This is the first collaboration between the Russian space corporation Roscosmos and the public broadcaster Channel One, with an approximate budget of around 1.155 billion rubles.[7] It is also the world's first feature-length fiction film to have scenes shot in space by a professional filmmaker.[8][9][10] Filming in orbit took place for nearly two weeks, and premiered on the World Cosmonautics Day, the 62nd anniversary of the first human spaceflight by Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, 12 April 2023, at the State Kremlin Palace in the Moscow Kremlin.[11]
The Challenge was theatrically released in Serbia and Russia on 20 April 2023 by Central Partnership, on an analogue of IMAX called CosMAX.[12][13]
The film collected more than 1 billion rubles at the box office by the thirteenth day of theatrical showings.[14] It holds the record for the highest-grossing Russian film on its opening day, and it grossed over 2 billion rubles against a production budget of 905 million rubles.[citation needed]
Plot
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Cosmonaut Oleg Bogdanov falls under a stream of debris from an emergency satellite during a spacewalk, receives a serious lung injury, and needs urgent medical care. Several ribs are broken, the right lung is severely deformed and develops purulentinflammation. Doctors on Earth conclude Bogdanov needs surgical intervention; it is impossible to delay the operation too far into the future. Moreover, it will have to be done directly on the International Space Station; otherwise, Bogdanov will almost certainly die from shock during atmospheric re-entry.
Seven candidates volunteer to urgently fly into orbit, all of them quite young, but experienced professional thoracic surgeons. Their evaluators gradually eliminate six of them during accelerated training, and the seventh, Vladislav Nikolaev, before making a final decision, proposes, in his opinion, a more suitable candidate, Evgenia Belyaeva, to her surprise.
Simultaneously, Belyaeva faces many problems at home: as a single mother who lost her husband in a car accident ten years ago, she does not have enough time to raise her teenage daughter Masha; she also needs to take care of her mother, who often forgets to take her medicine on time.
Belyaeva also has only two Soyuz crew members able to assist her: two Roscosmos cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Pyotr Kudryavtsev, manage to mobilize and retrain for several hours as efficient and accurate nurses.
The cosmonauts and Belyaeva launch aboard a Soyuz spacecraft, which hurriedly docks with the ISS. Upon beginning the operation, after penetrating Bogdanov's chest cavity, Belyaeva encounters unexpected complications.[clarification needed] Mission Control decides to give the order for an emergency descent, gambling that Bogdanov will still have a small chance to survive. However, Belyaeva disobeys the order, citing the Hippocratic Oath as her justification. In an almost hopeless situation, a colleague who has remained on Earth[who?] and is watching the broadcast operation finds an unexpected and risky solution that will require much improvisation.[clarification needed][15]
Cast
Yulia Peresild as Evgenia Vladimirovna 'Zhenya' Belyaeva, a thoracic surgeon who is launched on an emergency mission to save the life of an ailing cosmonaut
Miloš Biković as Vladislav Nikolaevich Nikolaev, as Doctor Vlad, one of the surgeons selected to be a candidate for the flight
Alexey Grishin as Gennady Simonov, a replacement flight director
Andrey Shchepochkin as Valentin Vershinin, chief surgeon at the Medical Simulation Center of the Botkin Hospital, Evgenia Belyaeva and Vladislav Nikolaev's supervisor
According to Konstantin Ernst, Director General of Channel One, the filmmakers wanted to confirm Russia's leadership in the space sector and restore the prestige of the cosmonaut profession in the eyes of the younger generation (as an example, Yulia Peresild herself did not dream of spaceflight as a child).[15] The unique experience of express training for non-professional flight may subsequently be useful for sending scientists or doctors into space on an urgent basis.[19] The development of the project was covered within the framework of the "Evening Urgant" program, whose members moved to the cosmodrome a week before launch.[15]
About three thousand applications were submitted for the main role, for which Peresild was ultimately chosen.[15] The number of which was reduced to 20–30.
"We selected 20 candidates, and Yulia was not included in this list, because she was filming in another project. And as a result, after all the tests of the medical board, all these actresses did not pass the selection. Not because they are ill, but because they are not suitable for flights."
—Konstantin Ernst, at the end of the filming of the series Gloomy River[20]
Aside from Peresild, Ernst offered the role to the Russian singer Polina Gagarina.[21]
On 14 May, the Interagency Committee approved the composition of the ISS main and alternate crews for the period 2021–2023.[22] Cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov was chosen to be the ship's commander, while Klim Shipenko and Peresild flew as spaceflight participants. The backup crew was cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev, cameraman Alexei Dudin and actress Alyona Mordovina,[19] Mordovina being the first woman to pass the cosmonaut screening since 2012.[16] Due to the allocation of seats on flights to the International Space Station, the flight of the director and actress necessitated rearranging mission lengths of the professional astronauts and cosmonauts, including extending the mission length of the on-orbit crew, U.S. astronaut Mark Vande Hei and his Russian cosmonaut counterparts, from six months to 1 year.[23]
The crew members began training at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center on 24 May.[24] To prepare for filming, Shipenko trained intensively, dropping 15 kilograms (33 lb) of weight.[15] On 23 July, the prime crew participated in a four-hour simulation inside a Soyuz replica while wearing the Sokol space suit,[25] and on 28 July, the back-up crew completed the same exercise. According to back-up commander Artemyev, the performance of the two back-up spaceflight participants was outstanding.[citation needed]
The dress-rehearsals for the movie took place after the scheduled spaceflight training each day.[26] On 30 July, the spacecraft had its pre-launch preparation started,[27] and on 31 August, the medical committee announced that both the main and reserve crew were healthy for spaceflight.[28]
On 12 September, First Channel aired a reality show called The Challenge: The First in Space, about the specifics of the selection and training of project participants.[19]
"In space, there are a lot of nuances, the whole process is arranged differently. Therefore, many of the shots that we worked on the earth had to be rethought: to change the movements, the mise en scene."
Principal photography began on 5 October, when Shkaplerov, Peresild, and Shipenko flew to the ISS aboard the Soyuz-2.1a launch vehicle with the Soyuz MS-19 manned transport spacecraft from the Baikonur CosmodromeinBaikonur, Kazakhstan. While on the ISS, Klim Shipenko shot about 30 hours of material,[29] and also worked as director, art director, makeup artist, and production designer. Oleg Novitsky and Pyotr Dubrov appear in the film,[30] with Dubrov and Mark Vande Hei assisting in the production.[31] Shkaplerov will also appear in some scenes.[32]
Of all the footage filmed in space, about 30% was filmed in the Nauka module, another third was filmed in the Zvezda module, and the remaining 30% was shot on the rest of the ISS modules.[33] The footage shot in space became approximately 35 minutes of the final runtime of the film.[15]
They left the ISS on 17 October, aboard Soyuz MS-18, with Commander Oleg Novitsky.[34][35] After the successful landing of Soyuz MS-18, Dmitry Rogozin revealed that Ernst had paid Roscosmos for Shipenko and Peresild's seats.[36]
The ground-based filming started in Moscow and the region of Moscow Oblast in mid-June 2022 and ended in October, with the last footage filmed at the Baikonur Cosmodrome. Some of the locations the crew filmed were the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center and the Voronovo sanatorium.[37] In addition, a pavilion was erected specifically for the film, imitating the RKA Mission Control Center of the Roscosmos State Corporation. There, Miloš Biković, the star of Klim Shipenko's film Serf, joined the cast.[38]
Reactions
According to Dmitry Rogozin, the then-head of Roscosmos, the film was an "experiment to see if Roscosmos can prepare two ordinary people to fly in about 3 or 4 months".[39] Filming on the International Space Station was widely criticized by the Russian cosmonauts and space scientists for disrupting the Russian space program and misusing public money.[40][41]
Sergei Krikalev, director of crewed programs at Roscosmos, reportedly lost his position by speaking out against the project,[42] but was reinstated ten days later following protests from cosmonauts on and off active duty.[41][24]
Release
Marketing
On New Year's Eve, Channel One released the first musical number,[43] and the first teaser trailer was released on 1 January 2023.[44]
The second trailer was released on 7 March 2023.[45][46]
Vostok carrier rocket from the Cosmos Pavilion No. 32.
On 10 April, the Cosmos Pavilion No. 32 at the Exhibition of Achievements of National Economy hosted the presentation and cancellation ceremony for a new postage stamp, part of the country's "Modern Russian Cinematography" series, depicting the movie's poster art. The 30-ruble stamp was issued the following Friday to coincide with the film's theatrical release and was accompanied by special postal cancellations at stations in Moscow, Star City and Korolyov in the Moscow Oblast, and elsewhere in Perm, Chelyabinsk and Baikonur.[48][49]
The tagline is "Become a star, by flying to the stars!"[51]
Theatrical
The Challenge was released by Central Partnership, which is part of the Gazprom-Media holding in the Russian Federation. As reported by Vedomosti, Central Partnership has developed a new cinema format that contains technical characteristics similar to IMAX, called CosMAX.[52]
The Challenge premiered on 2 May in a promotional video showing the cast and crew's impressions of space. They were joined by cosmonauts Dmitry Petelin, Sergey Prokopyev and Andrey Fedyaev, and seven other American and Emirati astronauts, all of whom had seen the film onboard the ISS.[57]
Home media
The Challenge is scheduled to be released on digital rental in Russia on 1 September 2023, at the Start platform.[58]
Reception
The film's advertising budget was 91 million rubles, according to Mediaplus Group Russia.[59]The Challenge was promoted mainly on Channel One, and the state portal Gosuslugi also sent out letters advertising the film.[59]
Box office
Having been released at the same time as the films John Wick: Chapter 4 and To Catch a Killer, in its first weekend, The Challenge took first place at the Russian box office and the CIS countries, earning a total box office revenue of 426 million rubles.[60]
In its second weekend, the film again became the leader: as of 3 May 2023, the film's box office receipts reached 1 billion rubles.[14]
On 7 August 2023, the film crossed the 2 billion rubles in 15 weeks, which is estimated to be the mark in Russia.[61][62]
Critical response
In Russian media, reception was mixed, leaning towards positive.[63] Film critics praised the visuals and Peresild's acting, but were divided about the melodramatic parts of the plot, supposed ideology, and how the movie deals with representation of women in space. Some critics took issue with the very idea of a costly space filming, while others praised it as an achievement. The Challenge was praised in reviews by Nezavisimaya Gazeta,[64]KinoPoisk,[65] and Lenta.ru, among others, while reviews in Kommersant[66] and Film.ru[67] were less enthusiastic, and Afisha was sharply critical.[68]
Accolades
During Russia Day festivities in the Grand Kremlin Palace’s St George Hall, President Vladimir Putin, on 12 June 2023, awarded Shipenko and Peresild a state prize in the field of literature and art for the film, though Shipenko could not attend due to work obligations.[69][70]