Music... Stanley Kubrick, George Lucas was fans of Pavel Klushantsev. Lucas called him "godfather of Star Wars" and Kubrick used his movies techniques and some scenes. As example "Planet of the Storms" (1962) and especially "Road to Stars" (1956) -some shots and stuff in "A Space Odyssey" (1968) look very similar. Also usage of classical music in background scenes (arrival, departs etc) was a common technique in Soviet cinema, that comes from early era of silent movies. So, Interstellar, Elite Dangerous and etc is using that docking Odyssey scene, while it was reference it self. p.s. Arrival of a Train (1896) is often called "first film"... while there was several before it, for e.g. Roundhay Garden Scene (1888)
@@angryox3102if I had to guess it's probably because they don't have to rush as much like they have to with Soyuz. Soyuz has enough air, fuel, and water for four days and a traditional rendezvous took about two or three days. cutting it down to 3-6 hours helps them a lot in case of emergency. Dragon has enough on board for about a week+ simply because it's a bigger spacecraft so they can afford to take their time. if they were pressed to I don't doubt they probably could dock in 3-6 hours
TY for posting, getting very exciting times once more in space.
The music reminds me of trying to dock my ship in Elite Dangerous 😁
You’ve never seen the movie 2001 A Space Odyssey ?
@Joey-JoJo-Jr.64 right!? Like, arguably the most famous space scene in film!
I wonder where Frontier got that came from? 😉
Music... Stanley Kubrick, George Lucas was fans of Pavel Klushantsev.
Lucas called him "godfather of Star Wars" and Kubrick used his movies techniques and some scenes. As example "Planet of the Storms" (1962) and especially "Road to Stars" (1956) -some shots and stuff in "A Space Odyssey" (1968) look very similar. Also usage of classical music in background scenes (arrival, departs etc) was a common technique in Soviet cinema, that comes from early era of silent movies.
So, Interstellar, Elite Dangerous and etc is using that docking Odyssey scene, while it was reference it self.
p.s. Arrival of a Train (1896) is often called "first film"... while there was several before it, for e.g. Roundhay Garden Scene (1888)
Это Прэкрасно‼️🔥🔊🍺😉
docking to hatch open is almost as long as launch to docking. How many orbits do they even go around? 1, 2?
Two.
Here we need music from "Interstellar" with "C'mon Tars"
2001 Space Odyssey meme music 😂 its going to be lit on the ISS. "Sorry Dave, I cannot comply".
See th-cam.com/video/HS_fqqFWMjU/w-d-xo.html
How did they make it that fast?
Two-orbit, three-hour trajectory since 2019 th-cam.com/video/N-z4xtrrHuw/w-d-xo.html
@@SciNewsRowhy does Space X usually take so long to get there?
@@angryox3102if I had to guess it's probably because they don't have to rush as much like they have to with Soyuz. Soyuz has enough air, fuel, and water for four days and a traditional rendezvous took about two or three days. cutting it down to 3-6 hours helps them a lot in case of emergency. Dragon has enough on board for about a week+ simply because it's a bigger spacecraft so they can afford to take their time. if they were pressed to I don't doubt they probably could dock in 3-6 hours
Thanks to nasa ROSCOSMOS😂😂
They go top gear. Simple.
it costs a trillion dollars and they don't have. a cammer that doesn't ned to readjust every 1 minute to track spacecrafts
it's a time lapse retard
Сколько триллионов и космических кораблей есть у твоей страны, Богдашка? Сколько веков планируете рассчитываться за кредиты? До конца истории?
@@I_r_i_ Я живу в США
@@bogdanivchenko3723 записной патриот Украины из США🤣
@@I_r_i_ я что-то говорил про Украину?
How ironic is it that as the confirmation of docking was announced they were above Ukraine.
Old tech😂
It gets in 3 hours to the ISS, "new tech" needs a day.