DESTINATION MARS

Amokura Gallery, Te Papa Tongarewa, 55 Cable Street, Te Aro, Wellington

11/12/2021 - 20/03/2022

Aotearoa New Zealand Festival of the Arts 2022

Production Details



Head into outer space on this interactive experience where gaming wizardry plus captivating live action equals high-stakes adventure! 

It’s 2034, and you are on the planet Mars. As the engineer in the control room on an international space station, you protect the base’s support systems and power up the next rocket launch. But when a solar flare plunges your community into danger, you must work together to avert disaster. Have you got what it takes to save the day?

From the makers of the popular APOLLO 13: Mission Control which toured the United States of America, Australia and New Zealand, HACKMAN has gathered a top team of game developers, designers and live performers to create Destination Mars.  

Seated within a giant dome environment, Destination Mars is a completely immersive experience. Follow crew instructions, attend to your console, or marvel as the action unfolds.

High-tech yet full of heart, this 45-minute experience is the perfect escapism for grown-ups and intrepid kids aged 6+. Family packages are available.

Taunga Rangawhenua

He wā rānei, i hiahia koe ki te haere ki tuarangi?, ki te wāhi e kīa nei e te pākehā, ko te ‘outer space’.  Koinei te wā! Haere mai ki Tuarangi, ki runga o Rangawhenua (Mars) He tākaro kēmu te mahi, kāore i rerekē i ngā kēmu ka tākarohia i tō wāea pūkoro. Ehara i te tuarangi tūturu, erangi he whakaaturanga toi, ka noho koe ki roto anō nei kei tuarangi koe.

He mea whakahaere tēnei whakaaturanga ki rō whare porowhita nunui (Giant Dome Enviroment), whāia ngā tohutohu ā tō tīma, tiakina tō īpapa, kōrero ki ō hoa, noho noa iho rānei ki te mātakitaki i te ātaahua o ngā mahi.

45 mēneti te roa, haria mai te whānau, ngā tamariki, me 6 tau+

Amokoura Gallery, Te Papa Tongarewa, 55 Cable Street, Te Aro 
Saturday 11 December 2021 –  Sunday 20 March 2022
$15 – $70
BUY TICKETS
Wheelchair accessible 

Session times are daily, 10:00, 11:15, 12:30, 14:00, 15:15 (No shows Christmas Day)
Suitable for children 6 years+
In person door prices:
Adult $26, Child $16, Concession $21, Family A $53, Family B $75


Travelling to Mars via Wellington? Head here for 10% off accommodation during the Festival (offer valid 19 February – 17 March 2022, subject to availability).


Featuring
Joel Baxendale, Emma Katene, Hannah Kelly, Arlo Gibson & Isadora Lao

Production Designer:  Brad Knewstubb
Game Development:  NZXR - Joe O'Sullivan, Joel Schroyen, James Everett & Emma Middlemiss

Game / Environment Design:  Pedro Klein, Nguyen "Sammie" Thuong, Michael Jeon & Rasyiqah Takiyaudin 

Sound Designer:  Jason Wright

Costume Designer:  Sophie Sargent

Lighting Designer:  Paul O'Brien

Researcher:  Kalani Dasaman

Set Realisation & Construction:  Tāwhiri Workshop  


Theatre , Family ,


45 mins

“It’s so exciting that it pumps adrenaline through your veins!”

Review by John Smythe 12th Dec 2021

We’ve come a long way since Apollo 13: Mission Control was the BATS/STAB commission in 2008. It was revived at Downstage in early 2010, returned at the end of that year and, as Wiki attests, it was also launched in Australia and the USA.

That show recreated the drama of the 1970 Moon mission where an oxygen tank exploded on board – “Houston, we have a problem” – and the astronauts had to be bought back to earth. Audience members (who wanted to get hands-on) were assigned roles in Mission Control, at consoles that were necessarily retro in their technologically. Not least because we also tuned into the astronauts on board and their loved ones at home, bringing them home felt very real.

I especially remember the whole cast leaving for a management meeting. After a long pause, a phone started to ring on a commander’s desk. It kept ringing; if it wasn’t answered by a member of the remaining team (i.e. the audience) the show would not proceed. A brilliant touch. Audience participation works best when it is essential to the outcome. We overcome our inhibitions when we know characters we have invested in really need our help.

This time we are on Mars in the future – 2034, the production information tells us. We find ourselves seats in the large, circular control centre. Each desk is has a touch-screen tablet embedded, connected to a central computer. We’re in designated teams that each have specialised displays and there will be tasks for us to complete. Surrounding us, above our heads, is a 360 degree vista of the space lab installations humans have established on Mars. And a domed sky screen represents deep space.

Individually we log on and scroll through various Shift Reports that bring us up to speed on matters like weather, transport, team responsibilities … There is a lot going on for those who want to mine the site for information. For example Space Lab 2, Rangahau – yes, this is an Aotearoa NZ operation (much like Scott Base in Antarctica, perhaps) – is researching organisms that might be useful for transforming Mars in the coming decades.

There are also entertainment options like Cosmo Run and Space tennis – which our young companions (aged 6 and 9) are much more adept at than us oldies. Indeed they seem very much at home as they intuitively navigate around their screens.

Our Commanders – Ashley (Arlo Gibson) and Deedee (Emma Katene)* – give us updates on such housekeeping matters as waste water management, assess our clothing, given this is a ‘Launch Morning’, and make us all feel part of the team. It becomes clear we all have a role in ensuring Rocket Nebula will be launched safely and successfully.  

Impressively Asley and Deedee, referring to their tablets, name-check a number of us as the pre-launch checks proceed through the 90 second countdown. We need to pay close attention to our screens because any one of us may be called on to tap a system field and declare it is “Go”.

At this point I can say little else without committing a spoiler crime. Let’s just say an unexpected crisis loom and we have to work together to avoid catastrophe. And we do – because we have to, adults and children alike. We don’t get to invest in people the way we did for Apollo 13 but the technology, the room set-up and the way Destination Mars plays out does assure us real humans are involved.

This is what Gabe (age 9) has to say:
“I really enjoyed this play. I quite like the effects and the experience is great! The Technology tablets are a great addon. It’s fun and interactive and it’s exciting. It’s so exciting that it pumps adrenaline through your veins! I recommend this play to anyone who wants to see a good play.”
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*For each session of the five daily sessions, Commander pairings will rotate through Joel Baxendale, Emma Katene, Hannah Kelly. Arlo Gibson and Isadora Lao. 

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