Luna (1965 film) explained

Luna
Director:Pavel Klushantsev
G. Ershov
Screenplay:Pavel Klushantsev
Music:Alexander Chernov
Cinematography:Arkady Klimov
Studio:Lennauchfilm
Runtime:50 minutes
Country:Soviet Union
Language:Russian

Luna (Russian: Луна́, "Moon") is a Soviet popular science and science fiction film directed by Pavel Klushantsev.

Story

The first part of the film — popular science — tells of recent (mid-1960s) achievements in the exploration of the Moon. Scientists discuss the hypothesis of the origin of the lunar maria, about the temperature of the lunar surface and the supposed properties of the lunar soil.

The second part of the film — science fiction — shows how the Moon in the near future will be developed by people from a hypothetical first lunar mission to lunar cities and laboratories.

Honors

The film won the "Golden Seal of Trieste" at the IV International Science-Fiction Film Festival (Italy, 1966).[1]

Crew

Scientists involved

Artistic features

Filmed in typical Pavel Klushantsev manner synthesizing two genres: popular science movies and science-fiction fantasy. In the second, "science-fiction" part of the film, animation and trick photography are applied.

Technical data

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.sciencefictionfestival.org/archivio/edizione-1966/ Award, International Science-Fiction Film Festival (Italy, 1966)