HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentReview | 'India’s Space Odyssey' reminds me of Films Division newsreels of yore

Review | 'India’s Space Odyssey' reminds me of Films Division newsreels of yore

The documentary is streaming on Discovery+.

October 07, 2021 / 15:35 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Hoisting of Vikram Lander during the Chandrayaan 2 spacecraft integration at the launch centre. (Image: Isro via Wikimedia Commons)
Hoisting of Vikram Lander during the Chandrayaan 2 spacecraft integration at the launch centre. (Image: Isro via Wikimedia Commons)

Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) is the only government agency in India that’s made a profit of Rs 5,600 crore from 2016 to 2018.

Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Vikram Sarabhai and Homi Bhabha created Isro under the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) in 1962. Until 1969, the agency was called INCOSPAR: Indian National Committee for Space Research and it split). Ever since its formal inception in 1969, Isro has launched 100 spacecraft missions, 70 launch missions, nine student satellites, two re-entry missions, and 269 foreign satellites of 32 countries.

Story continues below Advertisement

These are impressive numbers. Yet the Discovery+ documentary on Isro does not have such awesomeness. Instead, it follows an interview format with G. Madhavan Nair, former head of Isro; Anuradha T.K., the celebrated head of missions, a space historian; and journalists with footage and animation of rockets and satellites. It’s got fabulous information, no doubt, but this is 2021! Why do we get the feeling that school kids will troop into the auditorium and be forced to watch it.

It gets me asking, ‘Why are lessons for the UPSC exams about Isro on YouTube sharper and smarter than this documentary?’