The Norwalk Hour

CT filmmaker is heading to space with Steve Aoki

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“Being under the night sky were some of the most inspiring moments of my whole life,” Hall said. “But I never even dreamed that I would go up there, especially on a mission like this.”

The six-day mission is scheduled for 2023, but a launch date has yet to be announced. To carry out the mission, the Starship still needs to complete an orbital flight test. SpaceX owner Elon Musk announced in January the rocket could be ready by February. The test has experience­d several delays and it’s unclear if the Federal Aviation Administra­tion has approved the attempt. SpaceX and dearMoon did not respond to requests for comment.

One million people from all over the world applied for the mission when applicatio­ns opened in 2021, according to the dearMoon website. Hall submitted his on a whim, thinking the concept was “too incredible to believe.” That changed when he had his first Zoom interview. Former astronaut Naoko Yamazaki was one of the attendees.

Hall isn’t sure why he was selected as one of the few. The process spanned almost a year, he said.

Many of the interview questions focused on character: his work, reasons for applying and what artwork he would create during the mission, he said.

“I also told him about how much I wanted to tell this human story, and the story of the crew members transformi­ng through this mission,” Hall said. “This is about people as much as [it is] about the moon or about space.”

Hall said his nature documentar­ies center around people and how they’re impacted by the natural world. He accompanie­d TV host and “science guy” Bill Nye to Greenland to film a documentar­y about the scientist’s fight against climate change. Hall first received a camcorder for his twelfth birthday and began creating short films with his friends in his backyard. Ever since, he’s been working on the craft of telling stories through a camera lens.

Paul Bancroft, a career and technical education teacher, said by the time Hall walked through the doors of Regional Hebron, Andover and Marlboroug­h

(RHAM) High School, he had years of experience and advice from older students. It was his drive, maturity and discipline that set him apart from his peers, Bancroft said, recalling all the questions Hall asked about cinematogr­aphers and what type of camera he should buy with his birthday money.

“He really had a good eye for the camera,” he said. “He was always looking for new ways to tell the story.”

When Hall was assigned to get some footage of ice fishing, he attached a GoPro to a pole and stuck it through the ice to get underwater shots of the fish, Bancroft recalled.

Bancroft said because of Hall’s extra efforts, he wasn’t surprised when Hall was accepted to NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, one of the top-five film schools in 2012, the year he graduated from high school.

“That is what he had set his mind to,” Bancroft said. “And Brendan, you know what, when he set his mind to a goal, he went for it. And he certainly had the talent.”

Before his junior year at

NYU, Hall and his childhood friend, Anthony Blake, took a road trip to 10 national parks and developed the idea for “Out There: A National Parks Story” a project they would film over the next five years. The film is set to be released in May.

Blake said he could tell Hall’s perspectiv­e changed on that 2014 trip. Hall had “a lightbulb moment” at the Grand Canyon and decided his camera’s purpose would be inspiring others to preserve natural beauty, Blake said. While traveling in the following years, Hall would get up in the middle of the night to time lapse videos of stars.

“It’s great to see someone in love with what they do,” Blake said.

Hall continued filming nature with the National Geographic Channel, first as an intern and then a freelance filmmaker.

He is still brainstorm­ing concepts for his “dearMoon” film, but ensures it will have the same aim as his past documentar­ies. By filming Earth, he hopes viewers will appreciate

it more. Astronauts like Ron Garan and Russell “Rusty” Schweickar­t have returned from space with a different perspectiv­e on our planet and mankind’s role, a cognitive shift called the overview effect.

Hall is unsure when his civilian space training, a process that could take months, will begin or what it will entail. But he doesn’t have any doubts about the ability to pull off the mission, he said. Part of his job involves speaking with camera manufactur­ers and SpaceX officials about the best technologi­es to bring based on the payload of the rocket and limitation­s like radiation getting on the camera sensor.

“Cameras draw power, they draw electricit­y. Your laptop does and your hard drives do. And we’re a big floating ship in space. So electricit­y, and power is going to be very limited,” Hall said. “Those are all things we’ll be developing, which will be really exciting. It’ll for sure be a process that is totally new to me.”

Bancroft said documentin­g the mission is an important role. In the early days of the space program, astronauts brought tiny handheld cameras on missions. Hall, he said, will be following the many would-be filmmakers who have traveled to space.

“Mankind has always documented our adventures,” he said.

Bancroft was asked if he had any advice for his former student.

“I don’t think I am anywhere qualified to give Brendan Hall advice anymore,” he said. “I guess I would say ‘Have a great time, Brendan, enjoy every moment.’”

 ?? Anthony Blake/Contribute­d photo ?? Connecticu­t native Brendan Hall decided to become a documentar­y filmmaker during a trip to the Grand Canyon.
Anthony Blake/Contribute­d photo Connecticu­t native Brendan Hall decided to become a documentar­y filmmaker during a trip to the Grand Canyon.
 ?? Anthony Blake/Contribute­d photo ?? Connecticu­t natives Brendan Hall, a filmmaker, and Anthony Blake visited the Grand Canyon on a college road trip.
Anthony Blake/Contribute­d photo Connecticu­t natives Brendan Hall, a filmmaker, and Anthony Blake visited the Grand Canyon on a college road trip.
 ?? Mark Hall/ Contribute­d photo ?? Brendan Hall, a Marlboroug­h native, began making films with his camcorder in middle school.
Mark Hall/ Contribute­d photo Brendan Hall, a Marlboroug­h native, began making films with his camcorder in middle school.

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