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Ryan Gosling took flying lessons for new astronaut film

Hollywood star Ryan Gosling said on Wednesday that he tried to learn to fly to play astronaut Neil Armstrong in an emotional new biopic about the strong but silent space hero.

The Canadian actor renewed his Oscar-winning partnership with La La Land director Damien Chazelle for First Man, which tells how Armstrong overcame tragedy after tragedy to become the first man to walk on the moon.

Gosling, 37, revealed how he took flying lessons so that he could get inside the mind of the engineer and test pilot as the film opened the Venice Film Festival.

"I thought what I should do was learn how to fly. Neil could fly before he could drive. But not too long in when the instructor asked me to take the plane into a controlled stall, I thought, 'This is a terrible idea,'" Gosling said.

"There was a reason why Neil was destined to be one of the best pilots of all time and I am not. There was something very different about him and a lot of other astronauts."

It took a "certain breed of person to get into a plane that has never been flown before and push it to its breaking point for the sole purpose of furthering our knowledge of aeronautics", he added.

Chazelle, 33, said the astronauts were universal heroes.

"When I first saw a Gemini, I thought it was just part of the spacecraft - but it was the whole thing. I wanted to capture how terrifying it felt searching in the void of space in flying tin cans," he said.

Gosling and Australian co-star Jason Clarke, 49, paid tribute to the courage of the astronauts, admitting that just grappling with the claustrophobia of the space capsules was enough for them.

"The crew created capsules that were too authentic," said Clarke.

"It was a kind of meltdown. We had a seriously hard time sitting in the capsule locked in our space suits with three levels of doors closing on you."

British actress Claire Foy, 34, who plays Armstrong's first wife Janet, said the film owed a "huge debt" to Armstrong's sons and Janet, who helped vet the script and met the actors.

- AFP

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