Intothe Deep is a Danish documentary film that premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival on January 24, 2020.[3][4] It was directed by Emma Sullivan and filmed in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was planned to be released on Netflix, but the release was postponed indefinitely when some participants stated that they had not given their consent to participate in the film.[5][6] Before a subsequent release, Netflix, Plus Pictures and Sullivan agreed to re-edit the film to remove those participants who did not wish to appear.[7] It was released globally on September 30, 2022.[8]
In 2016, Emma Sullivan, an Australian filmmaker began documenting amateur inventor Peter Madsen. One year in, Madsen murdered Swedish freelance journalist Kim Wall aboard his homemade submarine. The film is based on footage from Madsen's lab in the period leading up to the murder, as well as subsequent interviews with members of Madsen's team.[9]
All documentary films are available on a first-come, first-served basis. No reservations are required. Individual tickets for Deep Sky showtimes are not available. Doors to the theater open approximately 10 minutes prior to showtimes.
LOS ANGELES, March 19, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- IMAX Corporation (NYSE: IMAX) and Crazy Boat Pictures Ltd. today announced the wide release of "Deep Sky," an IMAX Original documentary about NASA's Webb Telescope (JWST), exclusively in over 300 IMAX theatres across North America for a special 1-week limited run timed to Earth Day, starting April 19, 2024. Directed by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Nathaniel Kahn and narrated by Oscar-nominated actress Michelle Williams, "Deep Sky" follows the remarkable story of the scientists and engineers who helped design and launch JWST, NASA's largest science mission ever, now orbiting the sun a million miles from Earth, helping to unravel the mysteries of our origins and, perhaps, our future.
"The scale of the universe is so huge, it's really hard to comprehend," says Kahn. "But when you blow the images up to IMAX size, you feel like you're in space. It's the ideal way to experience the scale and beauty of what's actually out there. You feel connected to the big questions we explore in the film: How did the universe begin? Where did we come from? And the biggest question of all: are we alone?"
"I've always been fascinated by the beauty and magnitude of space," said Michelle Williams. "I'm excited to work with Nathaniel and IMAX to tell the story of the captivating images taken by this new telescope."
Following the film's continued success at select IMAX Theaters worldwide, IMAX will expand the release of "Deep Sky" to over 300 select locations across the U.S. and Canada for one week only, starting April 19, 2024. For a list of theatres or to purchase tickets, please visit
imax.com/deepsky.
IMAX Entertainment presents Deep Sky, a Crazy Boat Pictures Production of a Nathaniel Kahn Film. Deep Sky is narrated by Michelle Williams. It is written and directed by Nathaniel Kahn, and produced by Bonnie Hlinomaz and Nathaniel Kahn. The executive producers are John Turner, Matt Mountain, Sandra Evers-Manly, and Gerry Ohrstrom. Music by Paul Leonard-Morgan. Cinematography by Robert Richman. Edited by Brian Johnson, a.c.e., and Jay Keuper.
IMAX, an innovator in entertainment technology, combines proprietary software, architecture, and equipment to create experiences that take you beyond the edge of your seat to a world you've never imagined. Top filmmakers and studios are utilizing IMAX systems to connect with audiences in extraordinary ways, making IMAX's network among the most important and successful theatrical distribution platforms for major event films around the globe.
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Ever since I was a kid, staring up at the stars, space has held an endless fascination for me. That's why I was thrilled to interview Dr. Matt Mountain , the James Webb Space Telescope Scientist, about the new IMAX documentary DEEP SKY.
DEEP SKY takes audiences on a breathtaking journey through the cosmos, showcasing the awe-inspiring images captured by the Webb Telescope. But more than just a pretty picture show, the film reveals the human story behind this incredible scientific achievement.
Dr. Mountain's passion for space exploration is contagious. He explains how DEEP SKY isn't just about scientists in lab coats, but about real people driven by a deep desire to understand our universe.
The intertwining of the histories of Lawrence University and the City of Appleton is front and center in a new documentary produced by PBS Wisconsin as part of an ongoing series on Wisconsin communities.
The documentary explores how the decision of Amos A. Lawrence, a Boston merchant, to launch a college in a wilderness setting along the Fox River would lead to the development of a surrounding city, the taming of the Fox River through a series of elaborate locks and dams, the emergence of a burgeoning paper industry along the banks of the river, and the challenges and opportunities that flowed from there.
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Guided by director and wrangler of scientists Peter Byck, Roots So Deep (you can see the devil down there) is a four-part documentary series that explores the world of adaptive cattle farmers and their conventional farming neighbors.
Alongside this journey, a team of pioneering scientists conduct groundbreaking research, investigating the costs and benefits of grazing practices in harmony with nature versus those in conflict with it.
THE CATSKILL WATER SYSTEM PROJECT
The building of the Catskill Water System is the tale of heroism and heartbreak, political maneuvering, lost villages, brilliant engineering and a power struggle between New York City and the Catskills. Completed in stages between 1915 and 1926, the Ashokan and Schoharie Reservoirs were built by thousands of stone cutters, bridge builders, railroad workers, tunnel diggers and mule drivers.
It is the story of a city desperate for pure water and the reluctant rural area that was forced to provide it.
Today, the Watershed provides billions of gallons of pure water to New York City. In the time when the world faces severe water shortages, the Catskill system remains one of the most successful water projects of our time.
Hundreds of vintage photographs, rare films and interviews with historians and residents make "Deep Water" a compelling and moving documentary.
When Australian filmmaker Emma Sullivan trained her camera on Peter Madsen on the afternoon of August 10, 2017, she thought she was talking with the same charismatic inventor who had caught her attention a year earlier with his plan to build a rocket and launch himself into space. But as her remarkable documentary Into The Deep records, by the end of the following day, a different picture had begun to emerge: he was a psychopath and a murderer.
Into The Deep is not the film Sullivan set out to make, but it is remarkable. It captures a psychopath outing himself, confessing to hiding in plain sight. And it documents his impact on the people who were conned by him.
Just hours after that interview, Madsen set to sea in Nautilus, the submarine he had made in his Copenhagen workshop, with Swedish journalist Kim Wall on board as his passenger. Later that night. Wall\\u2019s boyfriend reported her missing. Ten days later, her torso washed up on the Danish coast.
In the days before the murder, Madsen had invited a number of other women out on the submarine, including Sullivan. Earlier on August 10, Madsen had texted Sara, a volunteer worker at his workshop, to ask her out to sea. He had even told her \\u2013 jokingly, she had thought \\u2013 \\u201CI have a murder plan ready which is a great pleasure\\u201D.
Sullivan knows it could so easily have been her in Wall\\u2019s place. \\u201CBut I would need to group in every other woman who was around him too,\\u201D she says. \\u201CI think any female that was anywhere near him in, at minimum, the month leading up to this terrible murder was in some degree of danger.\\u201D
Police later recovered videos on Madsen\\u2019s computer of women being murdered and beheaded. At his trial in early 2018, the prosecution argued that the murder of Wall was the culmination of a sick fantasy, and was clearly pre-meditated.
But even as the evidence against him piled up, Madsen maintained he had done nothing wrong. At first, he claimed he had set Wall back on ground, and she must have disappeared after that. Then he claimed she had died at sea after the submarine\\u2019s hatch hit her on the head. Then that she was asphyxiated.
In the end, Sullivan\\u2019s filmed interviews proved critical. In the background of that interview of August 10 a hand saw could be seen on the wall of Madsen\\u2019s workshop. By the time he was arrested, it was gone. That was deemed circumstantial evidence of his pre-planning and proved, Sullivan says, \\u201Creally important\\u201D in securing his conviction.
\\u201CThere was no cause of death, there was no forensic evidence to prove that it wasn\\u2019t an accident on board the submarine, so there was a chance, right up to the verdict, that he could have walked away with six months\\u2019 served, which was frightening,\\u201D she says. \\u201CThis huge volume of circumstantial evidence was integral to the conviction, and it was great that was the one thing we were able to do for justice for Kim Wall.\\u201D
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