fiction.wikisort.org - MovieReturn to Space is an American documentary film made for Netflix and directed by Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi.[1][2] Its story follows Elon Musk's and SpaceX engineers' two-decade mission to send NASA astronauts back to the International Space Station and revolutionize space travel.[3] The film was released on April 7, 2022.[4]
2022 American documentary film
Return to Space |
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Promotional poster |
Directed by | Jimmy Chin Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi |
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Produced by |
- Anna Barnes
- Jimmy Chin
- Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
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Music by | |
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Production company | Little Monster Films |
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Distributed by | Netflix |
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Release date |
- April 7, 2022 (2022-04-07)
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Running time | 128 minutes |
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Country | United States |
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Language | English |
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Synopsis
The film tells a story of SpaceX from their Falcon 1 and re-usable Falcon 9 to the Crew Dragon Demo-2, launched on 30 May 2020 with Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken aboard.
Featuring
- Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX
- Bob Behnken, astronaut
- Doug Hurley, astronaut
- Jim Bridenstine, head of NASA
- Tim Dodd of Everyday Astronaut
- Kiko Dontchev of SpaceX
- Lori Garver, Deputy Administrator of NASA
- Hans Koenigsmann, Chief Engineer of SpaceX
- Gwynne Shotwell, COO of SpaceX
- Lars Blackmore, Chief of Entry, Descent and Landing of SpaceX
- Karen Nyberg, astronaut and wife of Doug Hurley
- Megan McArthur, astronaut, member of SpaceX Crew-2 mission, wife of Bob Behnken
- Balachandar Ramamurthy of SpaceX
- Anna Menon of SpaceX
Reception
The film received mixed reviews. IndieWire called it an "Exasperating 2-Hour Commercial for Elon Musk";[5] a Wired review, meanwhile, points that the film "chronicles the company’s unlikely rise, but it avoids talking about its shortcomings".[6] The review by Decider was more favourable, saying: "While a large part of Return to Space plays like a SpaceX promotional video, the meaningful way the film tells the story of a group of hopeful dreamers makes it more than worth your while."[7] The review by Joe Morgenstern on the Wall Street Journal was also favourable while noting the promotional tone, writing: "In fact, it promotes the company quite effectively, and why not? Elon Musk’s aerospace venture has achieved remarkable things since it was founded two decades ago. The film is more than that, though. It’s a return to dramatic accounts of blastoffs, followed by soul-filling footage from beyond our sheltering atmosphere and implacable gravity; a portrait, by reflected light from fiery boosters, of one of Earth’s most curious (in every respect) overachievers; and a testament to failing upward—far, far upward."[8]
References
External links
Films directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin |
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Elon Musk |
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Companies |
- Zip2 (1995–1999)
- X.com (later PayPal, 1999–2000)
- SpaceX (2002–present)
- Tesla, Inc. (2004–present)
- Tesla Energy (previously SolarCity, 2006–present)
- OpenAI (2015–present)
- Neuralink (2016–present)
- The Boring Company (2016–present)
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Depictions |
- Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future
- "The Musk Who Fell to Earth"
- Ludicrous: The Unvarnished Story of Tesla Motors
- "One Crew over the Crewcoo's Morty"
- Power Play: Tesla, Elon Musk, and the Bet of the Century
- Return to Space
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People | |
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Related articles |
- Hyperloop
- Boring Test Tunnel
- Proposed acquisition of Twitter
- Views
- Awards and honors
- TSLAQ
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- Category
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SpaceX |
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History |
Launch vehicles | Current | |
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In development | |
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Retired |
- Falcon 1
- Falcon 9
- v1.0
- v1.1
- "Full Thrust" v1.2
- Block 4
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Cancelled |
- Falcon 1e*
- Falcon 5*
- Falcon 9 Air*
- BFR and ITS*
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Spacecraft | Cargo |
- Dragon 1 Cargo
- Dragon 2 Cargo
- Dragon XL*
- Starship*
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Crewed |
- Dragon 2 Crew
- C206 Endeavour
- C207 Resilience
- C210 Endurance
- C211 Freedom
- Starship*
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Test vehicles | Current | |
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Retired |
- Grasshopper
- F9R Dev1†
- DragonFly
- Starhopper
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Unflown | |
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Rocket engines |
- Merlin
- Kestrel
- Draco
- SuperDraco
- Raptor
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Lists of missions |
- Falcon 1
- Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy
- Starlink
- Starship
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Launch facilities | Orbital |
- CCSFS SLC-40
- KSC LC-39A
- VSFB SLC-4E
- Floating launch platforms*
- Omelek Island†
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Atmospheric |
- McGregor
- New Mexico†
- Starbase
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Landing sites |
- Autonomous spaceport drone ships
- Landing Zones
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Other facilities |
- Headquarters and factory
- Rocket development and test facility
- Satellite development facility
- Regional offices
- Chantilly, Houston, Seattle, Washington DC
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Support |
- Megan (recovery ship)
- Shannon (recovery ship)
- SpaceX fairing recovery program
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Contracts |
- Commercial Orbital Transportation Services
- Commercial Resupply Services
- Commercial Crew Program
- Commercial Lunar Payload Services
- Gateway Logistics Services
- Starship HLS
- Polaris
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R&D programs |
- Reusability
- Falcon 9 landing tests
- Red Dragon (canceled)
- Mars transport
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Key people |
- Elon Musk (CEO, CTO)
- Gwynne Shotwell (President and COO)
- Tom Mueller (former VP of Propulsion Development)
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Related |
- Commercial astronaut
- Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space (2021 docuseries)
- Return to Space (2022)
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* denotes unflown vehicles or engines, and future missions or sites. † denotes failed missions, destroyed vehicles, and abandoned sites.
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