On Saturday, a Russian film crew said their goodbyes at the International Orbit Station. It is after completing their mission to make the first film ever shot in space. Russian crew returns back after the first film in space wraps up.
Yulia Peresild and Klim Shipenko eventually returned to Earth on Sunday, landing parachute-assisted in Kazakhstan’s steppe.
They spent 12 days on-board filming scenes for their film “The Challenge”; then preparing to return to Earth aboard the Soyuz MS-18 spaceship.
Yulia Peresild, a Russian actress, plays a doctor. She flies to a space station to save the life of a cosmonaut.
First film in space wraps up
Russia has beaten the United States in the latest round of the space race: Filmmaking.
Last year, NASA revealed that Hollywood actor Tom Cruise would launch on a SpaceX rocket for an untitled project.
The narrative of the film is mostly under wraps along with its budget. It revolves around a surgeon who goes to the International Space Station to save a cosmonaut.
Shkaplerov, 49, is claimed to appear in the video with two Russian cosmonauts who were already aboard the ISS.
Russia’s space agency Roscosmos sponsored the 12-day voyage. It was the latest gesture in a race among spacefaring nations to pique public interest in human spaceflight. It also shows that destinations like the International Space Station aren’t just for government astronauts.
The mission also adds another feather to Russia’s spaceflight cap: it beat Hollywood to orbit.
The crew felt well ahead of their release from the Soyuz, according to the Russian space agency. Then, it will undergo a 10-day rehabilitation to help them recuperate from the consequences of living in the microgravity environment of low-earth orbit.