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Apogee Of Fear (Film): Suppressed By NASA?

Yithian

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The Film That NASA Banned May See the Light of Day

When Richard Garriot de Cayeux, the founder of the Ultima series of computer games and the world’s sixth space tourist, went to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2008, he didn’t just kick back and bask in zero gravity. No, during his twelve-day journey he conducted experiments on the crystallization of protein molecules, took photographs, conducted an art show (really) and…made a horror movie.

This eight-minute movie, Apogee of Fear, written by famed fantasy author Tracy Hickman, is probably no Prometheus. Still, it can boast the claim that it was the first-ever movie to be made in space. But there’s a reason you haven’t seen it: Space.com recently revealed that its release has been blocked by NASA.

Asked to speculate about why NASA wouldn’t give permission to release the film, Garriott offered up a few ideas.

“It’s too playful,” he told SPACE.com. “It’s just not their message.”

He doesn’t think the space agency actively dislikes “Apogee of Fear” or wishes to suppress it. Rather, he believes NASA simply sees no reason to support it.

“It’s just that the default answer is no,” Garriott said.

The release of this information got the Internet chatting. Now the Administration, who may have realized that it can use all the good PR it can get, has had a sudden change of heart.

Bob Jacobs, deputy for communications at NASA, told Wired reporter Matt Blum,

“NASA is working with Richard Garriott to facilitate the video’s release. While the project was not part of his original Space Act agreement with NASA, everyone involved had the best of intentions. We hope to resolve the remaining issues expeditiously, and we appreciate Richard’s cooperation and his ongoing efforts to get people excited about the future of space exploration.”

Of course, it’s hard for NASA to get people excited about space when they’re, ya know, blocking the release of what looks to be a cute little film, and acting very much like the evil government that so many bad movies have made a cliché.

What is NASA afraid of? That it would make the astronauts/cosmonauts look bad? We know they’re non-professional actors. We don’t care. It was made IN SPACE. Is filming the interior of the ISS revealing some state secrets? The camera Garriott de Cayeux used is likely not powerful enough to pick up the “Press here to destroy the Earth” button.

More importantly, how is NASA able to block the release of this movie when it’s an international space station. Did NASA somehow win all ISS media rights?

I wonder why NASA is concerned with the notion that people would view space as “fun.” Could it be that those ideas could lead to us to want to go ourselves? Egads…that might actually lead to space tourism.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/carolpinche ... ht-of-day/

Well, I have little to add except the trifling fact that, of course, I'd really like to see it.
 
Richard Garriott's "Apogee Of Fear," First Sci Fi Movie Ever Shot In Space

By: Mike Wall
Published: 01/13/2012 04:18 PM EST on Space


A new documentary about space tourist Richard Garriott's flight to the International Space Station is hitting theaters now, but the sci-fi movie he made aboard the orbiting lab remains under wraps.

"Man on a Mission," which opened Jan.13, chronicles Garriott's journey to the station in October 2008, a trip that cost him $30 million of his own money. While up there, the video-game designer made a playful eight-minute film called "Apogee of Fear," with some standout acting assistance from a Russian cosmonaut and two NASA astronauts.

"Apogee of Fear" is the first science-fiction movie ever made in space, Garriott said, and he would like to let the public see it. There has been some demand, with the Smithsonian Institution even asking to put the film in its permanent archives because of its historical value.

But NASA hasn't given the necessary go-ahead, according to Garriott.

"NASA has, so far, decided that since it's filmed onboard NASA hardware and uses NASA astronauts as actors, they have resisted me releasing it publicly," Garriott told SPACE.com Wednesday (Jan. 11).

The first sci-fi movie ever filmed in space

Garriott's not fighting mad about the movie's current underground status, but he wants "Apogee of Fear" to come out. In an interview with SPACE.com at a conference last year, he said the film shows a more light-hearted side of astronauts and life aboard the space station, so it could serve as something of an education and outreach tool.

Asked to speculate about why NASA wouldn't give permission to release the film, Garriott offered up a few ideas.

"It's too playful," he told SPACE.com. "It's just not their message."

He doesn't think the space agency actively dislikes "Apogee of Fear" or wishes to suppress it. Rather, he believes NASA simply sees no reason to support it.

"It's just that the default answer is no," Garriott said.

A private screening

After his talk at the conference last year, Garriott gave a private screening of "Apogee of Fear." That is, he showed the eight-minute movie on his laptop to a half-dozen or so folks who had stuck around to ask him questions or introduce themselves.

"Apogee of Fear" is without question the best science fiction film ever made in space. It begins with NASA astronauts Mike Fincke and Greg Chamitoff waving affably to Garriott through a window as the space tourist departs the orbiting lab and heads back home to Earth.

Then they turn to each other and express profound relief that he's finally gone.

"Man, am I glad we finally got rid of that guy," Chamitoff says.

Cut to several days later, and Fincke and Chamitoff are actually starting to miss Garriott. Without him around, Chamitoff is having trouble juggling, and the two astronauts are finding it difficult to settle their recurring arguments about who is upside-down and who is right-side-up.

But then an ominous declaration breaks the wistful chatter: Cosmonaut Yuri Lonchakov announces that oxygen use aboard the station is higher than it should be.

"Let's just think of what might be the obvious reason," Chamitoff says. "Maybe it's aliens."

The spaceflyers conclude that an unwanted visitor has found its way aboard the station, and they begin a search to root him or her out. And what they find will shock and amaze you! Well, not really, though there is an interesting double twist.

But if you want to know how it ends, you'll have to wait and see it yourself. And Garriott needs NASA's help to make that possible.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/1 ... 06198.html
 
Richard Garriott's "Apogee Of Fear," First Sci Fi Movie Ever Shot In Space

Possibly debatable - Werner Herzog's Wild Blue Yonder is a sci-fi(ish) film mainly composed of NASA footage. The difference I guess is that the footage wasn't shot specifically for the movie.[/b]
 
I'm confused, what is ISS supposed to stand for ?
 
It's like the W in World Series.
 
Not any more it isn't.
Video removed by user.
 
Like a home movie. But in space.
 
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