Bangkok Post

Russian returns to Earth after space station film shoot

Minor thruster hiccup a scare before cast and crew wrap historic movie, writes

- Joey Roulette

The Soyuz is in good shape, was declared ready to support undocking and landing this evening, and everything is in order for the departure. ROB NAVIAS NASA SPOKESMAN

ARussian actress and a film director landed safely on Earth early yesterday after spending 12 days aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station shooting scenes for the first feature-length drama made with scenes shot in space.

Yulia Peresild, the actress, and Klim Shipenko, a film director, launched to space with a Russian astronaut on Oct 5 aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft. They used the orbital laboratory as one of the main sets for their movie, The Challenge, a drama in which Peresild plays a surgeon embark- ing on an emergency mis- sion to save the life of an ailing cosmonaut.

The 12-day journey, backed by Russia’s space agency Roscosmos, was the latest act in a race among spacefarin­g countries to generate public excitement about human spacefligh­t and demonstrat­e that destinatio­ns like the space station aren’t exclusive to government astronauts. The mission also adds another superlativ­e to Russia’s spacefligh­t record over the United States: beating Hollywood to orbit.

Peresild, Shipenko and Oleg Novitsky, a Russian astronaut who’s been on the station since April and played the role of the film’s ailing cosmonaut, bid farewell to the station’s crew of seven on Saturday. The Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft that carried them back to Earth undocked at 9.14pm US eastern time. The crew’s trip home took about three hours before landing at 10.35am local time in the desert steppe of Kazakhstan’s Karaganda Region.

In live footage streamed by Russia’s space agency, helicopter­s from search and rescue teams circled the area where the astronauts were to set down, and mission controller­s urged the crew to “get ready” and brace themselves for landing. Under a large parachute, the capsule touched down, sending up a cloud of dust.

“They landed vertically, awesome guys,” said a mission controller from Russia, suggesting the capsule had not landed in a way that could add some difficulty to the crew’s exit.

The Russian space agency said that the crew felt well ahead of their exit from the Soyuz, and would undergo a 10-day rehabilita­tion to help recover from the effects of living in the microgravi­ty environmen­t of low-earth orbit.

The filming began as the movie crew arrived in space. Shipenko filmed scenes using hand-held cameras inside the capsule of another Soyuz module as it approached the station. When it docked, Pyotr Dubrov, one of the space station’s Russian astronauts, was waiting behind a large digital cinema camera as the crew emerged from their capsule and floated into the station for the first time. And on Saturday, the filming continued as the crew exited the station and boarded their capsule.

Few details about the plot of The Challenge have been announced.

But drama on the station turned real on Friday when it was tilted out of its position in orbit during a test of the thrusters on the capsule that ferried the film crew home to Earth. Novitsky had been testing out the engines, Roscosmos said, but they fired longer than expected, according to a Nasa statement. The station, which is the size of a football field, was tilted 57 degrees out of position, according to Russian mission control officials quoted by Interfax, a Russian news agency.

The incident sprang Russian and Nasa officials into action, and they corrected the station’s positionin­g within 30 minutes. It was the second such emergency since July, when Russia’s new Nauka module erroneousl­y fired its thrusters, shifting the station 1.5 revolution­s — about 540 degrees — before it came to a stop upside down.

Whatever caused the problems with the spacecraft’s thruster on Friday did not recur as the film crew and Novitsky departed the station Saturday night.

“The Soyuz is in good shape, was declared ready to support undocking and landing this evening, and everything is in order for the departure,” said Rob Navias, a Nasa spokesman, during a livestream of the process.

Russia’s space agency announced its intention last year to send an actress to the space station shortly after plans emerged that Tom Cruise would trek to space as part of an action-adventure film directed by Doug Liman. Jim Bridenstin­e, who served as Nasa’s administra­tor under former President Donald Trump, confirmed the plans on Twitter at the time, but no updates on the film project have emerged since that time.

Other entertainm­ent projects centred on the ISS in the years to come include a Discovery Channel reality TV competitio­n called Who Wants to

 ?? ?? Peresild: Plays a surgeon on mission
Peresild: Plays a surgeon on mission

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand