2001: A Space Odyssey

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I keep forgetting Keir played the piano player i Black Christmas.

Norse Jung (Eric H.), Saturday, 22 August 2015 06:20 (ten years ago)

This looks kinda interesting:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-2001-File-Landmark-Science/dp/0957261020/ref=pd_sim_14_1?ie=UTF8&refRID=0PJT8DR8YC4YW9CKBQG6

MaresNest, Saturday, 22 August 2015 14:28 (ten years ago)

Incredible! I was just daydreaming about a live music performance of this the other day. Blue Danube / Spinning Space Stations sequence is my favorite film sequence of all time.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 22 August 2015 16:51 (ten years ago)

I saw it at the Bowl which was great/interesting because the film is so good I kind of forgot that the orchestra was playing at all. That said, I'd never heard the choral parts live before (and had never really heard any avant-garde choral music live) and that was amazing.

Spencer Chow, Saturday, 22 August 2015 17:40 (ten years ago)

http://i.imgur.com/5U1yFUO.jpg

Spencer Chow, Saturday, 22 August 2015 17:44 (ten years ago)

Wow.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 22 August 2015 17:50 (ten years ago)

awesome

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 22 August 2015 18:15 (ten years ago)

Great idea

Saw it at a 70mm one-day-festival a year ago, sober, front row, blown away

niels, Saturday, 22 August 2015 21:04 (ten years ago)

Did they perform Ligeti's Aventures at the end section in the fake hotel suite?

MaresNest, Saturday, 22 August 2015 22:53 (ten years ago)

I believe so. It seemed complete and again, so seamless that it I occasionally forgot about the live aspect.

Spencer Chow, Wednesday, 26 August 2015 07:18 (ten years ago)

First viewing in 14 years yesterday at MoMA, unfortunately in DCP, not 70mm...

Very funny that Bowman shakes his hand from the hot package when he pulls his dinner out of the Discovery meal slot. Goddamn future can't get anything right.

Also it seemed to me that the name of HAL's creator, Dr Chandra, was DUBBED with another name in the disconnect scene! What reason could there possibly be for that?

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 6 September 2015 15:52 (ten years ago)

I always wondered that, in the film it's Dr Langley

MaresNest, Sunday, 6 September 2015 16:08 (ten years ago)

ok. i thought it usta be Chandra in the film.

Clarke finished the novel quite apart from the completion of the script.

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 6 September 2015 16:37 (ten years ago)

Was lucky enough to see this on a big screen a week ago. Theater was absolutely packed on a Tuesday evening!

Caught a lot of the more subtle dark humor this time around. For instance in the message from ground control confirming that HAL is malfunctioning and they know this because.....the HAL on Earth confirmed it LOL

Are they being lied to by all their computers?

Also I kind of wonder if HAL had some kind of weird meta reaction to watching himself give an interview about himself on public TV. Because really shortly after viewing that TV episode is when he starts pulling shit.

If he wasn't just evil the whole time and at some point in the film turned evil I think it may have to do w the TV interview. Maybe HAL is camera shy.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 6 September 2015 17:33 (ten years ago)

If you accept his personhood, I wouldn't call his killing of Poole "murder." It's self-defense.

People have speculated that he has the guilts bcz he knows the objective of the mission, and the humans do not.

btw the classical composers get screen credit, but not the guy who wrote "Daisy Bell."

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 6 September 2015 17:40 (ten years ago)

HAL's identifying of the AE35 as faulty doesn't appear to be 'pulling shit,' but a straightforward error. (and in fact we don't know for sure that it's an error)

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 6 September 2015 17:41 (ten years ago)

I never fail to marvel at the sound of Douglas Rain's voice and whoever the sound guy was that caught it with such softness.

I know it's very obviously telegraphed but the unsettling, glitchy 'just a moment, just a moment' right before HAL announces that the AE-35 has malfunctioned is the point, for me, that he makes the decision or it is made for him somehow.

MaresNest, Sunday, 6 September 2015 17:43 (ten years ago)

I always assumed the monolith was matted in on the man-apes' soundstage, but from the way Moonwatcher touches it, I don't believe so. (Haven't looked it up.)

btw the monolith moon-pit scene was the first one shot, at the end of December '65.

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 6 September 2015 17:46 (ten years ago)

btw the classical composers get screen credit, but not the guy who wrote "Daisy Bell."

― skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Sunday, September 6, 2015 1:40 PM (14 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I would suspect that credit is given to the copyright-holding performers of these public domain works, and that none is given for Daisy Bell because it is sung either by an actor or the IBM 704 from which a recording was made in 1961. Whether there is a copyright on that I don't know. Not my specialty.

Banned on the Run (benbbag), Sunday, 6 September 2015 17:56 (ten years ago)

People have speculated that he has the guilts bcz he knows the objective of the mission, and the humans do not.

yeah this is big. imo it's foreshadowed in the briefing given to the scientists at the beginning: they're told they'll be uncomfortable maintaining the official story. hal is directed both to monitor and help pilot the ship, to the best of his prideful ability, and to conceal from the crew the nature of the mission. he doesn't always know what information to relay and the information he relays becomes erratic; the crew notices; hal kills them to defend both himself and his sense of himself as infallibly helpful.

maresnest otm about "just a moment, just a moment" suggesting... something. a digital psychotic break. either he invents it to kill poole because he's decided that when the crew is dead he will no longer have to lie, or it is a genuine glitch caused in some way by his double consciousness -- or it's both, like, maybe the error is consciously genuine but manifests and sets in motion the fulfillment of an unconscious desire to be alone on the ship. regardless i think the fault report is hal's first act of legal insanity. the middle part of this movie is kinda hitchcock in space.

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 6 September 2015 20:03 (ten years ago)

i know everything hasn't been quite right with me. but i can assure you now--very confidently--that it's going to be all right again. i feel much better now. i really do. 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.

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 6 September 2015 20:09 (ten years ago)

People have speculated that he has the guilts bcz he knows the objective of the mission, and the humans do not.

tbh, i've always thought this was a given, it never occured to me to think otherwise.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Sunday, 6 September 2015 21:02 (ten years ago)

I always assumed the monolith was matted in on the man-apes' soundstage, but from the way Moonwatcher touches it, I don't believe so. (Haven't looked it up.)

Kubrick was pathologically obsessed with not only the design and look of the monolith but how to keep crew members fingerprints and dust off of the pristine, polished surface.

http://nzpetesmatteshot.blogspot.co.uk/2015/01/kubricks-2001-one-mans-incredible.html

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Sunday, 6 September 2015 21:13 (ten years ago)

People have speculated that he has the guilts bcz he knows the objective of the mission, and the humans do not.

Pretty much stated to Heywood Floyd by Dr Chandra in 2010 iirc

MaresNest, Sunday, 6 September 2015 21:17 (ten years ago)

Formatting is sketchy, apologies..

-Do you know why HAL did what he did?
-Yes. It wasn't his fault.
Whose fault was it?
-Yours.
-Mine?
CHANDRA:
Yours.
In going through HAL's memory banks
I discovered his original orders.
You wrote those orders.
Discovery's mission to Jupiter was already
in the advanced stages...
...when the first small monolith was found
and sent its signal toward Jupiter.
By direct presidential order, the existence
of that monolith was kept secret.
-So?
-So as the function of the command crew...
...Bowman and Poole
was to get Discovery to its destination...
...it was decided
they shouldn't be informed.
The investigative team was trained
separately and placed in hibernation...
...before the voyage began.
Since HAL was capable of operating
Discovery without human assistance...
...it was decided he should be programmed
to complete the mission autonomously...
...in the event the crew
was incapacitated or killed.
He was given full knowledge
of the true objective...
...and instructed not to reveal anything
to Bowman or Poole.
-He was instructed to lie.
-What are you talking about?
I didn't authorize anyone
to tell HAL about the monolith.
The directive is NSC 342-slash-23,
Top Secret, January 30, 2001 .
NSC, National Security Council,
the White House.
I don't care who it is.
The situation was in conflict
with the basic purpose of HAL's design...
...the accurate processing of information
without distortion or concealment.
He became trapped.
The technical term is an H-Mobius loop,
which can happen in advanced computers...
...with autonomous
goal-seeking programs.
The goddamn White House.
I don't believe it.
HAL was told to lie...
...by people who find it easy to lie.
HAL doesn't know how,
so he couldn't function.
He became paranoid.
Those sons of bitches.
I didn't know.
I didn't know.

MaresNest, Sunday, 6 September 2015 21:19 (ten years ago)

man is this bludgeoning--

The goddamn White House.
I don't believe it.
HAL was told to lie...
...by people who find it easy to lie.
HAL doesn't know how,
so he couldn't function.
He became paranoid.
Those sons of bitches.
I didn't know.
I didn't know.

compared to this (quoting myself upthread)--

the scene near the beginning where the guy stands in front of an american flag and acknowledges to the scientists that having to maintain the quarantine's official cover story while knowing the truth will make them uncomfortable and anxious, which not only foreshadows hal's psychosis but links it to the secretive impulses of the Complex that built him

playlists of pensive swift (difficult listening hour), Monday, 7 September 2015 00:58 (ten years ago)

i don't friggin' care what they (ie Clarke) said in 2010

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Monday, 7 September 2015 04:34 (ten years ago)

Kubrick's take was the simpler one:

"In the specific case of HAL, he had an acute emotional crisis because he could not accept evidence of his own fallibility. The idea of neurotic computers is not uncommon - most advanced computer theorists believe that once you have a computer which is more intelligent than man and capable of learning by experience, it's inevitable that it will develop an equivalent range of emotional reactions - fear, love, hate, envy, etc. Such a machine could eventually become as incomprehensible as a human being, and could, of course, have a nervous breakdown - as HAL did in the film."

http://www.archiviokubrick.it/english/words/interviews/1970superstar.html

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Monday, 7 September 2015 04:41 (ten years ago)

This guy posits that HAL was ice cold from the outset.

http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0095.html

MaresNest, Tuesday, 8 September 2015 10:15 (ten years ago)

Once when I was in France, 2001 was on TV in a dubbed version, which I decided to watch because the dialogue is not exactly key to the movie. However in the scene where HAL breaks down, instead of Daisy, Daisy he sings Au Clair de la Lune, which I found most disconcerting. Now I'm wondering whether he sings a different song in every language.

Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 8 September 2015 11:14 (ten years ago)

i read that there are a few diff songs

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 8 September 2015 11:36 (ten years ago)

Many non-English language versions of the film do not use the song "Daisy". In the French soundtrack, Hal sings the French folk song "Au Clair de la Lune" while being disconnected.[103] In the German version, Hal sings the children's song "Hänschen klein" ("Johnny Little"),[104] and in the Italian version Hal sings "Giro giro tondo" (Ring a Ring o' Roses).[105]

sleepingsignal, Tuesday, 8 September 2015 11:48 (ten years ago)

Bought tickets for the 70mm presentation of 2001 at the Prince Charles. There were plenty of central seats available on the first two rows but I thought that might be insane, so I went about half-way back. It's in a couple of weeks' time.

Michael Jones, Tuesday, 8 September 2015 13:32 (ten years ago)

acc to iNdB trivia, Kubrick did the sound of astronauts breathing.

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 8 September 2015 21:24 (ten years ago)

three months pass...

Bought tickets for the 70mm presentation of 2001 at the Prince Charles. There were plenty of central seats available on the first two rows but I thought that might be insane, so I went about half-way back. It's in a couple of weeks' time.

how was the 70mm screening at the PCC?

StillAdvance, Tuesday, 5 January 2016 13:24 (ten years ago)

It was pretty good, though the print wasn't pristine and I'd forgotten that flat-65mm presentation (i.e, not filmed with anamorphic lenses, like QT's Hateful Eight) is actually "only" 2.21:1, so at first I was distracted by the fact that it wasn't as panoramic as I thought it would be. 2.35 releases (the original DVD? VHS?) are actually letterboxed versions of the 2.21 original.

I wish I had been closer though. The music for the Beyond The Infinite sequence sounded great. And I'd forgotten how much I enjoy the dry economy of the Lockwood/Dullea conversations.

Michael Jones, Tuesday, 5 January 2016 13:47 (ten years ago)

i saw it on 70mm at the bfi but wasnt blown away, maybe as the print wasnt as immaculate as hoped (it looked arid rather than rich), but maybe for the reasons you mentioned too. apparently the pcc now have a new print (or maybe this is the one you saw already) so am wondering if i should try again. though i still think, as i prob posted already, that 2001 might actually benefit from DCP.

StillAdvance, Tuesday, 5 January 2016 14:11 (ten years ago)

The 2014 re-release was digital, wasn't it?

I first saw 2001 at the Unit 4 cinema in Wallasey in the summer of 1980, when it still had one large screen. I was 11 and I went with my older brother. He says I stared transfixed at the screen for a good minute after the intermission had started. I think it was first broadcast on British TV on New Year's Day 1982 or 1983. Oh, the arguments at school after the Xmas break - me defending it against the "boring and stupid" jibes.

Michael Jones, Tuesday, 5 January 2016 15:57 (ten years ago)

two months pass...

A very interesting old article by Douglas Trumbull here - interesting despite the fact that I understood hardly any of it.

http://cinetropolis.net/vintage-article-by-douglas-trumbull-on-creating-special-effects-for-2001-a-space-odyssey/

nate woolls, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 10:53 (ten years ago)

This is playing in the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood Wednesday night. Not sure of the format.

Spencer Chow, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 17:45 (ten years ago)

think you just show up with a ticket

Ecomigrant gnomics (darraghmac), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 17:58 (ten years ago)

two months pass...

http://bhautikj.tumblr.com/post/145339946114/2001-a-space-odyssey-rendered-in-the-style-of

hello drukqs

F♯ A♯ (∞), Friday, 10 June 2016 18:51 (nine years ago)

impressive.

The Alien re-cut is funny.

Drop soap, not bombs (Ste), Friday, 10 June 2016 19:20 (nine years ago)

five months pass...

new 70mm print in LA

http://americancinematheque.blogspot.de/2016/12/the-return-of-2001-space-odyssey-in-70mm.html

check out that bottom photo

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 7 December 2016 20:59 (nine years ago)

He looks better than I expected!

http://i.imgur.com/rFM3SGV.jpg

pplains, Wednesday, 7 December 2016 21:06 (nine years ago)

two months pass...

you get a t shirt

https://drafthouse.com/event/2001-a-space-odyssey

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 5 March 2017 14:43 (nine years ago)

Pretty good t shirt

Gukbe, Sunday, 5 March 2017 14:50 (nine years ago)

Should be Kubrick/Kraftwerk one...

https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0640/9215/products/kubrickxt_1024x1024.jpg

Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 02:48 (nine years ago)

four weeks pass...

LA people:

http://www.curbed.com/2017/3/24/15051198/2001-space-odyssey-bedroom-installation-los-angeles

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 4 April 2017 14:18 (nine years ago)

two weeks pass...

https://www.wired.com/images_blogs/gadgetlab/2010/10/monolith.jpg

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 19 April 2017 16:48 (nine years ago)


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