On July 21, 1969 the first human being walked on the surface of the moon. Or rather, that’s what the government WANTS you to believe.
The fact of the matter is that despite a mountain of tangible evidence proving that the moon landings were indeed real, a lot of people still believe that they were all faked on a sound stage. Heck, some people even think that 2001: A Space Odyssey director Stanley Kubrick directed them, but that’s preposterous. We all know it was 21st century independent filmmaker Matt Johnson who was responsible for that iconic footage. And if you need any proof then all you have to do is watch his inventive new motion picture Operation Avalanche.
Operation Avalanche is a mockumentary starring Matt Johnson and Owen Williams as alternate reality versions of themselves, working in the A/V department of the CIA in the 1960s. Ambitious to a fault, they manage to finagle their way into a top secret investigation into the hallways of NASA, and then they stumble across the shocking news that landing on the moon and then getting back to Earth will be impossible.

Lionsgate
Also: SXSW 2016 | Matt Johnson on ‘Operation Avalanche’ and Stanley Kubrick
Instead of simply reporting what they’ve learned, Johnson concocts an outrageous scheme to fake the moon landing by using innovative visual effects, all of them stolen from the set of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001. The CIA decides it’s worth a shot, and so Johnson and Williams set about the task of inventing the greatest motion picture in history, from the ground up, writing all of the dialogue and coming up with the incidents like they were junior executives in an all-night development meeting.
That right there is probably the real genius behind Operation Avalanche. It’s one thing to make a movie about a conspiracy theory and another thing altogether to humanize it. Matt Johnson’s film smartly realized that faking the moon landings would play out a lot like the production of any other movie, with a filmmaker making outrageous promises and then actually being required to deliver the goods. Making a movie is a tense situation already. Adding CIA spooks, Soviet spies and scary car chases into the mix is just delicious, tangy gravy.

Lionsgate
Operation Avalanche is a film for nerds, of the film, science and conspiracy variety. The attention to detail is astounding and the obsession with art and history is infectious. Matt Johnson’s film sags a bit in the middle, where the drama frequently takes a breather to let the film focus more on all that obsessive-compulsive specificity, but it never gets dull. At most, it probably could have been tightened up a little bit, but these are the problems most movies would kill for.
With Operation Avalanche, Matt Johnson has made a truly wonderful film. It’s so cleverly conceived and intriguingly realized that any of its flaws seem relatively minor. Young filmmakers should take a hard look at Operation Avalanche, a film that speaks to the journey of making movies, appreciates the medium’s power, and challenges fellow storytellers to come up with innovative ideas of their own.
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.
10 Movies You Need To See at SXSW 2016:
Top Photo: Lionsgate
10 SXSW 2016 Movies You Need To See
-
Beware the Slenderman
Irene Taylor Brodsky directs a documentary feature about the curious internet phenomenon of The Slenderman, an internet meme created in 2009... and the two girls who committed murder for him.
Image: HBO
-
Born to be Blue
In Robert Budreau's new biopic, Ethan Hawke plays the turbulent jazz genius Chet Baker.
Image: IFC Films
-
Collective:unconscious
A collective of five indie filmmakers take turns adapting one another's dreams to film.
Image: SXSW
-
Everybody Wants Some
Richard Linlater's love story to the fashions and joys of youth in the early 1980s is being credited as a "spitirual sequel" to his Dazed and Confused.
Image: Paramount
-
In a Valley of Violence
A town of oddballs become the site of a revenge plot. Ethan Hawke stars, and indie horror master Ti West directs.
Image: Focus World
-
Karaoke Crazies
A bizarre-looking Korean musical about a failing karaoke house, the video game addict girl that saves it, and a serial killer on the loose.
Image: SXSW
-
Pee-wee's Big Holiday
The decades-anticipated follow-up to Big-Top Pee-wee follows our eponymous manchild on his first-ever vacation.
Image: Netflix
-
Phantasm REMASTERED
The 1979 cult classic starring a tall mortician and a bevvy of interdimensional imps has been meticulously restored by J.J. Abrams. This may be your only chance to see it on the big screen.
Image: AVCO Embassy
-
The Liberators
A documentary film by Cassie Hay, The Liberators is about the investigation behind a clutch of missing Nazi gold, and its ultimate discovery in a small Texas town.
Image: SXSW
-
Doug Benson interrupts Leprechaun 4
Comedian Doug Benson has an ongoing cinematic series wherein he controls when a film stops and starts so that he may give his own hilarious commentary. In honor of St. Patrick's Day, he will be interrupting Brian Trenchard-Smith's amazing weird-fest Leprechaun 4: In Space.
Image: TriMark