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Wednesday, 6 October 2021

Russian film team boldly shoot towards space station

 Russia has taken the lead in a space race with a difference, sending a team to the International Space Station to shoot a feature film ahead of an American crew.

Russian film team boldly shoot towards space station

Yulia Peresild, 37, is set to star in the film, directed by Klim Shipenko.

Their Soyuz MS-19 spacecraft took off from Baikonur in Kazakhstan, and three hours later docked with the International Space Station.

Actor Tom Cruise and Nasa have also been planning to make a film there.

There was more than a touch of showbusiness glamour when the Soyuz crew launched on Tuesday, as the TV cameras focused on Peresild and 12-year-old daughter Anna, who was watching from a safe distance.

It was from the Kazakh steppes where camels and meerkats roam, rather than in the studios of Hollywood that real actors went into space at 11:55 Moscow time, said Russia’s Komsomolskaya Pravda website. Klipenko’s actress wife Sofia Karpunina noted that the director had had to shed 15kg (33lbs) beforehand.

Actress Yulia Peresild, cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov and film director Klim Shipenko, wave as they attend the send-off ceremonyIMAGE SOURCE,EPA
Image caption,There was more than a whiff of showbusiness as the crew headed to the launch site

The launch, led by cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, went according to plan at 11:55 Moscow time (08:55 GMT) and the Soyuz docked with the ISS a little over three hours later.

“The crew is feeling well,” said the commander shortly after take-off.

Although Shkaplerov will stay on board, director and actress have just 12 days to film their scenes in space, with Peresild playing a cardiac surgeon sent into orbit to save a a cosmonaut.

Filming will take part in the Russian section of the ISS and the mission has proved contentious in Russia’s space industry.

The feature film is the brainchild of Roscosmos space agency chief Dmitry Rogozin, who at one point fired the agency’s head of crewed missions in a row over the project.

Sergei Krikalev, a veteran of space missions, got his job back days later amid widespread anger at his sacking.

Another cosmonaut, Mikhail Kornienko, told BBC Russian he was one of many who were opposed to it. “The ISS is no place for performers, all sorts of clowns or tourists. It’s a huge space lab and you shouldn’t get in the way of professional work.”

The film is being funded by Russia’s Channel One TV, and a Roscosmos subsidiary said it would not require money from the federal budget.

Russia’s space agency has had a troubled few years, with corruption overshadowing the constructnio of a cosmodrome in the Far East.

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