Los Angeles Times

DRESSED FOR DURESS

- By Valli Herman

If you’re going to make the most technologi­cally advanced, realistic spacesuit costume in just eight weeks, it pays to go to the experts. To create a range of suits for director Ridley Scott’s “The Martian,” the tale of an astronaut stranded on Mars, costume designer Janty Yates worked closely with NASA, visited the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, consulted with the Smithsonia­n and spoke to the institutio­n’s spacesuit curator.

As astronaut Mark Watney, actor Matt Damon spent the bulk of his screen time in an orange, white and gray “surface suit” that artfully blended movie magic and high-tech engineerin­g. Though the cinematic suits don’t have to withstand space travel, they do have to provide oxygen, sound, comfort and compatibil­ity with cameras and lights. To manufactur­e and design the many components, Yates worked with spacesuit costume design expert Michael Mooney, along with Grant Pearmain and Andrew Dow, co-founders of London special effects company FBFX.

The helmet

Computers aided the design and machining of many parts, some of which were created by various high-resolution 3-D printing methods. To avoid glare or ripples, the helmet required durable, flawless glass, the same kind used in Aston Martin headlights. To illuminate the actors’ faces, FBFX engineers custom-built dimmable LED lights with miniaturiz­ed remote controller­s. Customized circuit boards inside each helmet retained the complex settings between takes.

“The helmets were wired for sound so [the actors] could hear Ridley and record to the standard to be used in the actual film,” Yates said. “Then we had to keep them alive, so there were two huge air pumps in the helmet.”

The suit

“It was a functional piece of equipment,” said Mooney. Yates drew on wetsuits and motocross racers to realize Scott’s request for a streamline­d style. The suit was given space-age texture with dimensiona­lly printed neoprene — digitally designed raised-ink patterns.

Between takes, the suit needed to be quickly disassembl­ed to allow each department access to adjust sound, makeup and lighting. FBFX built removable compartmen­ts that attached magnetical­ly and housed equipment relevant to specific functions.

The cooling suit

Borrowing technology from race car drivers, Yates kept the actors cool between takes with an undergarme­nt built with hoses that circulate cool water. “The costume department adapted them to make them look a little more NASA. The hoses had to be designed to look futuristic to fit in with the suit instead of the old rubber hoses that they really are,” Pearmain said.

The accessorie­s

Yates coordinate­d with concept artists, special-effects engineers and specialty costume designers who contribute­d to making realistic components — the gloves, boots, belts and the backpacks, which housed filters to remove vast amounts of dust blown at the actors to simulate a violent Mars sandstorm. The yoke that fit like a chest harness was hand-sculpted and molded from a lightweigh­t urethane similar to that in car bumpers. Jewelers hammered and etched metal pieces, while embroidere­rs, printers and painters created surface decoration­s and details. NASA even weighed in on the proper logos. “We don’t want it to look like a costume,” said Mooney.

 ?? Aidan Monaghan
20th Century Fox ?? MAKING the spacesuit Matt Damon’s Mark Watney wore in “The Martian” required expert advice.
Aidan Monaghan 20th Century Fox MAKING the spacesuit Matt Damon’s Mark Watney wore in “The Martian” required expert advice.

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