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== Production == |
== Production == |
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The filming was handled mostly by the long-term crews of the Mir. It is said that simply transporting the film camera used up roughly half of the film's budget. |
The filming was handled mostly by the long-term crews of the Mir. It is said that simply transporting the film camera used up roughly half of the film's budget. |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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* {{imdb title|0123211}} |
* {{imdb title|0123211}} |
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* [http://www.filmportal.de/en/movie/out-of-the-present_ea43d4a6fa745006e03053d50b37753d Out of the Present] at [http://www.filmportal.de filmportal.de] |
* [http://www.filmportal.de/en/movie/out-of-the-present_ea43d4a6fa745006e03053d50b37753d Out of the Present] at [http://www.filmportal.de filmportal.de] |
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[[Category:German films]] |
[[Category:German films]] |
Out of the Present | |
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Directed by | Andrei Ujica |
Written by | Andrei Ujica |
Produced by | Elke Peters |
Starring | Sergei Krikalev, Anatoly Artsebarsky, Alexander Volkov |
Cinematography | Vadim Yusov |
Edited by | Ralf Henninger, Heidi Leihbecher |
Distributed by | Real Fiction Filmverleih (Köln) |
Release date | 1995 |
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Out of the Present is a documentary filmbyAndrei Ujica from 1995 that deals with the prolonged stay of the Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalevatspace station Mir. This was the first time a 35 mm film camera was used in space.[1]
The film begins with the dockingofSoyuz TM-12 at the station. For 92 minutes (the time for one earth-orbit of the station) the routine of a long-term space station crew is shown, frequently interrupted by panoramic earth views in addition to observing the routine day-to-day activities of eating, exercising and conducting experiments in weightlessness. Krikalev was a bystander to the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt and the collapse of the Soviet Union during his 10-month stay.
The arrival of Soyuz TM-13 is a highlight, while the station was crowded with five cosmonauts for a week. Due to the then-current political situation in Kazakhstan, a Kazhak cosmonaut, Toktar Aubakirov, was selected for this mission. Without long-term training he was unable to relieve Krikalev, who therefore had to stay another six months at the station. Finally, Krikalev is shown back on earth, resting on a couch after more than 300 days in zero gravity.
The filming was handled mostly by the long-term crews of the Mir. It is said that simply transporting the film camera used up roughly half of the film's budget.