In this short scene, Edgar's daughter, Marti, meets her father, Brian, who has just returned from a successful mission to the moon. Marti asks Brian if he can bring a car to the launch site the next day so she can have some "night air" . Brian says he'll do it, and Marti says she's glad to meet her father. Brian tells Marti that the Apollo 11 capsule has successfully landed on the moon, and that he's going to go back to Earth and "damn it, take a bath, and be alive." Marti asks if she can watch a movie with her dad, and he says it'll be a movie about "scribbly," which is a fancy word for "autograph." He also tells her that they're going to turn off all the lights on the launch pad at 2 o'clock in the morning, so everyone can get some "rest" and "tomor row." Marti wants to know why Brian didn't go with the crew on the first two missions, but he can't figure out.
In this short scene, Edgar's daughter, Marti, meets her father, Brian, who has just returned from a successful mission to the moon. Marti asks Brian if he can bring a car to the launch site the next day so she can have some "night air" . Brian says he'll do it, and Marti says she's glad to meet her father. Brian tells Marti that the Apollo 11 capsule has successfully landed on the moon, and that he's going to go back to Earth and "damn it, take a bath, and be alive." Marti asks if she can watch a movie with her dad, and he says it'll be a movie about "scribbly," which is a fancy word for "autograph." He also tells her that they're going to turn off all the lights on the launch pad at 2 o'clock in the morning, so everyone can get some "rest" and "tomor row." Marti wants to know why Brian didn't go with the crew on the first two missions, but he can't figure out.