BSS
  04 Oct 2021, 19:44

First Russian film in space an 'experiment': director

    MOSCOW, Oct 4, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Russian film director Klim Shipenko said 
Monday the first movie in orbit would be an "experiment," on the eve of his 
journey into space hoping to beat a rival Hollywood project.

   The 38-year-old director and one of Russia's most famous actresses, Yulia 
Peresild, 37, are due to blast off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan 
at 0855 GMT on Tuesday to shoot scenes for upcoming Russian movie "The 
Challenge".

   Russia's space agency Roscosmos is sending them into orbit with 
experienced cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, 49. Cosmonauts on board the 
International Space Station are expected to appear in cameo roles in the 
film.

   The 12-day mission was announced in September 2020, four months after a 
Hollywood project involving "Mission Impossible" actor Tom Cruise was 
revealed.

   "We are doing an experiment," Shipenko told reporters.

   "There is nobody to get advice from. There is not a single cameraman who 
could answer how to work with light from a porthole," he told an online news 
conference.

   On top of directing, he will also be handling the cameras, lighting, sound 
and make-up.

   Shipenko conceded that "some things will work out and some things will 
not".

   Following months of rigorous training ahead of the flight, Peresild said 
that being an actress and a cosmonaut were "two opposite professions".

   "Let's see how we'll combine them," she said.

   Cosmonaut Shkaplerov said that preparing to play in space was not easy.

   "The script sometimes changes and I am learning it all the time. This is 
hard, I am not an actor," he said.

   Their experience, he added, is "unprecedented" and will be a learning 
experience should there be a need to send someone to space at urgent notice.

   The crew said that on Sunday they watched the classic Soviet film "The 
White Sun of the Desert" -- a pre-flight tradition religiously observed by 
cosmonauts.

   They are each allowed to take one kilogramme of personal items with them 
to the station. Some are bringing drawings from kids and others small 
souvenirs gifted by friends, they said.