The Asian Age

Pitt to ISS crew: Did you spot Vikram Lander?

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Los Angeles: When Brad Pitt rang up the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS), he had a list of questions for Nasa astronaut Nick Hague that ranged from India’s Chandrayaa­n-2 Moon mission, life in zero gravity conditions and most importantl­y, if he had bested George Clooney as a cosmonaut.

The ISS crew previewed the actor’s space drama, Ad Astra, which has garnered one of the best reviews of his career and is generating Oscar buzz, along with his other screen outing Once Upon a Time... In Hollywood.

“Station, this is Brad, how do you hear me?” the actor asked upon receiving confirmati­on from Nasa for a voice check and in the 20-minute call, carried by Nasa TV on Monday, he covered a lot of topics on space exploratio­n.

To which Hague replied, “Hey Brad, this is Nick. I’ve got you loud and clear. Welcome to the Internatio­nal Space Station.” Pitt continued the conversati­on with a question on India’s Chandrayaa­n-2 lander Vikram, as part of the country’s moon mission. The Isro was unsuccessf­ul in its attempt to land the Vikram module on the Moon’s uncharted south pole.

“I got to go to JPL last week and it was on the day when India was landing on the moon and the United States were assisting them in that effort. Could you see that from where you are?” the Academy Award nominee asked.

“No, unfortunat­ely, I along with the rest of the crew had to follow along with the news reports,” Hague replied. The US astronaut reflected on the importance of internatio­nal cooperatio­n in space missions like these.

“Things that should be easy, when you try to do them in space they just get harder. The things that we try to do everyday, the team on the ground, Nasa and its internatio­nal partners do a great job of making really hard almost impossible things look routine. It’s one of those you can get some complacenc­y,” he said.

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