
Capsule Sci-Fi Edmund Kingsley Lisa Greenwood David Wayman.
Guy is an experienced fighter pilot who is in command of Britain's first manned mission to space. He trained for three years at the height of the Cold War and now he is alone in space with a malfunctioning capsule. He has limited contact with the UK, some unusual communication with the US and some unorthodox communication with Tyuratam deep in Soviet Russia. Who can help him return safely back to earth? Will he make the right choice?
2015 U.K. Production
Winner! 51 Film Festival Awards and 38 Nominations.
For fans of films like; Gravity, Interstellar, The Martian, Apollo 18 and Ad Astra.
One Man, One Mission, One Choice.
Director: Andrew Martin
Cast: Edmund Kingsley, Lisa Greenwood, David Wayman
Trivia:
The Capsule used was genuinely very small and claustrophobic. Edmund Kingsley playing 'Guy Taylor' could reach both walls of the Capsule without stretching his arms out fully. The Capsule contained seven key shooting hatches. The Director used lengthy takes of up to seventeen minutes to enhance the tension and claustrophobia and between takes, Edmund would frequently stay in the Capsule.
The images of Earth outside the windows of the Capsule used no CGI and were in fact a front-projected 90-minute 4k video of one complete orbit of Earth shot from space.
2015 U.K. Production
Winner! 51 Film Festival Awards and 38 Nominations.
For fans of films like; Gravity, Interstellar, The Martian, Apollo 18 and Ad Astra.
One Man, One Mission, One Choice.
Director: Andrew Martin
Cast: Edmund Kingsley, Lisa Greenwood, David Wayman
Trivia:
The Capsule used was genuinely very small and claustrophobic. Edmund Kingsley playing 'Guy Taylor' could reach both walls of the Capsule without stretching his arms out fully. The Capsule contained seven key shooting hatches. The Director used lengthy takes of up to seventeen minutes to enhance the tension and claustrophobia and between takes, Edmund would frequently stay in the Capsule.
The images of Earth outside the windows of the Capsule used no CGI and were in fact a front-projected 90-minute 4k video of one complete orbit of Earth shot from space.