![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Start with the grown-ups - Tom Skerritt as Zach Bergstrom, an astronaut who now runs Space Camp. That’s annoying and seemingly a bit weird given that FAST services like Tubi have all kinds of old movies. You can, however, find the full thing on something that rhymes with TooYoube, but that’s not really an avenue we can endorse. You can’t buy it unless you want to go the optical route, and while I like SpaceCamp a lot, this isn’t a movie worth $30-plus on DVD. Good luck trying to watch SpaceCamp (legally, that is)įirst, and this may be the more important, is that the movie has fallen into a digital black hole. What really stands out about SpaceCamp all these years later involves the availability (or lack thereof) of the movie, the unexpectedly stacked cast, and one major musical surprise. Or, in real life, the modern marvel of seeing a SpaceX rocket land itself over and over again. The story is as predictable as it gets, and there are plenty of tells to point to the danger to come, and how to get out of it.īut for all its faults - and they are so many - SpaceCamp still manages to give you the same feeling that so many space movies manage, whether it’s (spoiler, but not really) Mark Watney getting saved at the end of The Martian, or the more bleak but no less human ending to Sandra Bullock’s Ryan Stone in Gravity. Nearly 40 years later, that’s not really most the amazing part of what wasn’t (and still isn’t) a particularly great film. a thing that you can still go to today, actually - accidentally on purpose get launched into space and have to learn to work together to get home. The premise: A handful of kids at Space Camp in Huntsville, Ala. Wait, someone made a movie called SpaceCamp? ![]()
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