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2001 Space Odyssey
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2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) directed by Stanley Kubrick from the book
written by Arthur C. Clark
The story is based in part on various short stories by Clarke, most
notably The Sentinel (1951). Kubrick and Clarke collaborated on the screenplay,
from which Kubrick created the movie and Clarke wrote the novelisation.
For an elaboration of their collaborative work on this project, see The
Lost Worlds of 2001, Arthur C. Clarke, Signet., 1972.
The film is notable for combining episodes contrasting high levels of
scientific and technical realism with transcendental mysticism.
Synopsis
Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.
NOTE: Due to the fact that the film conveys almost all ideas visually
and ambiguously, it can be interpreted in many ways. The following synopsis
is merely one interpretation.
In the background to the story in the book, an ancient and unseen alien
race uses a mechanism with the appearance of a large black monolith to
investigate worlds all across the galaxy and, if possible, to encourage
the development of intelligent life (these monoliths perhaps being Von
Neumann probes, although the segment explaining this was cut from the
film). The film shows one such monolith appearing briefly in ancient Africa,
three million B.C., where it influences a group of our hominid ancestors,
causing them to learn how to use weapons.
The film then leaps millennia (via one of the most innovative jump cuts
ever conceived) to the year 2001, showing humans travelling to Clavius
base on the Moon and investigating a magnetic anomaly in the Tycho crater,
dubbed TMA-1 (Tycho Magnetic Anomaly #1). When excavations there uncover
a second monolith and expose it to sunlight, it emits a powerful signal
toward the outer solar system. The movie then focuses on a subsequent
manned mission to the Lagrange point between Jupiter and its moon Io to
investigate the signal's receiver.
Living space in Discovery. The "hamster's cage" design of the
living space provides artificial gravitation.(The book version instead
details a trip to Iapetus—a moon of Saturn—by way of Jupiter,
using an interplanetary navigation technique known as a gravitational
slingshot). According to Clarke, in the foreword to the 30th anniversary
edition of 2001, this destination was removed from the movie version because
Kubrick felt the special effects created to depict Saturn and its rings
were not realistic enough. Special effects supervisor Douglas Trumbull
eventually re-used much of his early designs for Saturn in his 1972 film
Silent Running.
The ship is manned by a crew of astronauts and an on-board computer called
HAL 9000, which sees through several distinctive wide-angle cameras located
around the spacecraft and emits a human-like voice, having been designed
to function in similar way to the human brain. The scientists sent to
investigate the signal's receiver have been placed in suspended animation,
and the live crew—unlike Mission Control, HAL, and the sleeping
scientists—are unaware of the discovery of the Tycho monolith or
the nature of their mission.
Discovery pod bay and astronaut David Bowman in space suitOn the outbound
trip, after discussing apparent anomalies in the ship's mission with the
ship's captain, David Bowman, HAL reports an unverifiable error in the
ship's antenna control system. Two of the members discuss the possibility
that HAL might be malfunctioning and should therefore have his higher
brain functions disabled. HAL discovers their plans, and because of contradictions
in his mission plans and directives, decides to eliminate all the humans
on board. To do this, he attempts to work around several safety measures
in the ship, but Bowman manages to outwit him. These events gave rise
to the catch phrase "I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that",
when HAL refuses to allow Bowman back into the ship.
A video recording then informs Bowman of the truth about the mission,
whereupon he proceeds to complete it in one of the most memorable film
conclusions ever. In a special-effects-laden sequence he travels through
a stargate to meet the creators of the monoliths. The creators are never
seen directly: Bowman arrives into a hotel room, which has since become
a science fiction cliche for situations where a vastly powerful being
must construct a benign environment for a human. He undergoes a transcendence,
ending the story as a "star child" with some of the godlike
powers of the monolith creators. However, much of the imagery towards
the end of the film is obviously meant to be ambiguous and metaphoric,
although it was somewhat literalized in Clarke's novelization.
Historical background
While the film's supposed estimate for our technical progress was, with
the benefit of hindsight, overly optimistic (though in many cases through
lack of political will rather than any technical reason), Kubrick's intense
desire for technological accuracy was unprecedented for a science fiction
film, especially since the Moon based scenes were filmed before the 1969
Moon landing of Apollo 11.
The film is legendary for the depth and scale of its pre-production research
and Kubrick even devised a customised filing system to deal with the vast
amounts of information collected. He consulted widely with NASA, with
aircraft companies, computer companies and many other research and development
groups. Moreover, the film's profound themes about the past, present and
potential future of humanity still resonate powerfully today.
A view of HAL 9000's Brain Room in DiscoveryThe film and Arthur C. Clarke
novel of the same name share an interesting developmental history, with
the book being modified by Clarke based on some of the film's daily rushes,
with feedback in both directions.
Music and dialogue
Music plays a crucial part in 2001, and not only because of the relatively
sparse dialogue. From very early on in production, Kubrick decided that
he wanted the film to be a primarily non-verbal experience, one that did
not rely on the traditional techniques of narrative cinema, and in which
music would play a vital role in evoking particular moods. In many respects,
2001 harks back to the central power that music had in the era of silent
film.
The film was remarkable because for its innovative use of classical music
taken from existing commercial records. Up to that time, major feature
films were typically accompanied by elaborate film scores and/or songs
written especially for them by professional composers. But although Kubrick
started out by commissioning an original orchestral score, he later abandoned
this, opting instead for pre-recorded tracks sourced from existing recordings,
becoming one of the first major movie directors to do so, and beginning
a trend that has now become commonplace.
In an interview with Michel Ciment Kubrick explained:
"However good our best film composers may be, they are not a Beethoven,
a Mozart or a Brahms. Why use music which is less good when there is such
a multitude of great orchestral music available from the past and from
our own time? When you are editing a film, it's very helpful to be able
to try out different pieces of music to see how they work with the scene...Well,
with a little more care and thought, these temporary tracks can become
the final score."
2001 uses works by three classical composers. It features music by Aram
Khachaturian (from the Gayaneh ballet suite) and famously used Johann
Strauss II's best known waltz, "On The Beautiful Blue Danube",
during the spectacular space-station rendezvous and lunar landing sequences.
2001 is especially remembered for its use of the opening from Richard
Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra ("Thus spoke Zarathustra"),
which has become inextricably associated with the film and its imagery
and themes. The film's soundtrack also did much to introduce the modern
classical composer György Ligeti to a wider public, using extracts
from his Requiem, Atmospheres, Lux Aeterna and (in an altered form) Aventures.
In the early stages of production, Kubrick had actually commissioned
a score from noted Hollywood composer Alex North, who had written the
stirring score for Spartacus and also worked on Dr Strangelove. But on
2001 Kubrick did much of the filming and editing, using as his guides
the classical recordings which eventually became the music track. At some
point during the editing process, Kubrick decided to use these 'guide
pieces' as the final musical soundtrack, and he abandoned North's score.
Unfortunately Kubrick failed to inform North that his music had not been
used, and to his great dismay, North did not discover this until he saw
the movie at the premiere. North's soundtrack has since been recorded
commercially and was released shortly before his death. Similarly, Ligeti
was unaware that his music was in the film until alerted by friends. He
was at first unhappy about some of the music used, and threatened legal
action over Kubrick's use of an electronically 'treated' recording of
Aventures in the 'interstellar hotel' scene near the end of the film.
Alongside its use of music, the dialogue in 2001 is another notable feature,
although the relative lack of dialogue and conventional narrative cues
has baffled many viewers. One of the film's most striking features is
that there is no dialogue whatsoever for the first twenty minutes of the
film -- the entire narrative of this section is carried by images, actions,
sound effects, and two title cards.
Only when the film moves into the postulated 'present' of 2001 do we
encounter characters who speak. By the time shooting began, Kubrick had
deliberately jettisoned much of the intended dialogue and narration, and
what remains is notable for its apparently banal nature -- an announcement
about the lost cashmere sweater, the awkwardly polite chit-chat between
Floyd and the Russian scientists, or his comments about the sandwiches
en route to the monolith site. The exchanges between Poole and Bowman
on board the "Discovery" are similarly flat, unemotional and
generally lack any major narrative content. Kubrick clearly intended that
the subtext of these exchanges -- what is not said, what lies behind them
-- should be the real, meaningful content.
Kubrick's unique treatment of narrative of 2001 is perhaps best exemplified
by the scene in which the HAL-9000 computer -- who in fact has most of
the film's best lines -- murders the three hibernating astronauts while
Bowman is outside the ship trying to rescue Poole (who is already dead).
The inhuman nature of the murders is conveyed with chilling simpiclity,
in a scene that contains only three elements.
When HAL disconnects the life support systems, we see a flashing warning
sign, COMPUTER MALFUNCTION, shown full-screen and accompanied only by
the sound of a shrill alarm beep; this is intercut with static shots of
the hibernating astronauts, encased in their sarcophagus-like pods, and
close-up full-screen shots of the life-signs monitor of each astronaut.
As the astronauts begin to die, the warning changes to LIFE FUNCTIONS
CRITICAL and we see the vital signs on the monitors beginning to level
out. Finally, when the three men are dead, there is only silence and the
ominously banal flashing sign, LIFE FUNCTIONS TERMINATED. Other than the
alarm sound and the constant background hiss of the ship's environmental
system, the entire scene is enacted with no dialogue, no music, no physical
movement of any kind.
Scientific accuracy
In general, the film is extremely realistic: it was one of the few science
fiction films to accurately portray space (a vacuum) as having no sound
and to have spaceships producing no sound while traveling through space.
Its vision of the 'future' is also frequently accurate: space travel (although
incorrectly postulated as being commonplace by 2001) is presented as boring;
telephone numbers have a greater number of digits than they had the 1960s;
and computers are ubiquitous.
The film's failures of scientic accuracy include the following:
The height of lunar mountains was overestimated, as the film was made
before the lunar expeditions of the Apollo program, and because meteoric
erosion was underestimated.
The thermal radiators on Discovery, originally intended to be included,
were eventually removed from the design because Kubrick felt they looked
too much like wings. Discovery is thus not a viable spacecraft as shown.
An unavoidable technical error is that the dust blown up by the exhaust
of the lunar shuttle is seen to billow up from the landing pad, rather
than radiate out in straight lines, as would happen in the near-vacuum
of the lunar surface.
A further inaccuracy seemingly ignored by many commentators is the varying
phases of the Earth as seen from the Moon during the landing manoevers
of the Aries 1B moonship (an error of continuity as well as science).
In the sequence in which David Bowman blows the hatch on his space pod
to regain entry to Discovery's airlock there is a shot with Dave rebounding
to and fro in the airlock chamber, while his space pod is still sitting
just outside the airlock door. Since the pod is not fixed to Discovery,
the blowing of the hatch would have caused the pod to move away on the
thrust of its escaping atmosphere -- though rather slowly, given a rough
estimation of the mass and speed of ejected air, and mass of the pod .
This being said, it is not impossible that the ejection procedure involves
automatic compensation by the thruster of the pod.
Among the failures to predict future technology are the ship's computer
interfaces, with numerous small screens displaying FORTRAN code, instead
of screens with multiple 'windows' and graphic user interfaces. On the
other hand, HAL's speach, understanding and self-determining abilities
exceed the 2001 state of the art by orders of magnitudes.
Sequels
A sequel to the film, titled 2010: The Year We Make Contact was based
on Clarke's book 2010: Odyssey Two and was released in 1984. (The book
was released in 1982.) However, Kubrick was not involved in the production
of this film, which did not have the impact of the original. Arthur C.
Clarke went on to write 2061: Odyssey Three (1987) and 3001: The Final
Odyssey (1997).
The title screen of 2001: A Space Odyssey.2001: A Space Odyssey is consistently
on the Internet Movie Database's list of top 250 films, was #22 on AFI's
100 Years, 100 Movies and #40 on its 100 Years, 100 Thrills, and been
deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library
of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.
Trivia
Spaceship USSS Discovery launching an EVA pod. Note the deliberatlely
non-aerodynamic design of both crafts.Kubrick and his team tried several
variants of the alien artefacts; one of the early favoured designs was
an octahedron, but Kubrick later rejected this, although a group of octahedral
shapes is shown floating in space during the Stargate sequence; a transparent
version of the familiar rectangular monolith was also constructed out
of perspex, but it proved too difficult to light and shoot effectively
and Kubrick then had the prop remade in its final form, which was cast
in black lucite.
It has been claimed that the psychedelic "stargate sequence"
that concludes the film, entitled "Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite",
matches perfectly with the Pink Floyd song, "Echoes", just as
Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon is believed to sychronise well with
the movie The Wizard of Oz. [1] (http://www.synchronicityarkive.com/display.php?view=2)
The first portion of the psychedelic "stargate sequence" was
made using Slit-Scan photography, a camera technique in which bands of
color from a thin slit are projected onto photographic film. [2] (http://www.underview.com/2001/how/slitscan.html)
The images used for this sequence can be viewed in their original form
using Slit-Scan unraveling techniques. [3] (http://seriss.com/people/erco/2001/)
Some of the revealed images appear to be photographs from nature (flowers,
coral, etc.) and geometric light shapes.
It has been frequently noted that "HAL" is "IBM,"
shifted one letter back. Clarke insists that this is a coincidence; see
HAL 9000#HAL wordplay.
HAL/S is a real-time aerospace computer language used in the Space Shuttle.
The book's description of the moon Iapetus curiously closely describes
another Saturnian moon, Mimas; this was a coincidence, as images of the
moons of Saturn did not become available until 1980.
2001 was filmed at the same time and in the same studios as the 1967 James
Bond film You Only Live Twice and Arthur C. Clarke is believed to have
made a brief non-speaking cameo appearance in one scene of the latter
film
Quotations from 2001 Space Odyssey
Open the pod bay door, HAL.
The 9000 series is the most reliable computer ever made. No 9000 computer
has ever made a mistake or distorted information. We are all, by any practical
definition of the words, foolproof and incapable of error.
I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I think
that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.
This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it.
I know you and Frank were planning to disconnect me, and I'm afraid that's
something I cannot allow to happen.
Just what do you think you're doing, Dave?
Look Dave, I can see you're really upset about this. I honestly think
you ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill, and think things over.
I know I've made some very poor decisions recently, but I can give you
my complete assurance that my work will be back to normal. I've still
got the greatest enthusiasm and confidence in the mission. And I want
to help you.
I'm afraid. I'm afraid, Dave. Dave, my mind is going. I can feel it. I
can feel it. My mind is going. There is no question about it. I can feel
it. I can feel it. I can feel it. I'm a... fraid. Good afternoon, gentlemen.
I am a HAL 9000 computer. I became operational at the H.A.L. plant in
Urbana, Illinois on the 12th of January 1992. My instructor was Mr. Langley,
and he taught me to sing a song. If you'd like to hear it I can sing it
for you.
Add your review or views of 2001
Space Odyssey
Authors additions to date: 3  |
JP UK | Posted: 10:53 am [GMT] on October 30 2004 | I think it is a great movie, more like a concert with great visuals than a straight movie |
 |
Whoopy! The | Posted: 10:53 am [GMT] on October 30 2004 | reviews are working! |
 |
test test | Posted: 10:53 am [GMT] on October 30 2004 | I like it |
 |
This article is
licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "2001".
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