Or - one of my personal favorites - Hunchbacked's insistence that the LM should have landed by coming to a complete stop horizontally, then descending vertically, even though any pilot of a helicopter or other VTOL craft will tell you that (1) if at all possible they want to be moving forward during landing (you can't see what's directly under you) and (2) holding a hover with no horizontal movement is one of the hardest things they have to do. Not to mention that hovering with a rocket engine is the most horrendously fuel-wasting thing you can do.
I can vouch for that. I have tried doing this in a real helicopter; a Bell 47G (for those who don't know this helicopter, think M.A.S.H.).
Picture this.
You have your left hand on a lever that is rather like a handbrake between the bucket seats of a small car. This is the "collective" lever; lifting it increases the pitch of the main rotor. On this lever is a twist grip like a motorbike throttle. Twisting it to the left increases the rpm of engine.
You have your feet on two pedals on the floor in a similar position to the pedals on your car. They are connected to the tail rotor and change its pitch. pushing on the left pedal pushes the tail to the left (therefore rotating the helicopter clockwise). Vice versa for the right.
Finally, your right hand is on the control stick, Pushing the control stick on any direction tilts the helicopter in that direction.
Now, even in dead-calm conditions, the hovering chopper will drift in a direction, say, left. When you try to correct it by pushing the control column right, if you make the slightest input forward or back when trying to centralise the control column, it will start to drift in that direction too. Also, when the helicopter drifts, it begins to lose altitude, because the down-draft is no longer pushing directly downwards, so you have to lift up the collective lever slightly and increase the throttle a notch, but doing that will cause the helicopter to counter rotate against the torque of the increased main rotor speed, so you have compensate for that with the pedals. As the helicopter comes upright, the increased main rotor pitch and speed causes the helicopter to climb, so you need to drop the collective and rpms a little, which of course, affects the counter rotation.
Add to that the gyroscopic effects of the main rotor, and you can see that hovering a helicopter is no easy task.
...and this is what will happen if you don't know how all this works...