WASHINGTON - The star of the Warner
Brothers' new IMAX film "Hubble 3D" was missed Tuesday evening at
the movie's world premiere at the Smithsonian National Air and Space
Museum but for good reason: it was orbiting 350 miles above Earth.
The Hubble Space Telescope's absence
notwithstanding, the celebration saw the film's co-starring
astronauts walk the red carpet to see for the first
time the telescope's 'life story' unfold on the museum's five-story screen
here.
The movie's debut, which traded
Hollywood stars for the celestial variety, featured the NASA
astronaut crew of the fifth and final space
shuttle Hubble servicing mission who in May 2009 repaired and
upgraded the telescope while also filming
their work using an IMAX 3D camera mounted in Atlantis' payload bay.
"It's like experiencing the flight one
more time," STS-125 mission commander Scott Altman told
collectSPACE.com before the screening. "I can't wait to go there
again."
Altman, who with spacewalkers John Grunsfeld and Mike Massimino,
pilot Greg C. Johnson, and mission specialist Megan McArthur attended
the premiere, also shot scenes from inside the orbiter using HD
cameras, which were then digitally upsized for the large-format film.
"Probably the only frustrating thing
about flying in space, or sad thing, is that you can't share everything
that you see there with everybody," shared Massimino
from the red carpet. "This format gives us an excellent opportunity
to share this experience with many people."
The seventh film from the IMAX "space
team" led by Toni Myers, "Hubble 3D" offers audiences a
unique look at the space telescope's
legacy and how it has changed our view of the universe.
"I like them all," Myers told
collectSPACE.com about her prior six films that were set -- and often
filmed -- in space, "but this one is certainly breaking new
ground in terms of technical challenges."
In addition to incorporating the footage that
the astronauts captured, Myers collaborated with the imaging team at the
Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Md., and the Advanced
Visualization Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne
to use the data returned by Hubble to create a series of scientifically
realistic flights that "unfold on screen like a guided tour of the
universe."
Said Myers, "I
think any film that flies you to the edge of the observable universe is... a
new achievement."
Or as IMAX CEO Rich Gelfond
put it, "we first took you into space, we looked at the Earth, and
now we look at the edge of the universe."
The deep space scenes aside, the film also
steps viewers through a series of journeys that occurred much closer to
home -- the NASA shuttle missions that deployed and later serviced
the space telescope. Specifically, "Hubble 3D" pulls from
footage shot for IMAX's 1994 "Destiny in Space," which
showed the 1990 deploy of the observatory and the 1993 mission to repair
its famously flawed mirror by installing a set of corrective
"contact lenses".
"With the disappointments of the first
[mirror] problems, and then the difficulties of keeping it alive over the
years as various instruments failed, it is just a constant
drama," said executive producer and IMAX co-founder Graeme Ferguson. "It
makes for a natural movie."
The premiere, which concluded with a
cocktail party under a full-scale engineering model of the Hubble
telescope and nearby one of the observatory's
instruments replaced and returned to Earth by Atlantis' astronauts, drew
an invited audience of more than 500, including several members of
Congress and NASA's Deputy Administrator, Lori Garver.
"This [film] really brings to the public
what the taxpayers have paid for, not only seeing the research which is
widely distributed through the Hubble's Space Telescope Science
Institute, but also to experience it up close and personal," said Garver.
The public will get its chance to see
"Hubble 3D" when it opens in IMAX and IMAX 3D theaters
worldwide on March 19. Narrated by actor Leonardo DiCaprio
(who was unable to attend the premiere), "Hubble 3D" runs
43 minutes long.
Click
here to view photos from the Hubble 3D premiere party at
collectSPACE.com.
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