PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • The Right Stuff
  • The Right Stuff
rdfs:comment
  • "You will need to ride on the back of a pegasus to reach the temple. I will mark a location on your map of the last pegasus rider on the island, Raikil Windflower. He tames them and will be able to help you reach the temple." "The fate of Telon rests on you, Xexv. We will pray for your success."
  • The Right Stuff is a 1983 movie about NASA's first attempt at crewed spaceflight. Based on the 1979 novel of the same name, the story follows a group of test pilots selected to become astronauts. It is determined that each individual be composed of "the right stuff": the proper blend of education, determination and physical ability to withstand all that would be required of them in space.
  • The name of this achievement is a reference to The Right Stuff, a book written by Tom Wolfe in 1979.
  • The Right Stuff är en 1983 amerikansk drama film. Under 2009 kommenterade att Alan Shepard kissade sin rymddräkt. Han nämnde det efter när Sgt. Hunter Riley behövde kissa. (Kino: "Do I Look Stupid?")
  • It's open house day at Nishihama Junior High School, but Anita King doesn't want to tell her sisters. Anita and Junior finally meet, and Nenene Sumiregawa learns a little more about Anita.
  • The Right Stuff is a fourth season episode of House which first aired on October 2, 2007. House runs a reality show style contest to choose a new diagnostic team. While giving his new applicants an exercise, a prospective astronaut approaches him to treat her “under the table” to keep NASA from finding out anything is wrong with her. When Cuddy finds out about the arrangement, she demands that House properly chart every single procedure. When the patient refuses to consent to any test that would make NASA suspicious, House has to get even more creative than usual. However, he’s distracted by what appear to be familiar faces around the hospital.
  • A 1983 adaptation of Tom Wolfe's best-selling book, about the attempt to break the sound barrier and the subsequent Space Race. Briefly considered to be a campaign promo for John Glenn's presidential aspirations in 1984, but it actually didn't help much. It received eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, and won four. Although the movie is centered around the men and their fast, expensive, and dangerous toys, the women in the movie receive a great deal of character development, from Pancho and Nurse Murch to all of the astronaut's wives.
owl:sameAs
episode no
  • 4.020000
dcterms:subject
diagnosis
Objectives
  • Seek out Raikil Windflower to obtain a pegasus for reaching the Temple of the Ancestors.
StartChunk
  • Isle of Dawn
journal size
  • Solo
Unlock
  • No
EndChunk
  • Isle of Dawn
Sphere
  • Adventuring
journal lvl
  • 9
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Previous
Found
Faction
  • Neutral
Timeline
  • Isle of Dawn
Member
  • Yes
DE
  • Blonder Sturm
loc
  • in Isle of Dawn
Name
  • The Right Stuff
Text
  • "It's a good thing you came along. I was ready to pack up and leave this island for good, with how poor business has been lately due to the war and planar invasions." "I owe the priest a favour so the first pegasus ride is on the house. After that, you'll have to pay my price to rent one. Sorry, need to keep my stomach fed and free business means an empty stomach." "When you have the Pegasus, it will stay with you for ten minutes. After that, it will abandon you and fly back to me. Don't you worry, each Pegasus will grant you an emergency levitation spell so you don't fall from the sky and make a mess of the earth."
  • "You will need to ride on the back of a pegasus to reach the temple. I will mark a location on your map of the last pegasus rider on the island, Raikil Windflower. He tames them and will be able to help you reach the temple." "The fate of Telon rests on you, Xexv. We will pray for your success."
Type
Airdate
  • 2007-10-02
S
  • yes
Available
  • No
Party
  • None
Points
  • 10
Ru
  • Причёска “Верное дело”
Start
Description
  • Learn the artisan riding skill.
Cost
  • 500
Fr
  • Le Rôle Principal
dbkwik:readordie/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Pt
  • O Topete de Lado
Episode Name
  • The Right Stuff
ID
  • 1551
ES
  • Peinado rubio bien cortito
Guest Star
NEXT
Rating
  • 8.800000
Writer
Director
zebra
  • 7
abstract
  • "You will need to ride on the back of a pegasus to reach the temple. I will mark a location on your map of the last pegasus rider on the island, Raikil Windflower. He tames them and will be able to help you reach the temple." "The fate of Telon rests on you, Xexv. We will pray for your success."
  • A 1983 adaptation of Tom Wolfe's best-selling book, about the attempt to break the sound barrier and the subsequent Space Race. Briefly considered to be a campaign promo for John Glenn's presidential aspirations in 1984, but it actually didn't help much. It received eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, and won four. This was a breakout role for many now-established actors: Scott Glenn (unless you count Urban Cowboy), Dennis Quaid (unless you count Breaking Away), Fred Ward (unless you count Escape from Alcatraz), and Ed Harris (unless you count Knightriders). Additionally, Sam Shepard has never worked too hard to advance his acting career, but if he can be said to have a breakout role, this is it: he was nominated for an Oscar. Although the movie is centered around the men and their fast, expensive, and dangerous toys, the women in the movie receive a great deal of character development, from Pancho and Nurse Murch to all of the astronaut's wives. Interesting trivia: the actor named Glenn played Shepard, and the actor named Shepard played Yeager. Glenn was played by ... the actor named Harris. Not to be confused with the Anime online store The Right Stuf, which has one "F". Or the song by New Kids on the Block. * The Bartender: The real-life Pancho Barnes is worth a movie all by herself, and all she got was a made-for-TV piece of junk starring, of all people, Valerie Bertinelli. * Battleaxe Nurse: Nurse Murch. * Berserk Button: John Glenn is incredibly mild-mannered . . . unless you pick on his wife. * Bigger Is Better: the Atlas rocket. * Bug Buzz: The sound of locusts are played in the background of scenes that involve the Permanent Press Corps. * California Doubling: averted. Location managers are not likely to find a place more desolate than Edwards AFB. * The road to Edwards AFB? * Tell me about it. * Although the "Australia" in the film looked a lot like some of the more desolate places on the base... * Catch Phrase: "Who's the best pilot you ever saw?"; "Hey Ridley, got any Beeman's?"; "No bucks, no Buck Rogers"; "Fucking-A Bubba"; "My name Jose Jimenez"; "One hundred percent;" etc. * Chekhov's Gun: The conversation the Mercury 7 have with the scientists about having a window, manual controls and explosive bolts. Later on all three become an important part of at least one flight. * Chiaroscuro: used to good effect in the cabinet room. * Combat by Champion * Cool Plane: Oodles. * Creator Killer: Despite being a critical success, the movie was a financial failure. This, along with Twice Upon a Time own failure to earn money at the box office, sent The Ladd Company into oblivion for about a decade. The company rebounds. * Danger Deadpan: The original. The real Yeager makes a cameo as well (see Real Person Cameo below). * A Date with Rosie Palms: Only in this movie could they do this to the dueling tunes of "From the Halls of Montezuma" and "Off We Go Into The Wild Blue Yonder." * Did I Just Say That Out Loud?: "Dear Lord, please don't let me fuck up." * This became a Shout-Out in Space Cowboys as "Shepard's Prayer." * Do Not Call Me Paul: * Eagle Land: Unapologetically. * Embarrassing Middle Name: Virgil Ivan "Gus" Grissom. Not only was his first name personally embarrassing, but his middle name would have been a propaganda embarrassment. This IS the Cold War Space Race, after all. * Fatal Method Acting: The stuntman portraying Chuck Yeager's bailout of the crashing F-104. His helmet filled with smoke, and he didn't get his parachute deployed. Also a strange bit of Truth in Television, as Yeager actually collided with his seat after ejecting, and his helmet filled with liquid explosive materials, similarly filling his helmet with smoke and burning his face to a cinder. The aftermath is portrayed in the Out of the Inferno shot listed below. * Fauxlosophic Narration: The beginning narration, which poetically describes the sound barrier as a "demon that lives in the air." * Fee Fi Faux Pas: "I bet you're gonna hang our picture on your wall." * The Film of the Book * Fire-Forged Friends: Almost simultaneously, the astronauts when Glenn's mission is threatened, and the wives when Vice-President Johnson wants to interview Annie Glenn. * Funetik Aksent: "A pot?" "A spaceman?" "A jimp?" * Gosh Dang It to Heck: Ed Harris plays this to the hilt as John Glenn. Even when he wants to curse, he can't bring himself to do it. * The Grim Reaper: Listed in the credits as "Minister." * Hey, It's That Guy!: Only applies to Cincinnati Bengals fans. Gonzalez is played by Anthony Munoz, who was an All-Pro offensive lineman at the time. * John Glenn would later beat his wife back to life. * And return to the space program. * Homage Shot * Improbable Piloting Skills: Averted. * Insistent Terminology: That... is a spacecraft. We do not refer to it as a "capsule." It's a spacecraft. Similarly, the astronauts are not "occupants" of the spacecraft, but pilots. * Lethally Expensive: While the two White House staffers are showing the film of the Soviet space program. * Lie Back and Think of England: When John Glenn has to masturbate for a sperm sample, he hums the Marine Corps Anthem -- for, uh -- inspiration. * Then Cooper starts humming the Air Force anthem. Interservice Rivalry at its finest. * Lyndon Johnson: Donald Moffat gives what may be the most over-the-top screen portrayal of LBJ. "You know what the Russians want?" * MacGyvering: The sawed-off broom handle. According to Yeager's autobiography, 100% true. * Magical Native American: Well, Native Australian. You may well ask what they're doing in the movie. * Meaningful Funeral: At the beginning, to underscore the dangerous nature of the test pilots' work. * Mission Control: Literally. * Nakama: Just watch the astronauts, and their wives, rally around each other against NASA administrator and a vice president who's trying to score political points. * NASA: Also literally. * The Nameless: The above-mentioned "Minister"; the "Recruiters" (Jeff Goldblum and Harry Shearer, kind of a two-person Crowning Moment of Funny); "Liaison Man" (David Clennon from Thirtysomething); the mysterious Head of the Space Program (and his even more mysterious Soviet counterpart); the "Permanent Press Corps"; etc. etc. * Old Media Are Evil: The press corps are not portrayed in a very flattering light. * Other Stock Phrases: The book actually popularized the term "screw the pooch" in pop culture. * Out of the Inferno: Yeager, after crashing the F-104. * Potty Emergency: "Gordo, I have to urinate." * Followed by a montage of fire hoses, coffee pouring, water coolers, etc., after which Shepard declares, through painfully clenched teeth, "Request permission to relieve bladder." * Power Walk: The Trope Codifier. * Pragmatic Adaptation: A less-than-500-page book turns into a 3+ hour movie, but it's still actually an Adaptation Distillation. Two of the six Mercury flights (Carpenter's and Schirra's) aren't shown at all, and we only see the end of Grissom's and the beginning of Cooper's. Plus, the book goes into great detail about the dangers of Navy flight ops, and that only gets 30 seconds in the film. Etc. etc... * Real Person Cameo: "You fellas want some whiskey?" * Reality Subtext: * Towards the end of the movie, Alan Shepard tells his wife Louise, in a "one of these days..." manner, "I'm going to the moon...". Shepard would be the only one of the Mercury Seven who would go to the moon, on Apollo 14 . * During the astronaut tryouts in the movie, Gordon Cooper gloats about breaking the record for holding one's breath, only to realize that John Glenn and Scott Carpenter are still going after he's done. In real life, Cooper did hold his breath the longest, since he was the only non-smoker in the Mercury Seven. * At the movie's end, before Cooper lifts off on his mission, he's shown dozing off. Cooper was the first astronaut to sleep in outer space. * Red Scare: "Pretty soon they'll be dropping bombs on us like rocks from a highway overpass!" * Reentry Scare: Justified, in that this actually happened on John Glenn's flight. * Semper Fi: John Glenn, "Mr. Clean the Marine." * Shown Their Work: Wolfe was meticulous about getting the details right in his book, so the movie makers had an easy job of it. There's bits of Artistic License here and there, but that's all. * Shrouded in Myth: The sound barrier, literally shrouded in clouds, which turns out to be not so big a deal. * Speech Impediment: Annie Glenn's, which turns out to be central to the plot. She very successfully completed therapy for it in 1973. * Stanley Steamer Spaceship: Glenn's, during orbit. * Survival Mantra: John Glenn is shown humming "Battle Hymn of the Republic" during his (potentially fatal) re-entry, something the real Glenn did not do. * You Fail History Forever: "The Romans ruled the world because they could build roads" is arguable, leaning towards false. But "the British ruled the world because they had ships" and "we won the war because we had planes" is downright absurd. (However, that line was lifted nearly verbatim from LBJ's own words.)
  • The Right Stuff is a 1983 movie about NASA's first attempt at crewed spaceflight. Based on the 1979 novel of the same name, the story follows a group of test pilots selected to become astronauts. It is determined that each individual be composed of "the right stuff": the proper blend of education, determination and physical ability to withstand all that would be required of them in space.
  • The name of this achievement is a reference to The Right Stuff, a book written by Tom Wolfe in 1979.
  • The Right Stuff är en 1983 amerikansk drama film. Under 2009 kommenterade att Alan Shepard kissade sin rymddräkt. Han nämnde det efter när Sgt. Hunter Riley behövde kissa. (Kino: "Do I Look Stupid?")
  • It's open house day at Nishihama Junior High School, but Anita King doesn't want to tell her sisters. Anita and Junior finally meet, and Nenene Sumiregawa learns a little more about Anita.
  • The Right Stuff is a fourth season episode of House which first aired on October 2, 2007. House runs a reality show style contest to choose a new diagnostic team. While giving his new applicants an exercise, a prospective astronaut approaches him to treat her “under the table” to keep NASA from finding out anything is wrong with her. When Cuddy finds out about the arrangement, she demands that House properly chart every single procedure. When the patient refuses to consent to any test that would make NASA suspicious, House has to get even more creative than usual. However, he’s distracted by what appear to be familiar faces around the hospital.
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