Can't get into your local midnight screening of Star Wars: The Force Awakens on Friday? There is another option — and although you may have to travel quite a distance to get there, the theater's atmosphere is out of this world.

That's right — the International Space Station will screen the highly anticipated movie, according to a tweet from British astronaut Tim Peake. The 43-year-old Peake arrived at the ISS via Soyuz for a six-month stint Tuesday.

When a Twitter user lamented that Peake couldn't have chosen a worse time to leave Earth, considering the movie's release date, Peake corrected him:

.@ChrisEastabrook We have a projector & screen onboard & I'm told that @starwars will be waiting for us up there...what a place to watch it! — Tim Peake (@astro_timpeake) December 12, 2015

Movie-watching aboard the ISS is not unusual; astronauts have been known to while away the long evening with a space-based flick. Oddly enough, space disaster movies The Martian and Gravity — in which the ISS just happens to be destroyed — have been chosen in the past year.

Here's what the projection system looks like, according to Peake's fellow ISS resident Commander Scott Kelly:

#Movie night in micro #Gravity aboard #ISS on our new HD projector which we use for conferences, tech software, etc.. pic.twitter.com/Mhb03U3alz — Scott Kelly (@StationCDRKelly) April 25, 2015

And here's what it's like to be in the audience in humanity's loneliest theater. Zero gravity seating included, but no popcorn in sight.

There's no word yet on when NASA will beam The Force Awakens up to the station — but it's a fairly safe bet you don't have to worry about space-bound spoilers any time soon.