IMAX NEWS

IMAX 3D filmmaking in space

A recent article in Popular Science online takes us behind the scenes on the latest film project from IMAX Corporation - HUBBLE 3D. Veteran filmmaker Toni Myers gives us an insight into the way astronauts use the giant IMAX camera to capture images of the delicate repair of the Hubble telescope.

Here's the article, by Jeremy Hsu (posted online 28.05.2009):


Filming an IMAX 3D feature about NASA's last manned mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope created challenges that even Christopher Nolan's crew never faced on the set of "The Dark Knight." Using only eight minutes of film, astronauts had to capture the essence of five long spacewalks using a custom-made IMAX camera as big as a submarine. Thankfully, IMAX director and producer Toni Myers was there to help.

While Myers could only provide guidance from terra ferma, she worked carefully with Shuttle Atlantis pilot Gregory Johnson to turn him into the ideal IMAX astronaut/auteur during the ninety-minute day-night cycles as the space shuttle orbited Earth. This included knowing exactly when to roll film.

"It's really hard to cherry pick out of a six-hour spacewalk," Myers says.

Trying to get it right required a special IMAX camera that was operated remotely from inside the shuttle. Conventional IMAX 3D cameras capture images from the left and right eye views on two different strips of film, but weight constraints led filmmakers to design a more compact 700-pound camera that can shoot both left and right views on a single, mile-long strip of film. Myers first used such a camera for her 2002 IMAX film called "Space Station 3D."

Water bags were stuffed into the camera to help protect the interior film from damage due to space radiation. Filming both left and right views simultaneously on a single strip also meant adjusting the camera speed. To maintain 24 frames per second, it has to go twice as fast.

Johnson and other astronauts trained with a similar camera during simulated spacewalks in NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Lab over the course of eight months. The actual camera sat installed in the cargo bay of the space shuttle Atlantis, where Johnson could control and see its view via a computer screen and by using special software (no massive steadicam rigs required).



Photo credit: NASA's Custom IMAX 3D Camera: Testing the rig in NASA’s Neutral Buoyancy Lab. - NASA

Myers had to take a relatively hands-off approach out of necessity, even though she worked out a shooting schedule and plan beforehand with the astronauts. But her past years working on similar IMAX adventures in space have led her to trust astronaut instincts during filming.

"We always encourage them that if an alien flies by, they're the director and they take the shot," Myers joked.

Now Myers can only wait until June to see if her efforts have paid off. The camera is slated for unloading after the space shuttle Atlantis gets flown back to Florida from California, following a detour landing at Edwards Air Force Base because of bad weather.

Take a look at the final picture taken by the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (being decommissioned after nearly 16 years) on the Hubble Space Telescope:



Planetary Nebula K 4-55, in the constellation Cygnus, some 4,600 light years away. Layers of gas ejected by a dying red giant are ionized by radiation from the star's core, which causes them to glow.

Photo Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage team.
  • chris e 8 months ago
    I wonder why IMAX corporation are even bothering funding these big 70mm productions since they're so adamant about making everything 2K digital. Nonetheless, I'm glad they are anyway!
  • IMAX corporation don't actually make many of the 70mm films, on average they aim to do only one per year. Most of the films screened at the theatre come from other independent producers like MacGillivray Freeman Films (most recently The Alps) or Giant Screen Films (most recently Wild Ocean 3D). IMAX Corp are in the business of making the technology, not the films. The move to digital is logical even if it appears to be a departure from their traditional 15/70mm film format. The Hubble film will be shot with IMAX film cameras and the space sequences will be shot by the astronauts themselves (no room for a film crew up there!). This was the case with previous space films like Space Station 3D.

    The reason why IMAX continue to work in film is because they have a signifcant customer base of film based giant screen theatres. Many of these are in museums and science centre and they have little or no interest in showing Hollywood feature films. They would describe their film programming as 'mission based' ie showing films that support the institution's educational role. We continue to show these films because they are by far and away our most successful films. The most popular feature film that we have shown was The Polar Express, it was seen by twice as many people as The Dark Knight and yet it only ranks as the 22nd most popular film the theatre has even shown. The top 21 films are all traditional 15/70mm titles.
    • chris e 8 months ago
      Interesting. Do the traditional 15/70 films make so much more more money because of their very protracted screening periods, though? I would have thought that Hollywood DMR films make more money in the short term. Approximately how well do you think Hollywood pictures perform at Sydney IMAX compared to at a regular cinema multiplex, bearing in mind that IMAX is a single cinema operation? They must be going well enough to justify continuing Hollywood film screenings, judging by the recent releases in the cinema. Anyway, I'm glad you're continuing to screen true 70mm films. It's true that it's more financially beneficial for the IMAX corporation to go digital, but I would hope they'd at least wait until they could project at least at 8K resolution. Yes, it would be expensive, but I think it would be less so than 15/70 and a bigger, necessarily more expensive experience is the point of IMAX. Hopefully in the future they develop very high-res digital projectors to fill traditional IMAX screens like Sydney's, rather than completely throwing away what the 'IMAX' brand has come to mean.
  • LEAVE A COMMENT