A whole 240 miles above Earth, NASA astronauts had the ultimate movie night as the crew of the International Space Station watched “Star Wars: The Last Jedi.”

NASA astronaut Mar. T. Vande Hei tweeted, “Space Station movie night, complete with “bungee cord chairs”, drink bags, and a science fiction flick!”

Space Station movie night, complete with “bungee cord chairs”, drink bags, and a science fiction flick! pic.twitter.com/IPZ2thI8rw — Mark T. Vande Hei (@Astro_Sabot) December 24, 2017

Last week, NASA’s Public Affairs Officer Dan Huot confirmed that Disney was working on providing a digital copy of the movie to the astronauts.

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“[I] can confirm the crew will be able to watch it on orbit,” Huot told Inverse. “Don’t have a definitive timeline yet. They typically get movies as digital files and can play them back on a laptop or a standard projector that is currently aboard.”

“Star Wars: The Last Jedi,” as expected, is continuing its domination of the holiday box office, making $24.6 million on its second Friday with estimates pointing to a four-day Christmas weekend total of $102 million from 4,232 screens.

If Saturday’s totals can push that number up by $4 million, the “Star Wars” sequel will have reached $400 million domestic by the end of Christmas Day and is expected to reach $1 billion worldwide in the next week.

Meanwhile, back on Earth, “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” is currently playing in theaters across the planet.