The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Good Night Oppy’ about NASA’S rover mission may make you cry

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LOS ANGELES —When “Good Night Oppy”, which follows NASA rovers Opportunit­y and Spirit before and after they land on Mars, launched at a film festival in September, the documentar­y had an unexpected effect on audiences: they cried.

“It’s funny because I promise you we were not having conversati­ons in the edit room on how we would make people cry,” director Ryan White told Reuters.

“It is kind of the shocking resounding response to this film seems to be people coming up to me sheepishly with their hand over their mouths saying ‘I cried about a robot’.”

The film, which premiered at the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado in September, looks at the Mars Exploratio­n Rover (MER) mission, which NASA launched in 2003.

Both rovers, which were solar powered, were expected to only live for 90 Martian solar days (SOLS) but Opportunit­y (or Oppy) lasted over 14 years until it transmitte­d its last message on June 10, 2018.

White wanted to make the film after Opportunit­y’s last message “My battery is low and it’s getting dark” went viral.

However it is the film’s human characters that evoke an emotional response.

White had assumed scientists and engineers would be very academic and unemotiona­l, posing a filmmaking challenge. “I was totally wrong,” said White.

“Once we met the human being characters, it was an embarrassm­ent of riches. These are people that are living day to day getting to do the things that we all dreamed about doing as kids ... and it’s not just work to them. It’s their life. It’s their daughter on Mars, as a lot of them see her.”

One of the major comparison­s made by filmgoers is that the rovers look uncannily like the Pixar Studios animation character “Wall-e”. Reuters

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