Cubussoli
Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
Konterr
Brilliant and touching
Console
best movie i've ever seen.
Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
jeffchan
If you at all like flying or space, this is a must see. The main problem is that it seems unavailable except in pirated form on YouTube, etc. BBC, or whoever owns the rights, please sell it in HD! May's flight to the edge of space in a U2 haunts with its beauty, enchants with its musings, and thrills with its adventure.Technically James was the passenger in a two seat U2 flown by an American Air Force pilot. Both men wore pressurized flight suits similar to what astronauts wear, and the views were absolutely incredible. I'm sure the HD cameras barely captured the actual impact of the views from the cockpit, yet they were otherworldly.Airliners at their highest altitude, for example, passed far below them as they transited California parallel the Pacific Ocean on their way up to altitude. The U2 was flown from Beale Air Force Base north of Sacramento California, and the film includes suiting up, flight briefings, what to do if you get an itch inside the suit, etc.
Prismark10
In James May at the Edge of Space, May gets a chance to fly in a U2 spy plane at 70,000 feet above Earth. It is technically space as you can see the curvature of the earth and the dark space above.What is more he does not have to risk going on one of these expensive Richard Branson Galactic test craft.You see May in training for this adventure, having a medical, having problems with the helmet and telling us the history of the early days of these very high altitude spy planes and the space race.May gives us tips on how to pee into a tube and how to eat apple pie through a straw. However the most emotional part of this short documentary for both us and him is when the U2 reaches 70,000 feet and May realises that he is at the edge of space.A truly great moment for him as he really does not know what to say and you can see in his face that he has done something remarkable that will stay with him for the rest of his life.In contrast the early part of the documentary is rather plain.