![]() Brubaker, Willis and Walker escape in the jet that brought them, but run out of gas and have to go their separate ways in the desert as NASA-hired assassins follow, killing Willis and Walker while Brubaker continues on his trek to find a populated area. To keep the secret, Kelloway and his associates have no other alternative than to kill the astronauts. As far as the rest of the planet knows, all aboard were killed. ![]() Their final decision is made for them when the Capricorn capsule malfunctions on its faked reentry as the world watches. With no other way to turn, Brubaker, Willis and Walker go along with the ruse, but finally can’t take the increasing guilt of the lie they are helping to perpetrate. To save the program, Kelloway has been working with a secret team to fake the mission.Īt first refusing to go along with the scheme, the astronauts are told that if they don’t, a bomb on the plane carrying their families will be set off. Scrapping the mission is out of the question, as it would be the last nail in the coffin for NASA, as interest in and continued funding of the space program had begun to take a nose-dive. Once ensconced in the secret base, NASA director James Kelloway (Hal Holbrook) explains the bizarre situation: it was discovered in run-throughs that the Capricorn life-support systems would have failed, killing the astronauts. They listen as they are transported to a remote desert base they hear themselves from previous mission rehearsals give the pre-launch litany and hear as world news announces the launch of the world’s first manned mission to the red planet. Simpson) are set to be NASA’s best hope for sending a manned mission to Mars when, in the middle of the countdown, the three astronauts are removed from the capsule as the mission continues without them. Peter Willis (Sam Waterston) and Commander John Walker (O.J. In the story, Colonel Charles Brubaker (James Brolin), Lt. Born from post-Watergate angst and television’s increasing technological versatility, the film remains an effective thriller and adventure story, tightly-written and tautly directed by Peter Hyams, wherein the idea of government secrets to be kept at any cost is even more viable today than it was in 1978. Fifteen years before The X-Files made government conspiracy a way of life, there was Capricorn One.
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