The space shuttle may be gone, but it's not likely to be forgotten — not if Hollywood has anything to do with it. Over the course of the last 30 years, the shuttle has shown up repeatedly on the Silver Screen.
James Bond tracks down villains behind a stolen space shuttle in 1979's Moonraker.
Then there's the 80s movie, Space Camp, featuring a group of students who are accidentally launched into space and their instructor, played by Kate Capshaw, has to get them back down to Earth.
And then there's 1998's Armageddon — you know, the movie where Billy Bob Thornton plays a NASA scientist who helps a team of oil drillers save the world from an asteroid?
OK, so maybe the plot lines are a little unrealistic. Case in point, the most recent Transformers movie.
"There's so much science that's not correct on that, because it's completely fictitious with robotics. But it's very, very exciting, and it tells a wonderful story, and it's a wonderful way to reach people about the excitement of space exploration," says Bert Ulric, NASA's multimedia liaison. His job is to connect movie producers with NASA astronauts and engineers.
"We just want to reach out and share the NASA story as much as we possibly can," he says.
Ulrick is also the guy who gives the agency's stamp of approval and he's often on set when big productions are filming at NASA locations. But not every project passes the test.
"Well there've been certain times where we'd get a script and it's just so not true, that we'd have to say, you know what, we probably can't do this one," Ulrick says.
That's not the case for the upcoming Men in Black 3, which is currently shooting at the Kennedy Space Center. It's scheduled for release next May after the shuttle program has ended.
We don't know what's next for NASA, but Ulrick thinks space will continue to capture the imaginations of moviegoers both here and overseas: Space fever has already spread to India, where Bollywood giant Shahrukh Kahn played a NASA project manager in the movie Swades.
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