Russian Actress and Director To Start Making First Movie on Space Station (nytimes.com) 45
The first dog in space. The first man and woman. Now Russia has clinched another spaceflight first before the United States: Beating Hollywood to orbit. From a report: A Russian actress, Yulia Sherepild, a director, Klim Shipenko, and their veteran Russian astronaut guide, Anton Shkaplerov, launched on a Russian rocket toward the International Space Station on Tuesday. Their mission is to shoot scenes for the first feature-length film in space. While cinematic sequences in space have long been portrayed on big screens using sound stages and advanced computer graphics, never before has a full-length movie been shot and directed in space.
Whether the film they shoot in orbit is remembered as a cinematic triumph, the mission highlights the busy efforts of governments as well as private entrepreneurs to expand access to space. Earth's orbit and beyond were once visited only by astronauts handpicked by government space agencies. But a growing number of visitors in the near future will be more like Ms. Sherepild and Mr. Shipenko, and less like the highly trained Mr. Shkaplerov and his fellow space explorers. A Soyuz rocket, the workhorse of Russia's space program, lifted off on time at 4:55 a.m. Eastern time from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Before the launch on Tuesday, the MS-19 crew posed for photos and waved to family and fans in Baikonur. Mr. Shipenko, the director of the film which is named "The Challenge," held up a script as he waved to cameras.
Whether the film they shoot in orbit is remembered as a cinematic triumph, the mission highlights the busy efforts of governments as well as private entrepreneurs to expand access to space. Earth's orbit and beyond were once visited only by astronauts handpicked by government space agencies. But a growing number of visitors in the near future will be more like Ms. Sherepild and Mr. Shipenko, and less like the highly trained Mr. Shkaplerov and his fellow space explorers. A Soyuz rocket, the workhorse of Russia's space program, lifted off on time at 4:55 a.m. Eastern time from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Before the launch on Tuesday, the MS-19 crew posed for photos and waved to family and fans in Baikonur. Mr. Shipenko, the director of the film which is named "The Challenge," held up a script as he waved to cameras.
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It is a gimmick movie otherwise.
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Re:Porn. (Score:4)
Sex in space has been compared to sex while skydiving. It's supposedly not impossible, but with every push or thrust propelling the participants in opposite directions, it is certain to be less enjoyable.
Despite the fact that no agency has openly admitted it has ever happened, the fact that such opinions on the subject can be found fairly easily might still give a person pause.
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NASA has hinted that it's happened and it's unlikely that it hasn't (in the name of science of course) but they're not talking.
Re:Porn. (Score:5, Informative)
NASA has hinted that it's happened and it's unlikely that it hasn't (in the name of science of course) but they're not talking.
There was a married couple (Mark Lee and Jan Davis) on the STS-47 shuttle mission in 1992. They got married in secret before the launch.
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What a collosal waste of money (Score:3, Interesting)
Depends on who is paying (Score:3)
Unless they are making a documentary, there is no point to shooting a movie in space. Absolutely anything you might want to show can be replicated in studios that exist already, and for a fraction of the price.
Hollywood blows millions of dollars on things that don't make sense to me all the time. If they're making the Russian taxpayers fund this, then it's stupid. If some private investor thinks this is worth the price, I guess it's no stupider than buying a rare painting or a yacht or flying to space in a penis-shaped rocket.
If we're going to keep modifying the laws to make billionaires wealthier and pass law after law to give them tax shelters or just simple tax cuts to ensure they pay as little as possibl
Re:What a collosal waste of money (Score:5, Interesting)
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I've yet to see a completely convincing scene that takes place in zero g. It's never quite right. Hair is usually a giveaway.
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The space scenes in "Apollo 13" were filmed in 25 second takes in the "Vomit Comet", and so were filmed in a weightless environment. The shot length is somewhat limiting, although not really for most modern movies (where the average shot length is much less than that). I expect it's still a lot cheaper (even if more planning is required) than actually going to space.
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The sheer cost would be immense, and thus any reasonable producer would not go this route. This hints strongly that it's a national prestige ploy (ie, propaganda) and thus is being financed by Russia.
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Absolutely anything you might want to show can be replicated in studios that exist already, and for a fraction of the price.
So, you are saying that NASA could have saved billions of dollars in the 1960s?
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Not the first movie made in orbit (Score:2)
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Scott Garriott
You can turn in your nerd card now.
Accomplish (Score:1)
Well maybe you'll finally get to see someone spending time accomplishing pooping in a movie!
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It's nothing compared to Three Girls, A Donkey, the Starting Lineup of the Greenbay Packers, Sixteen Midget Lenin Impersonators, a Vintage Edsel and the French Foreign Legion and One Cup.
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Did I miss a scene in Pitch Perfect 2?
Check your effing facts (Score:1)
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I really hope (Score:2)
Fuck Hollywood and all their imitators (Score:2)
Massachusetts caught the "we want films" mind virus a while back.
And when I was a slightly younger and sprightly RightwingNutjob who lived in the city, I encountered these film crews doing their thing.
One instance involved closing off the area around the Harvard Square subway entrance and directing an old man with a cane to walk around the long way around so he wouldn't get into some pretentious prick's precious shot.
Another instance involved closing down the Massachusetts Avenue bridge at rush hour on a we
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Re: Fuck Hollywood and all their imitators (Score:2)
Government, and government meetings, at least are necessary. Or so I'm told.
Filmmaking and movie watching are pure leisure activity.
I enjoy a good film once in a while. But I notice that most of the ones I enjoy most were made back in the day when the studios had their own sound stages and back lots so they could do all their shit without having to lug all their crap somewhere and inconvenience the little people.
Tom Cruise (Score:2)
Somehow the paywalled article promoted by Slashdot doesn't even mention that Tom Cruise is expected to also be shooting a movie this month on the ISS as well. It was announced over a year ago, so Russia had ample time to beat Cruise to it. Guess they're still unhappy he shot down all those Migs.
https://www.theguardian.com/sc... [theguardian.com]
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Somehow the paywalled article promoted by Slashdot doesn't even mention that Tom Cruise is expected to also be shooting a movie this month on the ISS as well. It was announced over a year ago, so Russia had ample time to beat Cruise to it. Guess they're still unhappy he shot down all those Migs.
https://www.theguardian.com/sc... [theguardian.com]
Funny, I and millions of others have no problem reading the article. The problem must be on your end.
What I want to know is... (Score:2)
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CGI.
Title (Score:2)
Apparently the title should be idiomatically translated as "House Call". The standard meaning of the word may be "challenge", but it can also refer to asking a doctor to make a home visit. The premise is a cosmonaut develops a health problem that precludes riding down in a Soyuz, so a surgeon has to be sent up first.
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What about Return from Orbit? (Score:3)
Waiting for Daniel Crag (Score:2)
Must be a remake of the PP tape (Score:1)
When was the last time ... (Score:2)
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