Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space

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Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space
Poster for Netflix series about Inspiration4 mission.png
GenreSpaceflight documentary
Based onSpaceX Inspiration4 mission
Directed by Jason Hehir
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes5
Production
Production locationsUnited States, low Earth orbit
Production companies
  • TIME Studios
  • Known
  • Words + Pictures
  • JMH Films
Original release
Release6 September (2021-09-06) 
30 September 2021 (2021-09-30)

Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space is a 2021 American five-part docuseries jointly produced by Netflix and Time Studios to chronicle, in near real-time, the successful SpaceX Inspiration4 orbital mission which occurred in September 2021.

Contents

Conception and announcement

Netflix confirmed the production of the documentary series about the first all-civilian orbital mission on its Twitter account on 3 August 2021. Inspiration4's Twitter account added its own commentary to the Netflix announcement the next day, saying: "We can't wait for you to watch "Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission To Space" on @netflix, covering our crew's exciting, out-of-this-world journey". [1] The series was designed to track the recruitment process, preparation for and, in as close to real time as possible, the launch of the first all-civilian orbital flight, which would be accomplished by Elon Musk's company SpaceX. [2] [1] The documentary was co-produced by Time Studios, and is directed by Jason Hehir, creator of the 2020 basketball documentary series about Michael Jordan, The Last Dance . [1]

Netflix's decision to co-produce the documentary came weeks after two other billionaire passenger suborbital spaceflights launched and landed safely in July 2021: the flight of Virgin Galactic's VSS Unity, including Richard Branson, and Blue Origin's New Shepard flight, including Jeff Bezos. [1] According to The Verge , Netflix also planned to release a "hybrid live-action animation special for kids and families" about Inspiration4 on the day before the launch. [1]

For Netflix, Inspiration4 represents a new shift to near real-time documentary production. The launch was scheduled for 15 September 2021, and the plan was for Netflix to release two pairs of episodes about it on 6 September and 13 September 2021. The final of the series was planned for 30 September 2021, assuming the launch happens on its original schedule. It was reported by Deadline Hollywood that "The quick-turnaround series will take viewers behind the scenes with the four crew members — from their unconventional selection and intensive months-long commercial astronaut training, through the intimate and emotional moments leading up to liftoff", and that "The final episode, which premieres just days after the mission is completed, will feature unprecedented access inside the spacecraft, capturing the launch and the crew". [1] [3]

Production

The project began in January 2021 before the space mission was announced. The Inspiration4 team hadn't chosen the astronauts yet, so the series was in a position to capture every step of the recruitment and training process. The director Jason Hehir said that it was "being produced as the historic moment unfolds; time is of the essence". His involvement started on 1 April 2021 with an email from a Netflix executive. Regarding why it would be on Netflix, vice president of strategic communications and outreach for Space Foundation, Richard B. Cooper, said "You're taking the message and the story where people are consuming it most". [4]

Hehir said this was the most complex production plan he had ever been a part of, and that documenting different crew members training at different times in different time zones, while working towards a space launch, was "quite a tall task", and that "This is a more ambitious production than anything I've ever been a part of, on several levels". He also reported that "This is a true mission to space... ordinary people will be operating a spacecraft for three days as it orbits the Earth, higher than anyone has been since the Apollo missions ... the ambition of this is inspiring". [5]

The mission commander Jared Isaacman said "I think we all lost track of the fact that there was a documentary made throughout all this... But we're so thankful that they did, because we have not had an opportunity to stop and pause, even for a second, over the last five months or so to just reflect on all these important milestones. So we're happy to be doing this for us. We're so happy they're doing it for everyone... Because, that's what Inspiration4 is supposed to be about: inspiring people... and I think that will be explored in pretty decent detail throughout the documentary". [5]

Director Hehir was asked about having a contingency plan for the series finale, which planned to cover the space mission itself, in the event of a mission failure. He said "It was obviously a radioactive conversation that no one wanted to have... We had loose plans for what we were going to do with the final episode but the reality is that SpaceX likely would've seized all the footage. I don't know how we would've made a doc with what we would've been given. It would've been talking heads and felt like a news report. But I am confident we would've made an episode." [6]

With the success of the mission, Netflix got "bragging rights with the first limited series shot in space", and Hehir made the most of his access by "foregrounding the footage from the cupola, which includes intimate and personable moments as the crew capture themselves floating against a backdrop than in any other context would register as science fiction." Hehir said he trained the astronauts to record themselves with an iPhone designated as the Netflix phone, and coached the crew on how to make a documentary. He said "We were at the mercy of people who have a lot of other things to worry about besides producing a documentary. Luckily, they nailed it... It's the best photography ever taken in space by an astronaut." Hehir believes the crew deserved an award for their cinematography, saying "It's the most ambitious cinematographic achievement I've been a part of... These people should be listed on the list of cinematographers. They captured stunning images." [6]

Promotion and release

SpaceX founder Elon Musk used social media to urge his followers to watch the Netflix series. On the day of Inspiration4's launch, he also used Twitter to urge his followers to tune into the Netflix YouTube channel to watch the launch of the historic mission. [7]

The first four episodes were released for streaming on schedule, airing 6 and 13 September 2021. The final episode was released on 30 September and captured the Inspiration4 crew's launch, orbital activities, and successful return to Earth. [8] [6]

Episodes

No.Directed byOriginal air date [3]
1Jason HehirSeptember 6, 2021 (2021-09-06)
Preparations begin for the mission to send four civilians into orbit, and its charitable goals lead to a 29-year-old cancer survivor joining the crew. [9]
2Jason HehirSeptember 6, 2021 (2021-09-06)
Principles of generosity and prosperity inform the selection of the last two crew members. Excitement for the flight ramps up, but anxiety lingers. [9]
3Jason HehirSeptember 13, 2021 (2021-09-13)
As training begins, the crewmembers process the physical, mental and technical demands being placed on them. A climb of Mount Rainier puts them to the test. [9]
4Jason HehirSeptember 13, 2021 (2021-09-13)
A fighter jet ride prepares the crew for the G-forces of spaceflight. Hayley, Sian and Chris relate the emotions they experience as launch approaches. [9]
5Jason HehirSeptember 30, 2021 (2021-09-30)
The series finale covers launch preparation, the Falcon 9 launch, three-days of on-orbit activities, including stunning imagery of the Earth from the Dragon's unique cupola, and the safe return of the crew to Earth. [6]

Reception

An early review of the series by The Daily Beast posted when only the first two episodes were available reported that "Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space insistently pushes its message from the get-go". That message, according to Time's chief science editor Jeffrey Kluger, is that "Inspiration4 is "a hinge point in history, and will kick the doors open to space for the rest of us"". But it reports that the early episodes do "very little to take a critical look at this enterprise. At least in its initial pair of installments, the docuseries plays like a PR product, casting everything in glowing terms, including its portraits of the mission's four astronauts". The review also says "One can imagine Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space's more timely later episodes supplying greater suspense. Yet in its early going... the entire affair mostly comes across as prepackaged corporate publicity". It also admits that the hazards of spaceflight are "real, and they'll certainly be front-and-center as Inspiration4 makes its way from the planning stages to the launchpad... one hopes that, as its subjects enter orbit, Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space quiets down about its own importance, and lets its action speak for itself". [10]

The Guardian reviewed the early episodes saying, "There's a gameshow undercurrent to Countdown, the Netflix series, whose first two episodes predominantly serve to introduce viewers to the civilian astronauts, selected by a Willy Wonka - like arbitrary process tied to four core mission values... It remains to be seen... if Inspiration4 will push past skepticism of ultra-expensive, privately funded space flight. Regardless, the mission, and the messaging attached to it, will be televised, bringing the vast frontier to your personal screen". [8]

A review by MIT Technology Review said that,

...where the docuseries gets compelling is our introduction to the crew... This is where it becomes easier to root for Inspiration4. Arceneaux and Sembroski are like the rest of us who never, ever had any plans to go to space, and never thought we'd have the chance. Proctor's history and her twin passions for aviation and space meant she was always waiting for a moment like this. These are people who in past eras never would have had much of a chance to go to space — and who now find themselves on the precipice of something literally out of this world. It does not mean that Countdown is correct in telling us the mission will change the future of space as we know it — for at least a generation or two, space travel will continue to be under the control of larger and wealthier powers, and ordinary people won't be granted opportunities like this except in extraordinary circumstances. But the mission does give us a glimpse at what we can strive for. [11]

Regarding the completed finale, IndieWire reported that,

The hourlong finale of the five-episode “Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space” that comes out this week chronicles how Isaacman, along with child cancer survivor Hayley Arcenaux, geology professor Sian Proctor, and data engineer Chris Sembroski completed a successful three-day mission that brought them up to 575 kilometers above the planet and concluded with their splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean. With the crew's dazzling 4K iPhone footage at its center, the episode provides the first up-close look at the potential for space tourism that is poised to evolve in the near future. As the giddy crew float around the Dragon capsule and gaze out its expansive cupola, they marvel at the stunning imagery of the globe as they circle its perimeter every 90 minutes ... the footage from the cupola ... includes intimate and personable moments as the crew capture themselves floating against a backdrop than in any other context would register as science fiction. [6]

Jeff Foust indicated that while the exclusive footage and the interviews were fascinating, the docuseries lacked drama, and expressed the concern that it could be a new template for Space Age media relations [12]

Companion products

Netflix had a live webcast of the launch of Inspiration4 on its YouTube channel which was hosted from New York by Soledad O'Brien and Karamo Brown. They were joined by astronaut Leland D. Melvin to provide the viewpoint from a professional astronaut. Jeffrey Kluger, Catherine Coleman and Ron Garan were in Florida to provide impressions from KSC. [13]

A special edition of Time , The New Space Age: Inside the historic Inspiration4 mission to open rocket travel for all, was published as a commemorative book and companion to the series. [14]

See also

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References

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