Entertainment

A company behind plans for Tom Cruise to shoot a film in space has revealed it will launch the world’s first movie studio in orbit in two years’ time.

UK-based Space Entertainment Enterprise (SEE) says the film and sports arena will be in a module which will dock at the International Space Centre (ISS) by late 2024.

Not only will it allow film producers to make movies while orbiting the Earth, but SEE predicts that it will also host sporting events in space and social media influencers who want to make content 250 miles above the planet.

It will form part of the ISS’s new commercial arm, Axiom Station, who will also handle construction, and will eventually float free in 2028.

“SEE-1 is an incredible opportunity for humanity to move into a different realm and start an exciting new chapter in space,” SEE founders Dmitry and Elena Lesnevsky said.

“It will provide a unique and accessible home for boundless entertainment possibilities in a venue packed with innovative infrastructure, which will unleash a new world of creativity.

“With worldwide leader Axiom Space building this cutting-edge, revolutionary facility, SEE-1 will provide not only the first, but also the supreme quality space structure enabling the expansion of the $2trn global entertainment industry into low-Earth orbit.”

More on International Space Station

SEE is also the production company behind Tom Cruise’s upcoming attempt at filming a movie in space, with the actor planning to head to the ISS later this year.

He was pipped to the honour of being the first actor to shoot a movie in space by a team of Russians.

Their film about a surgeon performing an operation on a cosmonaut, which was shot on the space station over the course of 12 days, is due to be released this year.

Articles You May Like

Body of missing rabbi found in UAE – as Israeli PM says he was murdered in ‘antisemitic terror incident’
Anas Sarwar ‘right’ to distance himself from winter fuel cut, says Ruth Davidson
How Elon Musk’s plan to slash government agencies and regulation may benefit his empire
Trump watches SpaceX launch, but test flight does not go as planned
Cost of King’s coronation to taxpayer revealed in new report