Everything Goes photograph

Everything Goes

Use attributes for filter !
Initial release June 14, 2004
Directors Andrew Kotatko
Budget180,000 USD
Producers Colin Englert
Screenplay Andrew Kotatko
Raymond Carver
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2393394
Send edit request

About Everything Goes


Everything Goes is a 2004 short film directed by Andrew Kotatko. It is based on the short story Why Don't You Dance? from Raymond Carver's collection What We Talk About When We Talk About Love. The film stars Hugo Weaving, Abbie Cornish and Sullivan Stapleton.

Now That's What I Call Music turns 40: Forty facts about the compilation giant

Now That's What I Call Music turns 40: Forty facts about the compilation giant
Nov 28,2023 11:21 am

... 40) If Everything Goes to schedule, Now 120 will arrive in March 2025, with Now 200 due in time for Christmas 2051...

Uttarakhand tunnel collapse: Last-minute snag delays rescue of trapped workers

Uttarakhand tunnel collapse: Last-minute snag delays rescue of trapped workers
Nov 23,2023 5:01 am

... " If Everything Goes to plan, and there are no impediments, we should complete the rescue by tonight, " Atul Karwal, director general of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), told BBC Hindi...

Uttarakhand tunnel collapse: Rescuers to drill from top

Uttarakhand tunnel collapse: Rescuers to drill from top
Nov 18,2023 12:31 pm

... Officials say that if Everything Goes to plan, the rescue could another take four or five days...

SpaceX: Elon Musk's Starship rocket to make second flight

SpaceX: Elon Musk's Starship rocket to make second flight
Nov 18,2023 5:01 am

... " Assuming Everything Goes as planned, Starship will rise up and head down range across the Gulf in the direction of the Atlantic and Africa...

Laura Kuenssberg: What could go wrong for Keir Starmer?

Laura Kuenssberg: What could go wrong for Keir Starmer?
Jul 15,2023 11:50 am

... " Everything Goes in by late afternoon with a hard deadline and he spends his evenings poring over papers, ideas, drafts, or submissions" all dealt with by the morning...

Fukushima: Anxiety and anger over Japan's nuclear waste water plan

Fukushima: Anxiety and anger over Japan's nuclear waste water plan
Jul 5,2023 2:20 am

... Tatsujiro Suzuki, a nuclear engineering professor from Nagasaki University s Research Center for Nuclear Weapons Abolition, told the BBC the plan would " not necessarily lead to serious pollution or readily harm the public - if Everything Goes well"...

US accuses Iran of cruel false prisoner swap claims

US accuses Iran of cruel false prisoner swap claims
Mar 12,2023 12:51 pm

... Mr Amir-Abdollahian told state TV that an agreement had been reached in the last days and " if Everything Goes well on the US side, I think we will witness a prisoner exchange in a short period"...

The Last of Us: What to expect from series two

The Last of Us: What to expect from series two
Mar 10,2023 10:21 pm

... If Everything Goes to plan, then we re likely to re-join the story in 2025...

SpaceX: Elon Musk's Starship rocket to make second flight

Dec 18,2022 9:51 pm

At a glance

Science correspondent1 hour ago

American entrepreneur Elon Musk will have another go shortly at launching his mammoth new rocket, Starship.

The Vehicle 's maiden flight in April ended in spectacular style when it lost control and exploded Four Minutes after leaving The ground in Texas.

Debris from The 120m-tall (393ft) rocket fell into The Gulf of Mexico.

Engineers at Mr Musk's SpaceX company have since made " More Than a thousand" changes to Starship's systems to try to make The Vehicle more reliable.

Lift-off from The coastal town of Boca Chica is scheduled to occur within a 20-minute window, starting at 07:00 local time (13:00 GMT).

The planned mission profile will be broadly The same as before: to send The Top part of The two-stage Vehicle - The Ship - nearly one full revolution of The Earth .

The aim is for The uncrewed craft to make an ocean splashdown near Kauai, one of The islands in The Hawaiian archipelago.

If Mr Musk can get Starship working as designed, it will be revolutionary.

A fully reusable rocket capable of putting More Than a hundred tonnes In Orbit in one go would radically lower The cost of space activity. It would also assist The Entrepreneur in his efforts to realise The long-held dream of taking people and supplies to Mars to establish a Human Settlement .

The mantra Elon Musk follows is “test early, break it, and learn”, and engineers at his SpaceX company certainly had a lot of lessons to learn after The First Flight test in April.

Starship's fiery exhaust dug out an enormous hole under The Launch pad, hurling debris in All Directions . Scientists later calculated The forces generated by The Vehicle 's first-stage engines were similar to those found in an erupting volcano.

" The Rocket exhaust went through cracks in The launchpad's concrete. It was super hot, it was approximately 2,000C, and it vaporised The groundwater, " explained Dr Phil Metzger from The University of Central Florida .

" We actually used The equations of volcanoes to predict how fast ejecta would Fly - 90 meters per second, " he told Bbc News .

Engineers have since installed a steel plate-structure at The pad they liken to an upside-down showerhead. This will produce immense fountains of water in a bid to dampen The Heat and noise at lift-off.

SpaceX has also been working these past months to improve The Performance of Starship's methane-burning Raptor engines.

There are 33 of these on The lower-stage, or Super Heavy booster as it's known, and several were seen to stop operating as The Vehicle climbed higher into The sky. It's possible a few were damaged by all The flying debris at The Moment of launch.

The two halves of Starship are supposed to separate a couple of minutes into a mission, once The Super Heavy booster has completed its main task of getting all The hardware airborne. In April, this detachment event Never Happened ; and The automated command to destroy The floundering Vehicle with explosive charges failed to have The desired effect.

The Rocket eventually tore itself apart after tumbling end over end.

A New Approach is being taken to stage separation on this next flight.

The Ship segment will fire up its engines just before separation to push itself clear. A slotted ring has been added to The area around its engines to prevent their hot exhaust gases from burning through The Top of The booster.

Commentators think getting beyond staging will be The minimum requirement for SpaceX to claim progress with their innovative Vehicle .

" I think you have to step beyond that This Time , " observed Malcolm Macdonald , professor of space technology at The University of Strathclyde, UK.

" You have to go from The Point where you get all of The engines lit, you get to altitude with that capability, you get The Separation , And Then you progress from there to perhaps failure further in The Timeline . "

Assuming Everything Goes as planned, Starship will Rise Up and head Down Range across The Gulf in The direction of The Atlantic and Africa.

Stage separation is timed to occur at about two minutes and 40 seconds into The Flight .

At that point, The booster's engines will shut down and The Ship with its own engines will thrust onwards for a further Five Minutes and 53 seconds.

SpaceX wants The Super Heavy booster to try to Fly back to near The Texan coast and come down vertically, to hover just above The Gulf 's waters. It will then be allowed to topple over and sink.

The Ship is expected to re-enter The Earth 's atmosphere once it gets over The Pacific . It's been given protective tiling to cope with The immense heating it will experience during The Descent .

A completed mission will see The Ship bellyflop into The Ocean roughly 90 Minutes after lift-off.

If The Ship doesn't make it all The Way to waters off Hawaii and maybe even disintegrates mid-flight again, there shouldn't be a rush to judgement, says Garrett Reisman , a professor of astronautical engineering at The University of Southern California .

" I think The benefit of this Rapid Development approach is even though things don't look good at first, when things are blowing up - you learn so much and so quickly that you actually do converge on The correct solution much faster than if you try to get something 100% perfect The First Time , " he told Bbc News .

" SpaceX does seem to get there in The End . "

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯