The “spooky” series is coming to Apple TV+.

By Adam Davidson

Published: Tuesday, 20 February 2024 at 08:00 AM


Writer Peter Harness is no stranger to sci-fi, having written episodes of Doctor Who and adapted HG Wells’s War of the Worlds in 2019, but Apple TV+’s Constellation was a whole new challenge for him.

The writer delved into the “dark recesses” of his brain to conceive a “spooky” dark psychological thriller, which he describes as “a ghost story in space”.

The series, led by Noomi Rapace and Jonathan Banks, follows Astronaut Jo [Rapace] who returns to Earth after a disaster in space to discover that there are missing pieces in her life. She sets out to expose the truth about the hidden secrets of space travel and recover what she has lost.

“I wanted to do something that was like a ghost story in space. We had the elements of horror and spookiness but also something that was grounded and authentic in science diction. It’s very different from something like Doctor Who, which is science-fantasy. This originated in the dark recesses of my brain,” Harness told RadioTimes.com.

“I decided a while ago that I wanted to focus on telling a story that I made up. You have to fight, kick and bite but I thought, “What’s the point of being a writer unless you’re going to tell new stories?”

Noomi Rapace as Jo and Rosie/Davina Coleman as Alice in Apple TV+’s Constellation.
Apple TV+

One aspect of space travel that is often not talked about is the psychological effects it can have on the astronauts while in space or upon returning to Earth. Harness spoke with people involved with ESA and NASA, who were glad this neglected side of the story was being told.

“It is true that there are these vivid ghost stories about weird things that have happened in space. [For example,] the Salyut 7 crew who saw angels, that’s a true story. They also see flashes of light that pass through their hands and out the other side and they can’t explain it,” said Harness.

“Some people see alien spacecrafts. They don’t tend to mention it, it’s like fighter pilots who see UFOs, they know it’ll be the end of their career.”

 

For a better sense of the everyday experiences of space travel, Michelle MacLaren met with American astronaut Scott Kelly, who made four spaceflights between 1999 and 2016

“Scott brought an element of grounded-ness and reality to it. He was really helpful in execution and helping us understand what it’s like to move in space,” she said.

MacLaren added: “He told us a story about how he was on a spacewalk and it was so dark that he got lost. He didn’t know where he was, so for 45 minutes until the sun rose he had to just stay there and had to try and stay calm. He couldn’t see anything and how terrifying that must be!”