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MARS: Inside SpaceX Full Movie: Everyone has a different perspective on the world and what the future holds, but the one bugbear that eats away at my brain on a daily basis is the lack of funding allocated to space research programs. Since humanity first landed on the moon (don’t argue, that’s strange), we’ve deliberately gone backwards in space technology rather than ahead, as Elon Musk points out in SpaceX Movie.
The human race cannot live just by surviving on Earth. That is not a likelihood based on a hypothesis; it is 100% true, indicating that in order for our future generations to survive, we must get out of our chairs and explore the vast Universe. So it makes me ill when major media agencies like the BBC or Sky News incisively position a space milestone in their “featured” sidebar rather than “breaking news”.
But enough of the screaming; let us discuss about the 46-minute documentary MARS: Inside SpaceX. I’ve seen several materials discussing the potential of traveling to Mars as our second home, but SpaceX is serious about it, so it’s no surprise that this documentary is the most intelligent among the speculative ones. MARS: Inside SpaceX provides a background on the organization, its goals, and the shitload of money Elon Musk has poured into it to construct a variety of rockets so that, one day, we may settle on Mars.
Everything is about possibly going to Mars, which is the documentary’s fault; yet, given NASA’s limited budget, MARS: Inside SpaceX reaffirms that we need a crazy wealthy narcissist like Elon Musk to transform the way the world approaches space exploration. If you haven’t watched the footage of NASA landing a rover on Mars, you must see the project team’s response; their celebrations are as thrilling as winning the last-minute victory in a football game – and there are moments like these to relish in MARS: Inside SpaceX.
In terms of history, the documentary delves into the exorbitant expenditures of developing technology for such applications. MARS: Inside SpaceX talks reusable rockets, which will allow us to approach launches in the same way that we do planes: we can do them again.
The documentary does not devote much attention to Elon Musk, which I believe is due to his declining popularity. He is literally the evil genius in a science fiction film, except that he is attempting to produce invention that would help the world; his evilness stems from his poor usage of social media and labeling random people pedophiles.
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