50's/60's (?) sci fi movie: exploration spaceship escapes a star's supernova, ends up in another universe...

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50's/60's (?) sci fi movie: exploration spaceship escapes a star's supernova, ends up in another universe after being sucked in a black hole



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InWhat is this old movie that featured round, flat creatures that killed by touch?Trying to identify some short storiesSci-Fi movie about a black man alone in spaceshipTrying to identify a science fiction spoof movie about a singing alienA really old fantasy film about yin-yang shaped amuletLooking for name of an 80's movie or series about young people on a spaceship getting sucked into a black hole?YA book series kids on a spaceship called “Mother”Looking for early 2000's show about teenage boy and girl stuck on an icy planetCollection of short stories that take place in space I read in middle school. I got it from a Christian bookstore.Black and white movie where man lands on Earth, is chased, and gets shot in the leg





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In the early 1970’s I watched a movie on TV as a little kid, about an exploration spaceship that found a red super giant star that was about to go supernova.



They tried to escape and got sucked into a black hole, and ended up in a new universe with a shot of stars shot with star filters.



It's not the Disney movie or Supernova (2000).










share|improve this question









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  • en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova_(2000_film) matches, but much later.

    – FuzzyBoots
    1 hour ago











  • Thanks but sadly much later, I’m afraid. But thanks anyway.

    – John Mann
    1 hour ago


















3















In the early 1970’s I watched a movie on TV as a little kid, about an exploration spaceship that found a red super giant star that was about to go supernova.



They tried to escape and got sucked into a black hole, and ended up in a new universe with a shot of stars shot with star filters.



It's not the Disney movie or Supernova (2000).










share|improve this question









New contributor




John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova_(2000_film) matches, but much later.

    – FuzzyBoots
    1 hour ago











  • Thanks but sadly much later, I’m afraid. But thanks anyway.

    – John Mann
    1 hour ago














3












3








3








In the early 1970’s I watched a movie on TV as a little kid, about an exploration spaceship that found a red super giant star that was about to go supernova.



They tried to escape and got sucked into a black hole, and ended up in a new universe with a shot of stars shot with star filters.



It's not the Disney movie or Supernova (2000).










share|improve this question









New contributor




John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












In the early 1970’s I watched a movie on TV as a little kid, about an exploration spaceship that found a red super giant star that was about to go supernova.



They tried to escape and got sucked into a black hole, and ended up in a new universe with a shot of stars shot with star filters.



It's not the Disney movie or Supernova (2000).







story-identification movie black-hole






share|improve this question









New contributor




John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 min ago









Jenayah

22.3k5107143




22.3k5107143






New contributor




John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 hours ago









John MannJohn Mann

161




161




New contributor




John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






John Mann is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova_(2000_film) matches, but much later.

    – FuzzyBoots
    1 hour ago











  • Thanks but sadly much later, I’m afraid. But thanks anyway.

    – John Mann
    1 hour ago



















  • en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova_(2000_film) matches, but much later.

    – FuzzyBoots
    1 hour ago











  • Thanks but sadly much later, I’m afraid. But thanks anyway.

    – John Mann
    1 hour ago

















en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova_(2000_film) matches, but much later.

– FuzzyBoots
1 hour ago





en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova_(2000_film) matches, but much later.

– FuzzyBoots
1 hour ago













Thanks but sadly much later, I’m afraid. But thanks anyway.

– John Mann
1 hour ago





Thanks but sadly much later, I’m afraid. But thanks anyway.

– John Mann
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Into Infinity, also known as The Day after Tomorrow (1976), a British TV special?



Apart from it being made in the 70s, the Wikipedia summary seems to match your description:




A fail-safe brings the vessel, now powerless, to a halt within the gravitational field of a red giant on the brink of supernova. Donning a heat suit, Captain Masters risks his life by entering the reactor core in a bid to repair the drive. He succeeds, and Anna and Jane pilot the ship outside the blast radius of the star before it explodes.



Detecting a signal from Delta, which has taken the equivalent of 15 Earth years to reach them, the travellers are able to plot their position and lay in a course home. However, disaster strikes when Altares is caught in the gravity of a black hole that has formed from a collapsed star. [...]



 Her theory is proven correct when, sustaining the various space-time distortions at the event horizon, Altares safely emerges from the black hole – intact, albeit with no way of returning to Earth. As the vessel and its intrepid crew approach a planet, the narrator concludes, "One thing is sure – this is not the final word. Not the end, but the beginning. A new universe, a new hope? Only time will tell."




It's on YouTube. Not sure what you mean by "star filters" but the last couple of shot does have some generic-looking star shots:










Found with the Google query movie "red giant" "black hole" site:imdb.com/title which returned this summary.





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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Into Infinity, also known as The Day after Tomorrow (1976), a British TV special?



Apart from it being made in the 70s, the Wikipedia summary seems to match your description:




A fail-safe brings the vessel, now powerless, to a halt within the gravitational field of a red giant on the brink of supernova. Donning a heat suit, Captain Masters risks his life by entering the reactor core in a bid to repair the drive. He succeeds, and Anna and Jane pilot the ship outside the blast radius of the star before it explodes.



Detecting a signal from Delta, which has taken the equivalent of 15 Earth years to reach them, the travellers are able to plot their position and lay in a course home. However, disaster strikes when Altares is caught in the gravity of a black hole that has formed from a collapsed star. [...]



 Her theory is proven correct when, sustaining the various space-time distortions at the event horizon, Altares safely emerges from the black hole – intact, albeit with no way of returning to Earth. As the vessel and its intrepid crew approach a planet, the narrator concludes, "One thing is sure – this is not the final word. Not the end, but the beginning. A new universe, a new hope? Only time will tell."




It's on YouTube. Not sure what you mean by "star filters" but the last couple of shot does have some generic-looking star shots:










Found with the Google query movie "red giant" "black hole" site:imdb.com/title which returned this summary.





share
























  • If this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left.

    – Jenayah
    4 secs ago
















0














Into Infinity, also known as The Day after Tomorrow (1976), a British TV special?



Apart from it being made in the 70s, the Wikipedia summary seems to match your description:




A fail-safe brings the vessel, now powerless, to a halt within the gravitational field of a red giant on the brink of supernova. Donning a heat suit, Captain Masters risks his life by entering the reactor core in a bid to repair the drive. He succeeds, and Anna and Jane pilot the ship outside the blast radius of the star before it explodes.



Detecting a signal from Delta, which has taken the equivalent of 15 Earth years to reach them, the travellers are able to plot their position and lay in a course home. However, disaster strikes when Altares is caught in the gravity of a black hole that has formed from a collapsed star. [...]



 Her theory is proven correct when, sustaining the various space-time distortions at the event horizon, Altares safely emerges from the black hole – intact, albeit with no way of returning to Earth. As the vessel and its intrepid crew approach a planet, the narrator concludes, "One thing is sure – this is not the final word. Not the end, but the beginning. A new universe, a new hope? Only time will tell."




It's on YouTube. Not sure what you mean by "star filters" but the last couple of shot does have some generic-looking star shots:










Found with the Google query movie "red giant" "black hole" site:imdb.com/title which returned this summary.





share
























  • If this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left.

    – Jenayah
    4 secs ago














0












0








0







Into Infinity, also known as The Day after Tomorrow (1976), a British TV special?



Apart from it being made in the 70s, the Wikipedia summary seems to match your description:




A fail-safe brings the vessel, now powerless, to a halt within the gravitational field of a red giant on the brink of supernova. Donning a heat suit, Captain Masters risks his life by entering the reactor core in a bid to repair the drive. He succeeds, and Anna and Jane pilot the ship outside the blast radius of the star before it explodes.



Detecting a signal from Delta, which has taken the equivalent of 15 Earth years to reach them, the travellers are able to plot their position and lay in a course home. However, disaster strikes when Altares is caught in the gravity of a black hole that has formed from a collapsed star. [...]



 Her theory is proven correct when, sustaining the various space-time distortions at the event horizon, Altares safely emerges from the black hole – intact, albeit with no way of returning to Earth. As the vessel and its intrepid crew approach a planet, the narrator concludes, "One thing is sure – this is not the final word. Not the end, but the beginning. A new universe, a new hope? Only time will tell."




It's on YouTube. Not sure what you mean by "star filters" but the last couple of shot does have some generic-looking star shots:










Found with the Google query movie "red giant" "black hole" site:imdb.com/title which returned this summary.





share













Into Infinity, also known as The Day after Tomorrow (1976), a British TV special?



Apart from it being made in the 70s, the Wikipedia summary seems to match your description:




A fail-safe brings the vessel, now powerless, to a halt within the gravitational field of a red giant on the brink of supernova. Donning a heat suit, Captain Masters risks his life by entering the reactor core in a bid to repair the drive. He succeeds, and Anna and Jane pilot the ship outside the blast radius of the star before it explodes.



Detecting a signal from Delta, which has taken the equivalent of 15 Earth years to reach them, the travellers are able to plot their position and lay in a course home. However, disaster strikes when Altares is caught in the gravity of a black hole that has formed from a collapsed star. [...]



 Her theory is proven correct when, sustaining the various space-time distortions at the event horizon, Altares safely emerges from the black hole – intact, albeit with no way of returning to Earth. As the vessel and its intrepid crew approach a planet, the narrator concludes, "One thing is sure – this is not the final word. Not the end, but the beginning. A new universe, a new hope? Only time will tell."




It's on YouTube. Not sure what you mean by "star filters" but the last couple of shot does have some generic-looking star shots:










Found with the Google query movie "red giant" "black hole" site:imdb.com/title which returned this summary.














share











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answered 45 secs ago









JenayahJenayah

22.3k5107143




22.3k5107143













  • If this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left.

    – Jenayah
    4 secs ago



















  • If this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left.

    – Jenayah
    4 secs ago

















If this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left.

– Jenayah
4 secs ago





If this is the right answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left.

– Jenayah
4 secs ago










John Mann is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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