Road to the Stars

Road to the Stars (Russian: Дорога к звёздам /dərɐɡˈa ɡ_zvʲˈɵzdəm/) is a 1957 Soviet film directed by Pavel Klushantsev. It combines elements of science education films and speculative science fiction. The film was groundbreaking for its use of special effects to depict life in space.

Road to the Stars
Produced byP. Klushantsev
Screenplay byBoris Liapunov
Vasily Solovyov
Music byS. Shatiryan
Production
company
Release date
  • 1957 November (1957 November) (USSR)
Running time
50 min.
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian

Synopsis

The first half of the film is historical and educational in nature, depicting mostly the life and scientific contributions of Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, along with the basic principles of rocket propulsion, ballistics, and space flight. It also depicts the contributions of Max Valier and Robert Goddard.

The second half of the film is speculative in nature, with various scenes showing manned space flight (4 years before the flight of Yuri Gagarin), a large space station (in great detail), and the first man on the moon (12 years before the flight of Apollo 11), as well as lunar colonization.[1]

Cast

Crew

  • Writers — Boris Liapunov, Vasily Solovyov
  • Director — Pavel Klushantsev
  • Operator — Mikael Galper
  • Composer — S. Shatiryan
  • Artist — M. Tsybasov
  • Sound Engineer — RP Leviti
  • Operators animation — A.V. Lavrentiev and A. M. Romanenko
  • Animation artist — V. Shelkov

Art features

The film was far ahead of its time in terms of cinematic special effects. In particular, it features a wheel-shaped space station eleven years before Kubrick's famous film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Awards

  • 1958. 2nd prize at CCF I (Moscow)[2]
  • 1958. Bronze medal: Б. Kudricha MCF technical and scientific films Belgrade.[2]

Legacy

The film is believed to have significantly influenced Stanley Kubrick's techniques in 2001: A Space Odyssey, particularly in its accurate depiction of weightlessness and a rotating space station. Encyclopedia Astronautica describes some scenes from 2001 as a "shot-for-shot duplication of Road to the Stars".[3] Specific comparisons of shots from the two films have been analyzed by the filmmaker Alessandro Cima.[4] A 1994 article in American Cinematographer says, "When Stanley Kubrick made 2001: a Space Odyssey in 1968, he claimed to have been first to fly actor/astronauts on wires with the camera on the ground, shooting vertically while the actor's body covered the wires" but observes that Klushantsev had preceded him in this.[5]

gollark: So your expectations would be wrong.
gollark: Well, you would want that, but it doesn't do that.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: baidicoot suggests I have some sort of "try to rewrite this to look like this" operation, but that seems hard/overly general/slow.
gollark: It expands things as much as possible, but obviously in some cases you want to not do that.

References

  1. Guschev S. Фильм о штурме неба Техника-молодежи №3-1958 с.24-25
  2. E.V. Kharitonov, A.V. Shcherbak-Zhukov Дорога к звездам "On the screen - Miracle: Patriotic fantasy genre and kinoskazki" (1909-2002) : Proceedings of the popular encyclopedia / Motion Picture Arts Research Institute, if . - Moscow: B. Sekachev 2003
  3. "Road to the Stars". astronautix.com. Retrieved July 20, 2019.
  4. "Road to the Stars – 1957 Soviet Space Vision with Stunning Special Effects". Candlelight Stories. January 19, 2011. Retrieved November 24, 2011.
  5. "Klushantsev: Russia's Wizard of Fantastika". American Cinematographer. ASC Holding Corp. 75. 1994.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.