"Roving Mars," a 40-minute documentary film, tells the story of the two remote-controlled, four-wheeled "Rovers" sent to Mars in 2003. The Rovers were designed to last 90 days, but are still taking photographs.
Steve Squyres and Jim Bell of Cornell University designed the cameras for the Rover space vehicles, and helped make the film.
"One of our big goals was to make this an experience like you were there," Bell said. "The impression we wanted to create was, you step out of your little capsule ... and you're seeing this alien landscape for the first time."
Planning for the film began even before the launch of the Mars missions. George Butler, a documentary maker, was working on an Imax movie with film editor Tim Squyres, who had discussed Imax productions with his brother, the Cornell scientist.
They approached producer Frank Marshall, who successfully pitched the idea to Disney. The company is scheduled to release the film on Friday.
The movie's photographs were gleaned from 400 hours of high-definition film taken during a three-year period on the Red Planet.
Copyright 2006 by United Press International
Related stories:
Filmmaker examines the future in 3D
Melissa Butts has seen the future, and it looks startlingly clear and lifelike. Butts is a filmmaker who specializes in 3D digital movies, an emerging market that is increasingly drawing the interest of major Hollywood studios, theater chains, and top directors like James Cameron and Steven Spielberg.
Professor-turned-producer learns the movie biz
It's not every day that a research scientist and university professor gets to see his work on the silver screen. But in just a few months, Richard W. Siegel will get to watch his name scroll down the giant screen of a darkened IMAX theater with a new title that seems light years away from laboratory benches and lecture halls: Executive Producer.
Spiky Probe on NASA Mars Lander Raises Vapor Quandary
(PhysOrg.com) -- A fork-like conductivity probe has sensed humidity rising and falling beside NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander, but when stuck into the ground, its measurements so far indicate soil that is thoroughly and perplexingly dry.
1968 Science Fiction is Today’s Reality
The futuristic epic 2001: A Space Odyssey influenced many to fall in love with the limitless possibilities of space exploration. The movie sparked imaginations and provided a realistic preview of what our future in space might look like.
A Giant of Astronomy and a Quantum of Solace
Cerro Paranal, the 2600m high mountain in the Chilean Atacama Desert that hosts ESO’s Very Large Telescope, will be the stage for scenes in the next James Bond movie, “Quantum of Solace”.
NASA announces details of Hubble servicing mission
NASA scientists and a space shuttle astronaut today outlined details of a challenging mission that will repair and upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope in 2008.
Electric sand findings could lead to better climate models
Wind isn't acting alone in the geological process behind erosion, sand dunes and airborne dust particles called aerosols. The other culprit is electricity. By taking both factors into account, researchers at the University of Michigan have developed a new model that matches real-world measurements of "saltation" better than the decades-old classical theory.
IMAX Camera Returns to Space to Chronicle Hubble Space Telescope
IMAX Corporation and Warner Bros. Pictures announced Monday that, in cooperation with NASA, the IMAX 3D camera is scheduled to return to space in 2008 aboard the space shuttle during STS-125 for production of a new film. Set for release in early 2010, IMAX will chronicle the life story of the Hubble Space Telescope.