Russian crew returns to Earth after filming first movie in space

by NTOI Web Desk

#WORLD:

A Russian film crew returned to Earth after spending days in ISS shooting scenes for the first movie in orbit and if the project stays on track, the crew will beat a Hollywood project announced last year by “Mission Impossible” star Tom Cruise together with NASA and Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

A Russian

actress and a director along with a cosmonaut returned to Earth on Sunday at 12:35am EDT (10:05 am IST) in Kazakhstan on Sunday after spending 12 days in the International Space Station (ISS) shooting scenes for the first movie in orbit.

Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitskiy of Roscosmos along with actress Yulia Peresild,37, and producer-director Klim Shipenko, 38, departed the International Space Station in their Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft, according to NASA.

The trio will return to the recovery staging city in Karaganda, Kazakhstan, by Russian helicopter, before boarding a Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center aircraft to return to their training base in Star City, Russia.

If the project stays on track, the Russian crew will beat a Hollywood project announced last year by “Mission Impossible” star Tom Cruise together with NASA and Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

Actress Yulia Peresild, 37, and film director Klim Shipenko, 38, blasted off from the Russia-leased Baikonur Cosmodrome in ex-Soviet Kazakhstan earlier this month, travelling to the ISS with another veteran cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov to film scenes for “The Challenge”.

Shkaplerov, 49, and the two Russian cosmonauts who were already aboard the ISS are said to have cameo roles in the film.

The mission has not come without hitches.

As the film crew docked at the ISS earlier this month, Shkaplerov had to switch to manual control.

And when Russian flight controllers on Friday conducted a test on the Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft set to ferry the crew back to Earth, the ship’s thruster fired unexpectedly and destabilised the ISS for 30 minutes, a NASA spokesman told the Russian news agency TASS.

But the spokesman said their departure is set to go ahead as scheduled.

Peresild and Shipenko will bid farewell to the ISS crew on Saturday evening, the spokesman said, and begin undocking at 0100 GMT.

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