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tv   Interview  RT  October 28, 2021 9:30pm-10:01pm EDT

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wearing u. k. fishing vessels from dis and bulkhead, fresh pools and beefing aboard, attracts all new k goods and cargo. the dispute days, bonds to 2016. 1 british voted to leave the you in the years that followed the block and the u. k. struck a deal where britain offers access to french fishers who can prove they previously fish. their power says only half of french vessels eligible for british fishing license have been given. one london intern is warring, that frances ultimatum violates u. u. k. trade agreements and wider international law. and earlier we heard from you kips former spokesperson for fisheries. mike, who come and market della, hey, who is the head of norman des camecia on fisheries. they offered that opposing use on they should i think it's a president that says that's got an election coming up on the horizon and he's, he's trying to be yeah, of the bit of the statement there and bit of a bully boy. i would consider that in bahrain lot fan is doing very well and along
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that no french cost and he's look and he's desperate to get those votes back to again, we have to be very, very strong. would never ever bowed down to a bullying. we shouldn't, don't now we should allow this man to polier's answer the french to buller this country. we need to get control of all wall to which we were promising. the brakes were promised come to my waters. i don't know. we've got that yet little so we've been waiting to get access to those washes for more than 11 months. now it's time to do something about it now through were aware of what the other party is trying to project. everyone is trying to flex their muscles won't, but i don't think it will end in a naval battle between the french and british. but this is not so much of an economic issue as a symbolic one. the way we resolve this problem will determine how bricks it is settled in other sectors of the economy, the u. s. c. f to take more news and about said when it's time of next here. now st . and i shall, it's an exclusive in t v with
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a fast film direct same the wild has just returned from the international space station. ah, what explains yo biden's sudden drop in the poles as a candidate he promised to return to some form of normality. however, his current standing with the public is anything back is his agenda, the problem. maybe he's not as likable as he once seen. he is in trouble and so is this party. oh so i have to ask you the 1st thing is that better up or down? yeah, well it's very different, but it's so very different atmosphere in the circumstances and everything
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totally different. first of all. busy i mean people are flying up, they're not here. here they're just walking unders gravity. so this is a completely different feeling which i miss already, which i already miss because the fact that you don't feel any weight. and then you can like push yourself a little bit and fly until you stop yourself. is something you cannot experience here on earth. you think may be that you loved it so much because it was something new for you. but if you'd been there for 6 months, you'd just be at the and please i want to feel of it. well, yeah, i'm sure that's a part of it. and if i spend there's 6 months i would missed earth and i wouldn't want to come back as soon as possible. but when i talked to the customer, i was up there. usually their intention is to fly in to spend as much time up there as possible. with knees, it's a little different, there are certain certain aspects of life up there that i have to get used to. and
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i never quite did as you know, washing yourself for eating and going to a toilet. i mean it's, it's very uncomfortable there. you know, a person can use to get, can, can get used to anything pretty much, but those are the aspects that us, that are the hardest to get used to. other than that. i mean it's, it's a state of flight and you know, we have a perspective on a view of earth and nothing and don't he can beat that. it must be pretty amazing for you having not trained your life and dreamt of becoming on the wrong cosmonaut to suddenly have that opportunity and become sort of an average person to pay thought, unimaginable. well, i'm technically, i am technically a cosmo, but i don't feel like i'm on the same level of training and the same level of competence about space and international space station as
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the guys who trained for 10 years to to be up there. i did dream about that by the way i dreamed about it. when i was a child in russia, it was common, it was eighty's. and when i was about 567, i was very common among russian kids to dream of space because face cause when i was world were big heroes back to that and people knew their names. unfortunately, they like now did dream one and a huge book and bought space was this the x? so i was looking at and reading, trying to read it and trying to understand that i had them. i was asking other people to read passages out of it. i didn't dream about this for many years, but i remember as a kid dreaming about it after that space came back to me with my feature film was called 7 most phase. so the space came back to my wife. and me actually took a lot of it because i was also co author of the script i was was rewriting the
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script. and before i started rewrites, i had to do a lot of research. you can just start writing anything you had to kind of understand, get a deep understanding of what of the industry and of the history. and i had lived with the with space inside of me. and after that, i was shooting a film and i was always thinking, oh, how is that up there? and i was trying to imitate it on earth to really i did have i did have a lot of thoughts of log space and especially flying up there. when i went to ask you, actually when you 1st came home and you said to your wife to your mother, 2 children guys, daddy is getting to to space. what was the initial reaction? you know that because they know me, they kind of expected that to happen. and so that it wasn't that how that happened? no, no, no, no. and they were very much like, oh okay, i have another mad i do. yeah. no, no, no,
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it's totally. it wasn't that they knew i was serious. they, they, they kind of knew because for the new b moon, they knew me pretty well. and so i said it's going to happen then usually happen because respect your mother. and she said that she expected this totally from you said you've always been the type of person who always wants to go forward and do something new just comes from. huh. your sense of what we of course of course, from her as well. she said that she'd also like to go to face if she can use adventure. do you think she'd be a good space tourist? yes, she likes to travel job. was there a moment where you were on the i assess. well maybe he did peek into the room, anita a moment that struck you and stayed with you when you realized forgive the pump, the gravity of what you were doing here. it was right in the beginning. it was like a 1st day when i, because the 1st day when we arrived and was very overwhelming. and we were kind of
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shocked and we were through the take off on the and the docking. and we were very and we were exhausted and you know and shocks, and it was like a mix of those feelings to. yeah, we, i remember when i, we kind of flew around the station and we had a tour of the sky was around the i assess the whole, i says, american section and including the american folks. at the end of this tour week we flew into the don't the cooper and i remember unit i was just like frozen out there . then we stopped flying because it was and we were just looking. we just, we were just mesmerized by. and so i guess that was the 1st moment that we realize why on we are up in the space and we are here. we're here finally, i mean something, i mean, of course people will train for years, but for us the training was long to say every day after that the realization was
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getting new for and i guess in the middle of this, of our stay there, we kind of were used to already in being there, but yeah, the 1st moment was that that huge perspective of the world. obviously when you're down here filming on earth, which must seem really boring to now you have stuff like light engine is sound cute . so you have a whole team that you are pretty much one man bonded with you and you and then all the fuel because middleton off knows helping you thought did not make your life even more difficult. who did actually make it over more satisfying, knowing that you had done it from start to finish all by yourself, of course, and do what she were doing this interview right now. there are 4 guys here. shout out. yeah. for i was just, you know, when a flying, when we're not moving, if we were moving the lights would be somewhere there and there would be sitting up and there will checking the sound and how the here. and if we were doing the walk
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around this office, it would, we even more people would be more complicated. so yeah, of course, even the simple in are here and there. and we were shooting like a movie live action film with the, with artistic white. and there was, i was aiming for that we weren't just, you know, just turning on the light and let's go, no, no we, i was trying to create an atmosphere as cinematic atmosphere there and not to have my shadows over the actors. basically i was trying to make you look pretty because she's a beautiful woman. so i wanted to emphasize that as well. it was difficult. i was also doing the sound engineering and on camera mechanics and i was begging up material and i was sending it to earth for my editor to check in for the color guy. color is to make sure that i'm doing all the technical aspects of it, right. and it's not too dark and it's not too right. and it's not
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a whole one pass that guys are not even focus here. if we're moving around, it would be a problem with focus as well as i was trying to do because we're shooting on the film camera without out of focus. and so i was also flying and doing the focus racking focus. yeah, it was, i mean, but i'm not saying is it because i'm not that big of a hero that i was. i knew that that that's going to be like if the technical progress would in some future allow 10 people to go up there. it would be easier for the film, so get me up there. that was preparing for that. i was training for that and you will see in the movie theaters how i what can i do? why myself and say with you to help you a lot. well she, she did her own makeup, obviously i wasn't doing her makeup and she was she to a coup props because the props were medical, we're doing a medical opperation surgery. and so she really understood what each
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prop is and she kind of was doing. she was like a prop master, so she took that responsibility on to herself. she held dad called me and i was held to what they were out on while the customers were actors. script was written with the understanding that i couldn't bring other actors there. so i knew that there was would be one actress and the other one would be also in the see in the playing on themselves piece. and how did they do, or should they stick to being cultural? they were good. i mean, they did, they, they are used to being in front of the cameras. they do a lot of tv introductions, solo congratulating people all the time and you know, reading people in there so, so they're used to being in front of the camera. also, when they are not in the scene, and i was flying around with the camera, one of them would protect me from hitting my head over like
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a lamp or something. that's a problem there as well. because when you, when i look in the, in the viewfinder, i just see view finder. i don't see where i'm flying is where i'm walking. i can sort of when you're walking with your, you have an awareness is facia, why don't do what there because of 4 dimensions you didn't realize were the ceiling where the, where the wall because everything can be a ceiling and the wall and the floor filling space also have the advantages to be able to give you something to direct to the can't do. well, of course that's why we went up there because i, i spend a lot of time imitating the 0 gravity and space station. so i know the limitations of what you can do, even with a huge budget, even with $200000000.00 budget, there are limitations and up there which are trying to imitate, for months there is just given, you know, everyone's is, is natural for them. when you are directing ah, a space film on earth,
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it's really, really, i mean, it's hard to twist your brain and assert in this, in the 4th dimension and, and to create and invent a scene in a 0 gravity way. if you a seen were 2 people are communicating in a way on earth. i mean, they're pretty much standing in front of each other. they're on the floor. it's really uncommon if like a person would be standing on the, on the wall here or on the ceiling. but there, it's very natural, some scenes i shot the way i, i realized that i wouldn't be able to invent on earth because i is just, your mind doesn't twist that way. it's hard is just technically hard to shoot. it's hard move there. you have to get used to like, and on the earth you say, well, you get in the door and stand up here. and usually there is no problem with there. and you know, some person can get in the door and up there. and this is loops that happens. yeah
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. there's no one more take. so that's that space. oh, for oh, he died. i cried. i just kind of split the whole time out there. no one really thought anything different is all about. i just didn't feel good on the way for the surgery, his lungs failed. 30 seconds, but i killed him. i had gotten stuck with so many needles that day. in 2019 doctor started talking about
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a new wide spread. does he use that caused severe lung damage? there's a few points that were really the turning all of the patients were diagnosed with a lung injury associated with using electronic cigarettes or facing products. he pulled this out. he really felt holy crap, his him died. oh no, he's the better it was. i wouldn't want my worst enemy to ever go through that. it was out of breath. no one else seemed wrong. when i was just a shape out, the same becomes the african engagement equals betrayal.
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when so many find themselves worlds apart, we choose to look for common ground, a entertainment industry expanding itself into many other aspects of human life. that's a cross promotion. i mean, because of that, people will realize that our spaces and i assess and space is, can be closer to people who can it would be easier for them to reach it and they would get more interested in that. and space usually feel people succeed in think about phase and they think that all well as something they can somewhere up
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there. and i'm not even close to it. maybe this film and us flying up there when getting prepared in 4 months can change the mindset a little bit about space and people would say, well, maybe i can shoot a film there. maybe i can fly to space and it doesn't take 10 years for, for person to fly up there. one aspect also the people that talked a little bit is that there is now a movie space race, because of course tom cruise was also due to go up in the autumn. admit, it's quite nice that you got that fast and are feeling. i'm very competitive. i place force and i used to lou as always nice to be 1st. do you think that this is going to kick off and not this i. so i didn't feel like i don't feel like i closed that. i assess as a filming office and there's nothing more than anyone can do there. no, no, i think it's just the beginning and i,
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people will look at what i've shopped there and see, well, okay, now i understand what we can do there. and of course, we'll tell it we'll talk about my experience to guess filmmakers who would be interested in also shooting the i assess and i will kind of share my experience and do's and don'ts and get guessed they would. the 2nd one second since filmmaker, when it would be much easier for them than you've laid the path. well, because i kind of, i didn't know what to expect cause in many ways. and now i can talk to filmmakers in the filmmaking what it is and what he would, what do you expect and what, what it was you shouldn't even try to do. and many things like that space gives you perspective onto itself. that is hard to even come up with being on earth
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like the white also i thought chris hatfield are canadian asked me. he said, i think the hottest thing for them is going to be lighting wells in real time. it wasn't really the hardest. it was just the fact that we had to wait for it. sometimes it's just once every 40 minutes, it changes into being the organ, then it changes back to be light again. but. but those transitions are really magical one because it doesn't. it's not just like the sunset and some and so so something it's hard to come up with. the sun starts to changing into like a rainbow lights, and some seem like we had a scene where you is sitting in front of the illuminate or we're just talking with earth. san starts to change in so many ways and that created a special space. magical light, which i mean you can imitate here, but i wouldn't just, i would have it would,
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it would not have been able to create that, come up with that. the idea of all of the challenge and how it was born and whether it was something that you kind of that you always want to do and you seize the opportunity. what that you adapted for this opportunity? no, actually when i go to proposition of making directing a film my own space and i knew the limitations and we would have only 2 chairs to go up there and and i didn't want to have too much c, g i in the film and i wanted to shoot everything real. so i came up with the idea of the story with the those kind of circumstances in mind. but the story was invented originally and producers license and the old all the 3 companies the, the accepted right away. so i don't know how to answer, maybe a i and in some way i adapted to the circumstances,
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circumstances. and in many ways, i seized the opportunity from the time that sort of the idea was born until the launch from by can or how much time passed to little more than a year, year in one month. i think for a long time, did you find that you got the help of ross cosmos as well? well, what they are one of the producers. exactly. did you find that they really helped and invested well in time america with all their help and investors and would be impossible. so of course they did. did they did only could to help me with it. of course they, they couldn't do more than they could with that in mind that i assess. so is not a shooting stage, is the science object object of science and you know, cause when i was or they're doing the working. and they're really busy love with filming with others. so they did everything i guess they possibly could. they will
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. so we, i mean we focused a lot of course on you and you know, because you were making the fast feature length film in space. this is obviously you apply and this of that, but obviously people watching you back home probably a bit worried as well where your children really excited when they heard that you were going to go with the world. well, my daughter was kind of nervous a little bit and she was crying at the launch, my smile, the son was very confident he at least you look like that. he never expressed any fear for me. and my youngest son is too young to realize what's going on. do you have any connection when you are way i call them? i call them when we had a cello video connection, one time i really had no time for many phone calls. there really is you probably have noticed i was kind of like a beard when i, when they, when i didn't have one before, like i really didn't have time there to shave. it just takes
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a lot of like 5 times longer and i was like, well, do i really need to shave? maybe i can shoot and start shooting laughter a lot of days. yeah. yeah. so the process is take there longer than on earth. if i was there for a couple of months then i would start missing them and everything, but in that short period of time, when so much work to do, i really didn't have time to miss was take off. all that was launch order was all i know it was more like a, like a, a ride like a roller coaster ride, amazing roller coaster ride, the descent, the, the launch which was not as bad as people think, you know, we experienced only 2 and a half geez, i think the key for did you for the g force only that it was, i think it was 2 and a half only. so it wasn't bad at all. the landing was thinking for maybe 4 and a half when we were trained for 8 so. so it wasn't bad at all. no, the,
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the though the landing was when the parachute opener was like the, the capsule was going like this. but again, i thought it would be going like $360.00 before we before the wedding or american australian shane. and shane said that he did it twice and it was like a wild ride. it was a well ride. what i thought it would be like 10 times wilder. so yeah, it's glittering. and then when you came to she said obviously it's not just about preparing for being that. so said when you come back and you would then take, and i think star city want you to acclimatize you re adapt to live. there were 3 or 4 days of that. was it difficult? no. foster. well, hold on when you take out of that gum, were there were because your head to adjust to the dear scope in your head didn't realize again where the floor in or is the ceiling. and so yeah, it took me through to her 2 or 3 days for that ah,
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to kind of start walking confidently. you looked pretty relaxed though, when you land leased in the photo, that was something quite cinematic about it. in fact, the unit was sitting up with her sunglasses on. you was sitting, i think with your legs crossed, you both just looked like, oh yeah, we just come back from a ride. was there a huge sense of relief when you got down, but everything had been done safely that you'd gone up? can you done what you set out to do? oh yeah. you oh oh yeah, there was a good well, like after you do some something being hard and you feel satisfaction that you've done that and that you went through it and then that you you feel i feel good about myself, that shooting plan that we set out to for, for their, for i assess, was, was completely finished and that i shot everything i was, i planned and, and, and it looks pretty good. anything and the producers were happy with it. and i had
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the feeling of satisfaction of the fact that you completed a huge task for you as a director obviously is really boring. you've already be in that space. so i mean being that dom that. so what's next? i mean, there's nothing left but what miles the moon. well, no, it doesn't mean that you know i would just expand into the universe and then and then fly into another galactic. no, i don't think like that. i have other projects and it's not boring for me. to shoot us, fill on earth at all i. i have many projects that are waiting for me to the to get to know after i complete, of course, the principal shooting of the challenge. no, i, i'm very interested in just a symbol human stories. maybe they will be somehow in reached by my experience of flying, and maybe i will open them up a little different than i that i thought. but no,
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it's not like i'm going to be now flying, getting ready to to film on the moon or mars. no, there's no plan like that. you talked about the films being released internationally talking about release. what kind of timeline do you think? well, it definitely is going to be the earlier than the end of the next year because of the got a while to, well, you know what you are doing up for 12. do you feel that it's a test of the greatest ho? oh. and as a person, as a filmmaker totally as a person, and it of course is there is going to be life before that in life after that. then finally i'm gonna ask you if they said you want to go again, would you go again? yeah, the meeting this week, but maybe next thursday i can do that. well, we go, i was just really climb was to grab it. yeah. i have some other some things i have
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to finish before i go back again. okay, well thank you so much for speaking to mark. you cannot wait to see the phone. i think so much. oh, a oh, so you see this statistic that 90 percent of the well the cell by 10 percent of the population and they added trillions of dollars to their network. since the pandemic one would look out onto the american landscape and look at all the wonderful innovation, these folks have brought people to their lives. oh, wait, hold on. life expectancy is down into mortality is up wealth, an income gap between widening to genie coefficient looks terrible. death of despair are exploding. so i think it's natural to conclude that all this money printing is not feeding amera talk or see is back that speeding attack
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a stock or see rule by the least qualified ah, support is of julianna challenge claim washington's promised to allow him to serve his sentence in his homeland australia should not be trusted. that says the you case, high court deliberates whether to hand him over to the americans. high profile figures have spoken in support of the whistleblower. he would spend the rest of his a supermarket prison in the united states. what kind of life with no crime, i've been telling the world the truth or for the sound, a solution to the energy crisis, base and other big issues have been discussed as an economic form. and they time in sale. verona with prominent figures shaping voices from europe and asia and getting together.

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