers JACK AND TOOTOTABON air breathing monkey and a chicken. Great content! 🐬
@Anthony-ik2dw
@Anthony-ik2dw Ай бұрын
Who remembers watching Mutual of Omaha's wild Kingdom
@danielvain
@danielvain Ай бұрын
I do. It was wild.
@bozhijak
@bozhijak Ай бұрын
While Marlin Perkins was getting hammered in the up armored range rover, Jim Fowler was wrestling a gorilla. Memories.
@PRH123
@PRH123 Ай бұрын
Yes just before Disney every Sunday. It was one of the few shows that we were allowed to watch as kids.
@CSB3747
@CSB3747 Ай бұрын
There was also a Hanna-Barbera live-action/animated show The New Adventures of Huck Finn around the same time slot in the late sixties. Had Ted Cassidy (Lurch) as Injun Joe.
@RichardSmith-q1h
@RichardSmith-q1h Ай бұрын
same night as Lassie
@trinnis42
@trinnis42 Ай бұрын
It feels like I'm back in the 8th grade in my homeroom class on a rainy day. We walk in and the lights are off and there is a 16mm projector set-up in the back of the room. This is the film we see.
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
We only got bill nye
@roncatdog
@roncatdog Ай бұрын
@@AceBoogyStacks Bill knows his science. He is currently CEO of The Planetary Society and has a degree from Cornell, where he took a course taught by Carl Sagan.
@marklauzon186
@marklauzon186 Ай бұрын
Wow....awesome recollection! I used to love our Filmstrips on History. Filmstrips....😂😂. I haven't written THAT word in 50yrs or more!!!!
@mitchelldakelman7006
@mitchelldakelman7006 Ай бұрын
Two other classics were OUR FRIEND THE ATOM and DONALD IN MATHMAGIC LAND
@AngelCatBaby
@AngelCatBaby Ай бұрын
I was about 8 years old when I first seen this one …. Takes me back with my parents and an old black n white TV set and with only two stations to choose from, no fighting over what’s being watched, just toss a coin overhead…..🤣
@GinoACosta
@GinoACosta Ай бұрын
I was born MANY years after this, and after Star Trek as well. This is so very much more intelligent and educational than "modern" Disney, it's unbelievable! Even today, this movie makes me believe in the future, and what Man could accomplish if we stopped all the pathetic arguing, and actually worked together. Even though it's all done "manually" here without computers, this is very advanced stuff. How we have fallen since then, and especially, how Disney has fallen. All I can say, things have gotten so sad lately. Walt Disney would be so disappointed!
@michaelricketson1365
@michaelricketson1365 25 күн бұрын
Yes! Artistic production should return to this type of vision and creativity and intellectual wonder.
@teresahiggs4896
@teresahiggs4896 24 күн бұрын
I was born in the mid 1960’s……and we have de evolved, gone backwards in so many ways. We have made the mistake of just going ahead wirh the latest “ gee whiz “ new technology workout considering its negative effects . Look now smartphones have both helped us but created people who are obcessed wirh the internet, children who don’t play outside much anymore….. it isolates us from our neighbors ,…….
@GinoACosta
@GinoACosta 24 күн бұрын
@@teresahiggs4896 There's really no valid reason why smartphones should stop kids and others from going outside, etc. I'm also born in the mid 60's, I'm a total nerd, I have a cell phone, and I never thought to myself that I ought to stay locked inside
@an-tm3250
@an-tm3250 22 күн бұрын
Don't be so sure. Disney was a 33° m@$on.
@milliewoo337
@milliewoo337 18 күн бұрын
AMEN my friend. You succinctly described the point I’ve been aching about for years. “Modern” children’s entertainment treats the viewer like a receptacle for flat, ideologically saturated and morally simplistic nothing-burgers with no spiritual (I mean, the human spirit- esprit de corps) content. A human being needs to DREAM- not be lectured or spoon-fed. This film challenges the spirit of a person to dream of what can be possible with hope and drive. Completely foreign to today’s (Western) media!
@snowysnowyriver
@snowysnowyriver 27 күн бұрын
Wonderful relic of the days when the name Disney was worthy of respect.
@donkeyslayer9879
@donkeyslayer9879 20 күн бұрын
Not anymore.
@OublietteTight
@OublietteTight 17 күн бұрын
How ironic that this studio now owns Star Wars.
@donkeyslayer9879
@donkeyslayer9879 17 күн бұрын
@@OublietteTight and ruined it beyond belief.
@donkeyslayer9879
@donkeyslayer9879 17 күн бұрын
@@OublietteTight and ruined it beyond belief.
@pharmerdavid1432
@pharmerdavid1432 6 күн бұрын
Disney was a 33rd degree Freemason and pedophile already, and his cartoons and "tellLIEvision" mind-control programming was already pushing fake scientism on the infantilized masses, with Nazi war criminal Werner Von Braun helping - even after he worked thousands of people to death in his Nazi weapons programs, and killed thousands with his rockets.
@timothystephendarlow3658
@timothystephendarlow3658 Ай бұрын
Von Braun's design for the space station is pretty much the design for the station in 2000 Space Odyssey, with an explanation of artificial gravity control and including the space pod vehicle with articulating arms. Not surprisingly Kubrick had clearly seen this Disney doc film, but it would interesting to know how much of the fine detail was furnished directly by NASA.
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
probably in credits of 2001 somewhere
@shuntguy
@shuntguy Ай бұрын
I love how they plant the seed of an unknown base on the moon.
@Top10WizardReviews
@Top10WizardReviews Ай бұрын
That seed would have been planted in literature that predates this by quite a bit.
@fredericklmeade2947
@fredericklmeade2947 Ай бұрын
Our technology may be new, much of which is a direct outgrowth from the NASA space program. What is being worked on today are plans are merely being taken back off the shelf - in whole or in part - and dusted off now that a decision has been made to devote the resources to them. They were shelved by Richard Nixon in a very conscious (and ultimately exorbitantly expensive) decision to nullify the legacy of John Kennedy, a man and an administration that Nixon utterly loathed.
@plateshutoverlock
@plateshutoverlock Ай бұрын
This was unexpected and unsettling, and not something I would expect in a film basically selling us a grand vision of the then future. The high radiation reading and what appears to be some artificial structure though it's never refered to such in the dialog nor do we see the astronauts mention anything about it to their commanders. It reminded me of an urban legend I heard years ago that astronauts while going around the dark side of the moon received a message to never return to that area. Of course, that one should be taken with a whole silo's worth of salt.
@shuntguy
@shuntguy Ай бұрын
@@plateshutoverlock Quite unusual for a film made by Disney starring von Braun. They show the base then never mention it again. Who's base is it and why is on the far side? The is a transcript of Apollo 10 orbiting the moon and hearing "music" on the far side.
@mardus_ee
@mardus_ee Ай бұрын
​@@plateshutoverlockThe timestamp for what's being discussed, is at 45:10, 'high geiger count readings' and an 'unusual formation'.
@DMBall
@DMBall Ай бұрын
I have to believe Stanley Kubrick paid close attention to this film when he was preparing "2001."
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 Ай бұрын
Kubrick was never creative, everything he did was derivative and refined with so much detail the mind prefers a Kubrick reality to reality.
@IULIUSLXIX
@IULIUSLXIX 28 күн бұрын
For sure. Awesome take 👍
@AbelMcTalisker
@AbelMcTalisker 20 күн бұрын
He had Arthur C Clarke advising him. When this was made Clarke was at his most productive as a writer of both science fiction and fact. Its interesting how each of the components of Von Braun`s scenario was eventually built but at some point the way everything was supposed to fit together got forgotten about. But this was 1955, two years later getting to the moon fast before somebody else did became more of a priority.
@donkeyslayer9879
@donkeyslayer9879 20 күн бұрын
I don't.
@Ingaevones33
@Ingaevones33 12 күн бұрын
@@genuineappeal3458yeah you drank the kool aid..Anyone who speaks out against the satanic Judaea-centric worldview is always bashed into pieces..I see you soaked it on,real good.
@tomobedlam297
@tomobedlam297 27 күн бұрын
I never realised how much dramatic music there is in space! 😯
@danielvain
@danielvain Ай бұрын
I about lost it all when the astronauts used that rotary-phone-dial for whatever reason they were supposedly using it for. 😄😆🤣
@phil2u48
@phil2u48 Ай бұрын
… accessing the computer, of all things. 😂 I thought the bank of little metal switches was equally 1950’s.
@danielvain
@danielvain Ай бұрын
@@phil2u48 that's right, accessing the computer, thanks for the reminder. The bank of metal switches makes me think of some dialogue in "Airplane II: The Sequel" when it is being discussed that there are "no levers, just switches, lights and knobs."
@wordwalkermomma4
@wordwalkermomma4 16 күн бұрын
Also the president of the United States… RMN.
@RussellBauwens
@RussellBauwens Ай бұрын
What a great production! I miss the days when The World of Disney was something a person could trust, admire, and believe! I grew up watching these sorts of productions and my imagination soared and there was just SO much hope for the future, who wouldn't want to go into outer-space and explore after seeing such a film??!! I honestly forgot what year it actually is right now, watching this film took me back to a much-better time and once again I experienced the hope that the future and science offered back then. Thank you SO much for downloading and sharing this marvelous time-capsule!!
@tr7938
@tr7938 Ай бұрын
I'm detecting whining.
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
Its definitely up elsewhere just trying something new and getting some stuff off my CPU
@Nedchilvs
@Nedchilvs Ай бұрын
@@tr7938 I guess the guy has taste. These shows were class unlike the modern Disney rubbish that they churn out to appeal to minorities
@ansumanahargett6227
@ansumanahargett6227 Ай бұрын
@@AceBoogyStacks How nice
@PaulNelson980
@PaulNelson980 Ай бұрын
Sad who far they have gone downhill.
@stickplayer2
@stickplayer2 Ай бұрын
Wow, Werner von Braun himself appears in this.
@jamesflake6601
@jamesflake6601 29 күн бұрын
Him and Walt Disney worked together
@Stroopwaffe1
@Stroopwaffe1 18 күн бұрын
25:04 looked like Starship lol.
@timebot000
@timebot000 16 күн бұрын
how they put true stories in cartoons❤
@JeremiahSchreffler
@JeremiahSchreffler 14 күн бұрын
​@@jamesflake6601 Yah cuz they are both masons... Notice the 33 degree "radioactive" ancient abandoned city on the darkside of the moon .. Then what's up with the black and white movie saying she's gonna escape to America during the reign of Henry 8th... Crazy ass shit.
@Ingaevones33
@Ingaevones33 12 күн бұрын
The great Werner Avon Braun..
@shabbysnubtide3339
@shabbysnubtide3339 Ай бұрын
The people watching this show when it debuted would not believe that just 13 short years later this trip would happen for real. What would be even more unbelievable is that our trips to the moon would continue for only 4 short years and more than half a century after that we still would not have returned.
@pylgrym
@pylgrym Ай бұрын
We will never return. Watch "Apollo 18".
@JamesSimmons-d1t
@JamesSimmons-d1t Ай бұрын
No rational reason to go back. When coal is gone, no geosynchronous satellites. No machines at all. Oil/gas gone sooner...about a century.
@paradisebird7108
@paradisebird7108 Ай бұрын
Yes agree all *unbelievable* but so many adult children.
@artieeffham355
@artieeffham355 Ай бұрын
@@pylgrym Not a documentary.
@xofpi
@xofpi Ай бұрын
And Werner Von Braun’s fantasy played no role in it.
@privateprivate1865
@privateprivate1865 Ай бұрын
Ty very much for uploading. Please never remove this cartoon❤
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
@privateprivate1865 it should be up somewhere if you know what you're looking for, bunch of others on my 2nd channel youtube.com/@rudzenterprises
@privateprivate1865
@privateprivate1865 Ай бұрын
@@AceBoogyStacks ty. Peace
@MichaelMencher-h7i
@MichaelMencher-h7i Ай бұрын
Time Warp! Excellent classic Disneyland! 🤗🏰
@andrewwilliams9599
@andrewwilliams9599 Ай бұрын
Assistant Director: Robert Justman. I wonder if he found this experience useful when working on Star Trek.
@Glenn-m1t
@Glenn-m1t Ай бұрын
When i was a kid I had a crush on Tinkerbell!!!!
@JayDee-x2b
@JayDee-x2b 23 күн бұрын
A silent woman is definitely fiction
@longrider42
@longrider42 Ай бұрын
I watched this more years ago then I like to think. It brings back memories. I think I even did the moon ride way back in the day. I miss those days.
@gruntherblendin388
@gruntherblendin388 Ай бұрын
Remember how the seat cushions deflated during take-off? It felt kinda real for a few seconds at least.
@tortysoft
@tortysoft Ай бұрын
Remarkable. The methods used here are more advanced that what was actually used, also they are in advance of today !We do not use a space station as a staging post, but we don't power everything with reactors that need shielding on a pole !
@Lee90000
@Lee90000 27 күн бұрын
Great video. This was before they destroyed Disney.
@an-tm3250
@an-tm3250 22 күн бұрын
Before Disney made contact with entities and went $@t@nic.
@goodfriend3
@goodfriend3 21 күн бұрын
Did you not see the immodest images?? Also, what does Disney have to do with traveling to outer space?? They were used to fabricate the lie? Curious how God wasn't mentioned at all in the creation of earth. They are $at@ni(. Simple as that. Terrible how many innocent mind were indoctrinated by their l!e$.
@goodfriend3
@goodfriend3 21 күн бұрын
The images were all immodest. Indoctrination at its earliest conception.
@donkeyslayer9879
@donkeyslayer9879 20 күн бұрын
Disney did that to themselves. No they needed.
@herelieskittythomas3726
@herelieskittythomas3726 6 күн бұрын
Walt was in love with a minor male child actor. Disney has always been corrupt.
@gregor_man
@gregor_man 22 күн бұрын
If I had seen this when I was a child, I would have been confused by the beauty. I had a brilliant book, written by Pavel Klushantsev, called To Other Planets (1959). He explained space travel and the moon landing to children, I loved it, of course I wanted to be an astronaut too. This Disney movie would have ignited my imagination even more, it was amazing. I don't know how much von Braun believed in what he told us here, the reality later turned out to be completely different, but this reverie was fascinating.
@smokeynedith3555
@smokeynedith3555 28 күн бұрын
I miss programs like these. 1955 was the year of my birth.
@LeeWallace-oz3wg
@LeeWallace-oz3wg 24 күн бұрын
I'm a 1955 kid too. Future world for us was bright and magical. Now the kids think of the future as bleak. All the space stuff was a big deal. Not just the Star Teck, but I Dream of Jeannie, Lost in Space, the Jetsons, and I'm probably forgetting a few. As a kid, Disney was "safe on base."
@robertpage2023
@robertpage2023 Ай бұрын
I remember seeing these when they were on for the first time. The one about life on other planets was GREAT! The Disney Imagineers were so good at what they did. Also, the sports epics that were MCed by Goofy were exceptional. Professor Ludvig Von Drake also did a bunch of them. The weekly after school Mickey Mouse Club with its special serial series like "Spin & Marty" or the "Hardy Boys' Mysteries, The Treasure of Applegate" were wonderful. And who could forget the Georgous Annette full of Jello. "Texas John Slaughter" "Zorro" "The Swamp Fox" Some of the lesser known series were, "Micky's torture chamber" "Lassie marries Rin Tin Tin" "Goofy's Commitment" And who could forget................."Annette Gets Sand In Her WHOO HAAA"
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
hard to track down the right ones but they're out there, thanks for stopping by kzbin.info/www/bejne/qHm2d5ePa856r5o
@Rayman1971
@Rayman1971 Ай бұрын
I remember Ludwig von Drake did "Pacifically Peeking" about the Pacific Ocean!
@jeffbybee5207
@jeffbybee5207 28 күн бұрын
Lassie marries rin tin tin??? Really???
@ventiankraus777
@ventiankraus777 10 күн бұрын
Very educational and entertaining for those that enjoy the study of propaganda or for those that can't tell the difference between propaganda and entertainment.
@pauliedibbs9028
@pauliedibbs9028 28 күн бұрын
Greatest sci-fi documentary ever!
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks 28 күн бұрын
check out youtube.com/@RUDZenterprises for more randomness
@Peeky_blinder3.14
@Peeky_blinder3.14 17 күн бұрын
69 was better
@UtahGmaw99
@UtahGmaw99 18 күн бұрын
I went on that rocket ride when I was 5 years old. I was so happy to be in Disneyland. It was the 1950's and all things space was the big thing back then.
@IULIUSLXIX
@IULIUSLXIX 28 күн бұрын
This is a piece of art 😮❤. Disney back in the days was truly magical. Education via cartoons. This is needed this days.
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks 28 күн бұрын
but actual artwork not computer generated nonsense
@alexcarter8807
@alexcarter8807 Ай бұрын
Space travel in 1955 looking a lot better than in 2025
@dcmacnamara6014
@dcmacnamara6014 Ай бұрын
Your comment is rayciss!
@lilblackduc7312
@lilblackduc7312 Ай бұрын
DEI will keep it well 'grounded'.
@dakotanorth1640
@dakotanorth1640 26 күн бұрын
Pretty cool sci-fi. Thanks for a trip back to what might have been.
@frankquevedo6001
@frankquevedo6001 Ай бұрын
I thought I watched all the Great Disney programs, 1960’s through early 1970’s. Fortunately I was wrong. This “Moon shot,” story was extremely entertaining. Though our moon experience didn’t happen this way. Nonetheless, it was FUN VIEWING!
@alexcarter8807
@alexcarter8807 Ай бұрын
Wait a minute, I saw a documentary on this, called "The Reluctant Astronaut" with Don Knotts. It's great.
@destonlee2838
@destonlee2838 19 күн бұрын
This is legit the inspiration for NASA, WHICH WAS FOUNDED IN 1958
@Rubbi-rv1mn
@Rubbi-rv1mn 10 күн бұрын
Is his name Adam a Libra very strategic okay thank you ❤
@macsnafu
@macsnafu Ай бұрын
Obviously, NASA needed music like this to make the actual moon shots more dramatic! Not to mention colorful and dramatic lighting.
@softdorothy
@softdorothy Ай бұрын
Dick Tufeld providing narration on the live sequences - ten years before his work on "Lost in Space".
@tortysoft
@tortysoft Ай бұрын
Most of the historical Moon stories and sayings never made it to the UK. Very odd. This is the first I have heard of them !
@AbelMcTalisker
@AbelMcTalisker 20 күн бұрын
This was one of Disney`s tv progammes from the 1950`s and at that point the only tv programming was provided by the BBC who didn`t buy much from the USA, preferring to make their own content. I actually remember seeing this at school on a cine projector in the 1960`s so some of us in the UK DID see this, though a bit dated by then as we all knew about Apollo. The "When Knighthood Was in Bloom" advert for the next episode is interesting as that was actually a UK made film called "The Sword and The Rose", made in 1953 with Disney funding and had been seen in the cinemas prior to this, in the UK at any rate. I think it did appear in this form in Disney`s "Wonderful World of Colour" series which we DID get in the UK later, from the US perspective that must have been a re-run.
@creditcard1243
@creditcard1243 Ай бұрын
Ah the days when Disney was enjoyable to watch. Nowadays they're pushing their woke BS onto kids I refuse to support these anti-family policies
@PapaDutch
@PapaDutch Ай бұрын
Comparing early speculation such as this to what is now accepted fact is a rare look into how we were thinking back then... Which led to our current state of technology The power of curiousity is amazing, matched only by our creativety
@davidkent2804
@davidkent2804 27 күн бұрын
Why is this more compelling than modern entertainment? It is so dated and hokey, full of inaccuracies and impracticalities known to be obvious at the time. It was so easy to believe. The world of that time guaranteed a lot and covered up much, so as not to spoil the illusion. Yet, it seems better for my mental health to relive this material as opposed to anything current. I think it might be lack of cynicism. I can't think of any recent entertainment that isn't infected with a whopping dose of that, plus a measure of futility and angst.
@mydogbrian4814
@mydogbrian4814 Ай бұрын
> I was 9 years old watching this on TV back then. __Not knowing that a space race would begain 2 years later with the Russian launching of Sputnik-1 into orbit. - And that trip around the moon was actualy made by *Apollo 8* __13 years later, without the need for a giant wheeled space station.
@alexcarter8807
@alexcarter8807 Ай бұрын
I love it when I look up and see a teeny little sliver of moon. But when there's an eclipse, I can see the moon's just a big dumb rock. So it's the sunlight on the moon that makes it special.
@CowboyRobot2000
@CowboyRobot2000 Ай бұрын
My god... How far Disney has fallen from the glory days this film came from. Walt would be sick and enraged if he saw what his creation has become.
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 Ай бұрын
Have you seen the Acolyte? what a difference from 1955
@CowboyRobot2000
@CowboyRobot2000 Ай бұрын
@@genuineappeal3458 It was shit.
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 28 күн бұрын
@@CowboyRobot2000 The power of one, the power of two, the power of many
@hollyhatch1055
@hollyhatch1055 Ай бұрын
Unbelievable UNBELIEVABLE I remember watching this when i was little
@gerardosalazar161
@gerardosalazar161 Ай бұрын
Disneyland! My favorite program ever, full of fantasy, adventure and trips to space. That was, like fairy tales begin: “in a small, town, many years ago there live a young boy who liked to dream….”
@U812-k7j
@U812-k7j 10 күн бұрын
There's more science in this cartoon than what kids today are being taught
@pharmerdavid1432
@pharmerdavid1432 6 күн бұрын
This is nonsense, not science - you must be joking?
@samnuckolls4166
@samnuckolls4166 18 күн бұрын
That was better than everything on TV now!
@guguineo
@guguineo 27 күн бұрын
45:20 there is something on the moon terrain! . . . Nice and no comments ever more . . .very nice
@duudsuufd
@duudsuufd 23 күн бұрын
First conspiracy! They don't want the world to know about it.
@johndeaton7968
@johndeaton7968 Ай бұрын
Back at a time when you used to actually learn something while watching a cartoon
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 Ай бұрын
Today the kids get to learn about pride parades and gender affirmation care. Back then, TV knew nothing about that super duper important stuff.
@unclevictoroski1
@unclevictoroski1 15 күн бұрын
I remember the rocket to the moon ride in Tomorrowland in the 50s and 60s. Those photos of the backside of the Moon look very familiar to me 😊
@firouz256
@firouz256 Ай бұрын
The lighting in this makes more sense than in most AI generated movie scenes today!
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
They don't make em like they used to
@ansumanahargett6227
@ansumanahargett6227 Ай бұрын
Some of these old Disney cartoons are very educational
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
Got a bunch but only handful on interesting topics www.youtube.com/@rudzenterprises
@0therun1t21
@0therun1t21 4 күн бұрын
I wish I could have visited Tomorrowland back in the 50s and 60s. Retrofuture style is so cool! I love optimistic science fiction too. I didn't even know that's what it was called but that was the first keyword I tried when I was looking for it, I'm so happy a lot of other people are on the same page as me with it. There can never be another era like it. I love the idea of the moon's shadow as a bridge. I heard our blood also goes around in our bodies 3x a minute, interesting. That was wonderful, thank you!
@MichaelCairns-fv2vi
@MichaelCairns-fv2vi 24 күн бұрын
The heavy germanic accent of the rocket narrator ..oh well THEY were the first.
@kennyhagan5781
@kennyhagan5781 28 күн бұрын
I haven't seen this before, but I have a lot of catching up to do with Disney anyway.
@jeanneratterman4174
@jeanneratterman4174 4 күн бұрын
Science, myths, cultures, music, literature, history. The whole magilla in mostly animated form. Wonderful!
@jacobsockness571
@jacobsockness571 Ай бұрын
Even that far back, they knew about the ruins on the Moon.
@javiercortes5232
@javiercortes5232 Ай бұрын
I vaguely remember to have a kit model (Revell) of that moon ship, but white
@alecwilliams7111
@alecwilliams7111 Ай бұрын
Disney was one of the reasons that the 1950's were "The Golden Age f Television." The Disney commitment to quality is one thing, but add imagination to that. This program is also an historical document of a more visionary and optimistic era in American history. (PS: I saw this in black and white when it was first broadcast).
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
studio ghibli stuff cool too but yeah I prefer this and original looney toons/road runner stuff. and tex avery
@fredericklmeade2947
@fredericklmeade2947 Ай бұрын
We are, in fact, in a new Golden Age of Television with a large number of excellent, cinema feature quality productions available by cable or streaming media, produced in the U.S., Canada and abroad. There is a huge amount of dross, but there was then too. (Look through the television and movie listings of a newspaper from those decades to see how bad it could be.) People don’t tend to remember the bad stuff (and because it was poor quality it doesn’t tend to be rebroadcast) or if they do recall it, they sentimentalize it as at least being “from a better time.”
@fredericklmeade2947
@fredericklmeade2947 Ай бұрын
It’s impressive that Disney spent the money to produce this in color, which was a much, much more expensive medium to use and with relatively few television viewers able to see it in color. Undoubtedly, people would have argued that it was pointless to produce something in color that so few people would even see. I suspect though that, as a futurist, Disney was always considering the value and worth of a production 25 or 50 years later rather than just at that time. Obviously, the SFX are by the technology of the time pretty rudimentary and there are things it gets wrong even based on the knowledge of 1955. (For instance, there is no sound in the virtual vacuum of space. 🤣) However, compared to how badly these futuristic visions usually age, this holds up very, very well by comparison. This is likely due to the fact that much of the vision and plans being dramatized here were shelved in the early 1970s by Richard Nixon’s administration, in no small part in order to intentionally vitiate Kennedy’s legacy. What is being done now is, in many ways, retrieving these plans and picking back up from where we left off. See Dwight Eisenhower’s very ironic farewell address and warning which Americans dd not heed to see where the U.S. decided to put its resources instead.
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 Ай бұрын
Today Americans are obsessed with abortion, transgender access to women's spaces, and moving hostile migrants into the USA.
@AwkwardHistory
@AwkwardHistory Ай бұрын
Ward Kimball was a famous artist and very talented, but he was not well served by the makeup department in this video. The poor man looks like he’s been up for 48 hours.
@rippy4freedom
@rippy4freedom Ай бұрын
I miss these too 😊
@jillgates1340
@jillgates1340 Ай бұрын
Moon is now 238, 000 miles away. It is getting closer. From time of this production 7, 000 miles closer.
@AckzaTV
@AckzaTV 11 күн бұрын
2:25 oh man i wanna see flat earthers react to this guy just telling you "this is the moon" and showing that hand drawn cartoon.
@llamapajama7840
@llamapajama7840 Ай бұрын
God Bless the moon, and God Bless me🌹♥️
@Rubbi-rv1mn
@Rubbi-rv1mn 10 күн бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@LongReachOne
@LongReachOne 22 күн бұрын
Idk it's like this film of going to the moon is way more realistic than the story we're told. Anyone notice the dial-up internet connection? What was that???
@rayrocher6887
@rayrocher6887 27 күн бұрын
thanks Dr. Percy Julian - for creating and developing the pre natal vitamins. i do not have kids. but still hope for the next generation - care for them . amen .
@Rubbi-rv1mn
@Rubbi-rv1mn 10 күн бұрын
❤❤❤ amen 🍏 🌹 whoa that's awesome Lady :)
@plateshutoverlock
@plateshutoverlock Ай бұрын
I don't know if I should be slightly amused or absolutely terrified about the history of what people thought was on the moon. And it's a very short hop to real world atrocities being committed over stuff like this. I think I choose terrified. 😳😨😰
@unicomp5705
@unicomp5705 Ай бұрын
Great vid even today!!!!! ;-)
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
few more www.youtube.com/@RUDZenterprises
@dob691
@dob691 12 күн бұрын
The idea that God didn't create the moon and all the stars was probably the beginning of the downward spiral of Disney.
@deepfriedohiogravy4756
@deepfriedohiogravy4756 12 күн бұрын
Man, this production was just as realistic as Stanley Kubrick's 1969 version!
@herelieskittythomas3726
@herelieskittythomas3726 6 күн бұрын
@Eltonlaleham
@Eltonlaleham Ай бұрын
How I would love to have been born, in the year 1955 instead of been born 14 years later.
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 Ай бұрын
The closer one was born to the year 1954, the more opportunities were presented to them.
@richj120952
@richj120952 Ай бұрын
As one that was about 3 when this was released, it is interesting to see the vision of the technology vs. the reality of it happening in 1969 and the actual way we got there just 14 years later. Then even now the space station concept then vs. now. You have to remember that Wernher Von Braun was captured after working for Hitler in 1945, and sent plenty of V2 rockets into England. We did have our own rocket experts, and frankly didn't need him, but we did hide his affiliations to get his vision, and project leadership. (Via Operation Paperclip.)
@javiercortes5232
@javiercortes5232 Ай бұрын
Operation Paperclip is one of the most disappointing books that I have read in the last tmyrars on the WWII
@AndrewHillis_2024
@AndrewHillis_2024 Ай бұрын
NICE TO SEE WERNHER VON BRAUN IN THIS PRODUCTION ! ! !
@tabascoraremaster1
@tabascoraremaster1 27 күн бұрын
Pure Gold
@h.huffen-puff4105
@h.huffen-puff4105 3 күн бұрын
Very interesting. Disney was special.
@paulcooper8818
@paulcooper8818 Ай бұрын
Now I know where the Artemis Moon mission got its over ambitious inspiration from.
@roystonmason9125
@roystonmason9125 6 күн бұрын
never been to the moon geebs
@Car1Sagan
@Car1Sagan Ай бұрын
The first to circumnavigate the moon were the Soviets and two tortoises were the passengers. They both came back alive to a heros' welcome.
@LuvBorderCollies
@LuvBorderCollies 29 күн бұрын
After the US astronauts planted the US flag on the moon, there was a widespread rumor that the Soviets were going to the moon to take it down. At the time it seemed very plausible given the mental state of Soviet dictators. But it would not have surprised me if they tried to actually do it.
@herelieskittythomas3726
@herelieskittythomas3726 6 күн бұрын
​@@LuvBorderColliesMen have never been on the moons surface. You should know better. There is no flag on the moon.
@herelieskittythomas3726
@herelieskittythomas3726 6 күн бұрын
​@@LuvBorderColliesMen have never been on the moons surface. You should know better. There is no flag on the moon.
@chrisvellner3922
@chrisvellner3922 28 күн бұрын
So we're just not going to talk about the structure they saw on the far side of the Moon...
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman Ай бұрын
Back when _DISNEY_ was _GOOD._
@goodfriend3
@goodfriend3 21 күн бұрын
But still immodest.
@harriettanthony7352
@harriettanthony7352 Ай бұрын
Ahh! The glory years of Disney!
@richardnottelmann58
@richardnottelmann58 9 күн бұрын
This was very cool to watch.
@paulbriggs3072
@paulbriggs3072 Ай бұрын
As I watched Werner Von Braun describe the space station used to get to the moon, I began to laugh out loud and it got worse the further he went!
@GizmoFromPizmo
@GizmoFromPizmo 28 күн бұрын
I think he might have been counting on slaves to build all that like he had back in ze fazerland.
@mikeostrow7051
@mikeostrow7051 13 күн бұрын
Its classic Disney Indoctrination and programming
@genesis7552003
@genesis7552003 16 күн бұрын
79 here but i still liked these kind of entertainment!! Was getting dizzy wen the moon was going around earth but wen i go outside i start spinning again!!
@stevemaas7046
@stevemaas7046 Ай бұрын
The Moon God told the Greeks that there were no women there. And the Greeks said, "That's not really a problem."
@fredericklmeade2947
@fredericklmeade2947 Ай бұрын
Women were seen as baby carriers and nurses, having a social and legal status somewhere between that of slaves and juvenile male offspring, literally called “idiots,” meaning they didn’t vote or have the capacity to engage in civic life. It is a view that is still very much alive and evident in the minds of many today.
@willdatsun
@willdatsun Ай бұрын
Yeah , they had unigoats
@paradisebird7108
@paradisebird7108 Ай бұрын
"What can be, 'Unburdened by what has been' you know?" They had a lot of Wokeness, but their modern avant-garde HELLenistic period did not end well, kind of like the Roman's. Or the civilized USA?
@genuineappeal3458
@genuineappeal3458 Ай бұрын
lmao
@LuvBorderCollies
@LuvBorderCollies 29 күн бұрын
@@paradisebird7108 It ended way worse than the Roman Empire which dwarfed the Greeks in so many ways. Like size, wealth, power, and longevity.
@SarahC2
@SarahC2 15 күн бұрын
It looks more real than the real moon landing!
@nif407
@nif407 6 күн бұрын
No one thinks that it's weird that the moon revolves around the earth exactly 28 days to the minute? Even the Earth doesnt go around the Sun exactly 365 days. But now I see where Ren and Stimpy got their filmography from
@mybachhertzbaud3074
@mybachhertzbaud3074 Ай бұрын
Wasn't it nice that Lucien thought the treasure to be sought was women?🤔
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
who
@mybachhertzbaud3074
@mybachhertzbaud3074 Ай бұрын
View at approximately 5:00 min in.👀
@GeorgeStar
@GeorgeStar Ай бұрын
Naively optimistic. May be in another 70 years.
@fredericklmeade2947
@fredericklmeade2947 Ай бұрын
In a number of mechanical details, yes, but overall, no. It was entirely achievable if given the commitment and resources it required, something that the U.S. as a nation opted both intentionally and tacitly to abandon in favor a massively scaled down program, which became the space shuttle, something that was from its very inception intended to do less with less and save money, but in its conservative, pennywise-and-pound-foolish approach it ended up costing enormously many, many more times what it was supposed to - even in lives.
@jonnyoneplate
@jonnyoneplate Ай бұрын
@@fredericklmeade2947😂
@WaterShowsProd
@WaterShowsProd Ай бұрын
Well, that took some unexpected turns! I know it was for dramatic effect, making them have to use flares and only catching glimpses, but I did question why the mission was timed for them to arrive when the far side of The Moon was facing The Sun. 😅 They also didn't explain how the rocket did that rotational manoeuvre before braking. With everything else explained quite well, I was surprised by that omission of detail.
@fredericklmeade2947
@fredericklmeade2947 Ай бұрын
Perhaps for the huge advantage of solar power.
@tsopmocful1958
@tsopmocful1958 Ай бұрын
Yes I wondered about why they looked at the far side in shadow and the only reason I could think of is that they wanted to show scenes of the ship heading towards a full Moon.
@longrider42
@longrider42 Ай бұрын
If you have any more of these, Please post them.
@AceBoogyStacks
@AceBoogyStacks Ай бұрын
few more www.youtube.com/@rudzenterprises and direct links in description
@donvasquez1791
@donvasquez1791 Ай бұрын
Werner Von Braun @21:00 inventor of the V2 rocket in WW2!
@RogerHruska-x7x
@RogerHruska-x7x 23 күн бұрын
Wow that looks exactly like the moon they landed on years later😮
@JosephHayes-c3z
@JosephHayes-c3z 26 күн бұрын
Haha!.. it's the Man with the mustache from Germany and the original Superman!
@TheCalifornian
@TheCalifornian Ай бұрын
Looks like Bio Station Alpha down there.
@AckzaTV
@AckzaTV 11 күн бұрын
4:07 lol even disney made toth black
@larrymrobinson1051
@larrymrobinson1051 6 күн бұрын
That's amazing for 1955 especially what they saw on the dark side of the Moon and never said anything about it!
@neilrichardson7454
@neilrichardson7454 8 күн бұрын
Thankfully, rocket trips daily to the moon never happened 😊
@rayrocher6887
@rayrocher6887 27 күн бұрын
John Hershel - was a great astronomer, and polymath. He also discover [to be honest and Discreet] the planet Uranus, Tyson knows that a telescope is a time machine - thanks to Hershel and his son. on PBS - the documentary cartoon and hershel and his son - Magical inspirational. amen thanks Walt . and tyson.
@destonlee2838
@destonlee2838 19 күн бұрын
Yes, that's the hand of Walt, smoke smoke smoke that cigarette, you can die of cancer or cardiac arrest, so puffpuffpuff til you're out of breath.
@RonBevins-sw6uq
@RonBevins-sw6uq Ай бұрын
Good Luck Miners. I started following the Miners when Mike Price was their coach. Mike is from Everett HS, my Alma Mater
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