Yesterday morning I caught a SXSW press screening of Hubble 3D at the Bob Bullock Museum's IMAX theater. Shot in part on a specially designed, 700-pound, space-ready IMAX 3D camera, the movie tells the telescope's life story, from construction and launch 20 years ago through the five subsequent servicing missions. The primary focus of the film is the Space Shuttle Atlantis' May 2009 repair mission, the last-scheduled trip of its kind. Although not mentioned during the movie, one of the things the Atlantis crew installed on the Hubble was a device that will eventually cause it to de-orbit, making way for its successor, the James Webb Telescope.
But fair warning: be prepared to feel more than a little frustrated by the time Hubble 3D ends. The Hubble telescope has allowed us to view countless new galaxies, and I want to visit them all. Right now. Unfortunately, I'll be dead and gone long before we discover and catalog (much less visit) more than the tiniest fraction of our universe. Unless we invent teleportation. I'm still holding out for that.
Hubble 3D is narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio and is rated G. It will play select IMAX theaters beginning March 19.

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