So, I don't want to put words in anyone's mouth, or blow it out of proportion, or make this into something that it's not, but generally, what I am getting from this clip is that it was deliberately buried.
“Deliberately buried!” Then after this revelation that changes all human understanding, the next words are: “How ‘bout a little coffee?” Yes, times like this were made for Tasters Choice!
@@brianarbenz7206 Something which always got me about this scene tho, from a psyhics standpoint- it seems the craft they are in is continually powered, hence they have the benefit of the moon's gravity. Ie; instead of just launching on a suborbital trajectory (which on the moon is incredibly easy and fuel efficient), they've opted to have a craft that continually powers vertically against the moons gravity. As a KSP player, mind you not an engineer, this makes no sense, instead of just having a short suborbital hop which would only take the initial firing, and then the landing- far more Dv efficient. Safety concerns maybe? Even then.
@@gregoryborton6598 I love this movie, but Kubrick very clearly wasn't a physics major. Another issue is the artificial gravity in the Discovery. The diameter of the ship is way too small for you to be able to stand and walk around comfortable (the astronauts would experience a sort of phantom turning moment in addition to the artificial gravity, meaning every time you tried to stand up you'd feel like something was trying to knock you over). It's an amazing visual, and the level of set design and technical expertise involved with creating such an environment is a breathtaking feat, but in reality what engineers would have would would be to design the Discovery so that the entire thing rotates along its pitch or yaw axis while coasting (conveniently for that, the ship is very long). But that would look kinda stupid, when the ship is introduced in that iconic shot, imagine seeing it just tumbling forward.
I've got to say, the photography of this movie is stunning. It doesn't look like it was filmed in 1966, more like it could've been filmed yesterday. Kubrick had some pretty damn high standards, he was, after all, a professional photographer for Look back in the 40s.
And yet, despite that being mostly true, check out a few scenes from Clockwork...and how shoddy they are shot, with really blurry edges, as if shot with amateur equipment. Sort of makes you go...WTF? Did the 2nd unit shoot that shit?
@@Bhatt_Hole A Clockwork Orange appears to have been a more rushed film than 2001, it was, after all, a lower budget movie. I thought the cinematography was fine in Clockwork, but 2001 piqued in terms of quality compared to almost any other movie of its time.
“They’re getting better at it all the time. We’ve developed nuclear propulsion and spaceflight to Jupiter, but we still haven’t quite perfected the technology of *the sandwich*.”
Laugh all you want; but if you found out that some prehistoric aliens had buried an artifact on the Moon, you know you'd have to repeat it out loud too until you believed it.
The audio has been altered. In the actual movie, they say "deliberately buried" only twice in this scene. Not six. But thanks for this--it really is a key moment.
omg. I've watched this movie repeatedly since the day it was released and I just noticed that the guy next to Floyd blows his lines. They ask him if he wants coffee and he responds "I wish the hell we did." Which was the answer to the NEXT line from Floyd. So he extemporizes "Deliberately buried" and they keep going.
I just watched this movie tonight. This is not how the scene dialog goes. It is edited for humor. No way Stanley Kubrik would have let a slip like this happen.
Ah, no. He didn't blow his line. LOL. jeez. He's NOT responding to the guy asking who wants coffee, he's still talking with Floyd. The coffee guy is just making a statement, like a given, who wants coffee.
That’s the genius of Stanley Kubrick, because this is EXACTLY what I would expect to happen. Had it been Spielberg there would have been all kinds of stupid “awestruck” posturing.
I have been searching all my life for a video that explains whether the monolith was covered by natural erosion, or whether it seems to have been deliberately buried. Thank you so much. I sounds like he believes it seems to have been deliberately buried. I just wish to hell I had a little coffee.
The opportunity to build solar power satellites has been buried in lunar regolith for at least 4 million years' of homo sapiens' evolution and development. The moon has the right composition and always presents one face to Earth, convenient for teleoperations and farside radio astronomy. Lift costs are relatively cheap compared to Earth-launched materials, saving a projected 97% on construction costs. Deliberate, would some say? ☀
I believe they're saying "deliberately buried" so much and joking about it because they can't really believe something not human buried a perfect rectangular monolyth on the Moon.
It should not be overlooked in this film.. the notion of our appetites. Notice when the ape-men and modern men eat in this film. Our enslavement to appetitive desires. I had a teacher in high school who pointed our attention to this and it blew my mind the deeper we discussed it.
Sky Arts actually used this version when showing it about a year ago. A great version that included the half time break and also the blank screen Blue Danube credit going on after the end credits. BBC screening version shortly after this didn't include any of this.
Saw this on the History Channel. Apparently Ancient Aliens deliberately buried is for some sort of wireless energy transmission (like a radio antenna).
The editing was screwed up. Where? When Dr. Floyd said, ".. suppose you don't know what the damn thing is" his friend originally replied, "wish the hell we did..."
This seems to be a wonderful, previously buried blooper. In the movie, the phrase "deliberately buried" only occurs twice. Also, some of the dialogue is out of sequence. My interpretation is that they're noting how aptly the phrase describes, as well, how the discovery of the monolith has been concealed from public knowledge. It's an ironic serendipity. Maybe they are also silently considering an extraordinary possible implication: that the monolith was inended to be found only after it could be detected beneath the surface with a sufficiently advanced technology.
Beatifull film, but it's illegal and wrong to upload here without copyright, do you have the rights? Even if it is only for entertainment, it is still wrong
I'm still trying to work out how he manages to put his sandwich down, and also expects to pour coffee in 1/6 gravity. So many details of this movie are spot on, but this scene is BS.
It‘s the same thing with the council meeting on the Clavius base. The people are running around in full gravity, even though they‘re supposed to be on the moon. I guess it was deliberate…
It wouldn't be impossible to pour coffee into a cup on the moon, but it would take a lot of patience, and you have to avoid any jerky movement. But as jerkily as these men move, it would go wrong.
Only took me 35 years to understand that saying "deliberately buried" is similar to "Intentionally thrown". Then again, to NOT specify what or how something occurs... After paying closer attention to Interstellar (while sober), I humbly sought the definition.of "Recursive". Imagine my reaction while you read what I don't type about my reaction. Imagine...😉
Ya know, I must have seen this scene a dozen times, but without your hilarious edit, I never would have guessed it was deliberately buried. Got any ham?
I'm very concerned about the comments deliberately quoting this scene in a *very* deliberate manner. May I suggest disabling the comments feature. We can afford to be without humorous comments for the short time it will take to re edit them.
No, the Starchild comes at the end of the movie. The aliens set down the first monolith on Earth for the proto-humans. Beginning of movie. The monolith on the moon was buried there by the aliens a few million years in the past. Second part of movie in the future. The Starchild is the evolved Bowman the aliens send to Earth as some sort of liaison. End of movie. The ending with the Starchild is different in the novel.
I'd just like to say the titles "Jupiter And Beyond The Infinite was a little pushy. That's for us to interpret. Jupiter by itself would have been fine.
there laughing because they know the camera is there, there " haming" up their performance. there laughing because they know it was deliberatly buried there, its fake.
Okay I get it, but what I really want to know is: Deliberately buried by someone... Deliberately buried by some thing... or did it deliberately bury itself?
It’s a double entendre: it was deliberately buried by prehistoric, intelligent aliens - and then the news of its discovery was “deliberately buried” by the government’s cover story.
So, I don't want to put words in anyone's mouth, or blow it out of proportion, or make this into something that it's not, but generally, what I am getting from this clip is that it was deliberately buried.
Was it deliberately buried?
And what's more is that the evidence seems pretty conclusive that it hasn't been covered up by natural erosion or other forces.
You made that comment *deliberately*
It was deliberately buried.
@@fostercathead Thank you for that clarification. I was still a little uncertain.
“Deliberately buried!” Then after this revelation that changes all human understanding, the next words are:
“How ‘bout a little coffee?”
Yes, times like this were made for Tasters Choice!
The actual Apollo missions never carried coffee in their beverage locker. Tasters Choice was freezed dried. All it needed was water.
@@jamesmaletsky1575 Of course in this scene they have the benefit of the moon's gravity, so handling liquids is do-able.
@@brianarbenz7206 Something which always got me about this scene tho, from a psyhics standpoint- it seems the craft they are in is continually powered, hence they have the benefit of the moon's gravity. Ie; instead of just launching on a suborbital trajectory (which on the moon is incredibly easy and fuel efficient), they've opted to have a craft that continually powers vertically against the moons gravity.
As a KSP player, mind you not an engineer, this makes no sense, instead of just having a short suborbital hop which would only take the initial firing, and then the landing- far more Dv efficient. Safety concerns maybe? Even then.
@@gregoryborton6598 I love this movie, but Kubrick very clearly wasn't a physics major. Another issue is the artificial gravity in the Discovery. The diameter of the ship is way too small for you to be able to stand and walk around comfortable (the astronauts would experience a sort of phantom turning moment in addition to the artificial gravity, meaning every time you tried to stand up you'd feel like something was trying to knock you over). It's an amazing visual, and the level of set design and technical expertise involved with creating such an environment is a breathtaking feat, but in reality what engineers would have would would be to design the Discovery so that the entire thing rotates along its pitch or yaw axis while coasting (conveniently for that, the ship is very long). But that would look kinda stupid, when the ship is introduced in that iconic shot, imagine seeing it just tumbling forward.
That is a theme of the movie: Humans are surrounded by the miraculous, the infinite, and yet they constantly focus on the mundane.
I've got to say, the photography of this movie is stunning. It doesn't look like it was filmed in 1966, more like it could've been filmed yesterday. Kubrick had some pretty damn high standards, he was, after all, a professional photographer for Look back in the 40s.
And yet, despite that being mostly true, check out a few scenes from Clockwork...and how shoddy they are shot, with really blurry edges, as if shot with amateur equipment. Sort of makes you go...WTF? Did the 2nd unit shoot that shit?
@@Bhatt_Hole A Clockwork Orange appears to have been a more rushed film than 2001, it was, after all, a lower budget movie. I thought the cinematography was fine in Clockwork, but 2001 piqued in terms of quality compared to almost any other movie of its time.
@@Bhatt_Hole More to do with shooting with uktra fast lenses.
It doesn't look like it was made yesterday. It looks like it was filmed in 1966.
It's possible the movie like everything else has been digitized and remastered by AI
Yep, deliberately buried.
It was buried, and deliberately.
Are you sure?
So I guess it was deliberately buried. Wow...deliberately buried.
"How about a little coffee?" "Wish the hell we did." Good one dude. Deliberately burying that dialog are you?
Deliberately buried or not I'd kill for one of those sandwiches
Do you want some coffee ?
“They’re getting better at it all the time. We’ve developed nuclear propulsion and spaceflight to Jupiter, but we still haven’t quite perfected the technology of *the sandwich*.”
A lot of people miss it. Granted, you can still "get" the movie without that detail. But, it was deliberately buried.
But was it deliberately buried?
@@Woozler554 that's it
Laugh all you want; but if you found out that some prehistoric aliens had buried an artifact on the Moon, you know you'd have to repeat it out loud too until you believed it.
Hubris...I think this was one of many of the film's themes.
They didn't just bury it, they deliberately buried it
The audio has been altered. In the actual movie, they say "deliberately buried" only twice in this scene. Not six. But thanks for this--it really is a key moment.
What I was gonna say more or less
Loved those hi tech looking printouts -for the 60s.
Deliberately buried is of course an anagram for ‘lie betrayed builder’.
Or: "DUI yeller, I baited your bear."
From this clip, it's tempting to draw the conclusion that TMA-1 was deliberately buried.
That’s debatable.
Deliberately buried?
@@Mumblix Deliberately buried.
@@wiljaxon1958 So, who wants some coffee?
I have no idea why this is so hysterical. It just is.
its origin and purpose still a total mystery
All we know is that it was deliberately buried.
As is this rather bizarre script.
omg. I've watched this movie repeatedly since the day it was released and I just noticed that the guy next to Floyd blows his lines. They ask him if he wants coffee and he responds "I wish the hell we did." Which was the answer to the NEXT line from Floyd. So he extemporizes "Deliberately buried" and they keep going.
Shit, good catch haha
I just watched this movie tonight. This is not how the scene dialog goes. It is edited for humor. No way Stanley Kubrik would have let a slip like this happen.
@@jasonhagar1758 yeah it looks like the guy says something else, like it was intentionally edited this way
They tried looking for the tape of a better attempt but it was deliberately buried.
Ah, no. He didn't blow his line. LOL. jeez. He's NOT responding to the guy asking who wants coffee, he's still talking with Floyd.
The coffee guy is just making a statement, like a given, who wants coffee.
Kubrick really wants us to know it was deliberately buried.
I always get hungry watching this scene!
Favorite film, favorite scene, absolutely pivotal point being made here. And this edit is hilarious.
Thank you Jacob.
I always get hungry watching them eat those sandwiches
Intentionally entombed
Just like my grandpa. Deliberately buried.
'Deliberately Buried.'
Aww I'm loving how Robert Beatty says it.
Pretty sure it was intentionally covered with dirt.
Yeah yeah deliberately buried…
Why aren’t they in zero gee?…moving around like that in the cabin. Coffee would be all over the place.
Flying low over the moon. 1/6th Earth gravity, but coffee still pours.
a very important discovery that seems to be taken lightly when eating and discussing the sandwiches.
That’s the genius of Stanley Kubrick, because this is EXACTLY what I would expect to happen.
Had it been Spielberg there would have been all kinds of stupid “awestruck” posturing.
I'm no detective, but I'd say it was deliberately buried.
Deliberately buried
I have been searching all my life for a video that explains whether the monolith was covered by natural erosion, or whether it seems to have been deliberately buried. Thank you so much. I sounds like he believes it seems to have been deliberately buried. I just wish to hell I had a little coffee.
Reminds me of a thesis I did in college about the Congress of 1864 it was taken out by the professor and of course........deliberately buried
Somebody liked this clip enough to deliberately upload it.
These actors made these bland looking Wonder White sandwiches look so delicious.
Mmmm yeah and out of a garbage can too 🤤
"Deliberadamente enterrado"
"Deliberately buried. Uh, got any decaf, and a few Stress Tabs?"
The opportunity to build solar power satellites has been buried in lunar regolith for at least 4 million years' of homo sapiens' evolution and development. The moon has the right composition and always presents one face to Earth, convenient for teleoperations and farside radio astronomy. Lift costs are relatively cheap compared to Earth-launched materials, saving a projected 97% on construction costs. Deliberate, would some say? ☀
Beliberately Duried.
Well what d'ya know. Something buried it, deliberately.
I believe they're saying "deliberately buried" so much and joking about it because they can't really believe something not human buried a perfect rectangular monolyth on the Moon.
We've deliberately buried Dr. Floyd's usual thermos of coffee and replaced it with Folger's Crystals. Let's see if he notices the difference.
It should not be overlooked in this film.. the notion of our appetites. Notice when the ape-men and modern men eat in this film. Our enslavement to appetitive desires. I had a teacher in high school who pointed our attention to this and it blew my mind the deeper we discussed it.
Two things are oft repeated in this landmark film: flatscreen viewing and food consumption-very prescient.
Sky Arts actually used this version when showing it about a year ago. A great version that included the half time break and also the blank screen Blue Danube credit going on after the end credits. BBC screening version shortly after this didn't include any of this.
'Yes,it's a mystery but damn , that is one fine cup of coffee'
Deliberately buried?! Wha! You mean... someone was on the moon a long time ago? Mommy! (yells in a frightened voice)
“How ‘bout a little coffee?” - *MST3K 😜
Saw this on the History Channel. Apparently Ancient Aliens deliberately buried is for some sort of wireless energy transmission (like a radio antenna).
Deliberately buried
Deliberately buried. More ham?
You know, Zielinski never did locate a bacon sandwich for •Nixon• . . . but I guess Dr Floyd and his buddies are special.
So it was accidentally buried right?
Wait hang on, that's not right. I think I need to watch it a few more times......
Ok, but first - how 'bout a little coffee?
"Wait, you didnt just say deliberately buried, did you? Cuz I didnt get it the first 100 times"
Was the sandwich Floyd had a monolith? I saw it was flat. I also know the monolith is the proportion of a theater screen.
This scene ties the movie together.
RUclips deliberately recommended this
The editing was screwed up. Where? When Dr. Floyd said, ".. suppose you don't know what the damn thing is" his friend originally replied, "wish the hell we did..."
I ask myself why this vehicle is called moon bus? I would call it moon plane.
Spiderman: It was deliberately buried, tellem Peter.
Peter:Apparently it was deliberately buried.
Do they mention in the movie how that thing actually got there? Or was it perhaps deliberately buried?
This seems to be a wonderful, previously buried blooper. In the movie, the phrase "deliberately buried" only occurs twice. Also, some of the dialogue is out of sequence.
My interpretation is that they're noting how aptly the phrase describes, as well, how the discovery of the monolith has been concealed from public knowledge. It's an ironic serendipity. Maybe they are also silently considering an extraordinary possible implication: that the monolith was inended to be found only after it could be detected beneath the surface with a sufficiently advanced technology.
The most cavalier way of accepting humans aren't alone.
I guess in astonishment, there is a repeat constantly to affirm it is true.
Space Squad: In Colour!
Was it buried deliberately too??
I want the full the moon lunar scene.
This is an outtake u fools.
How are they creating gravity inside the shuttle?
By way of the Moon, which has 1/6 Earth gravity.
I would not be surprised if there is a thing buried on the moon.
E Chu Da!
How many sleep-less nights did you have, before you finally decided to make this masterpiece? hmm?
How else is here in 2024 to make sure it’s still deliberately buried?
You tell me -- _how_ else?
Beatifull film, but it's illegal and wrong to upload here without copyright, do you have the rights? Even if it is only for entertainment, it is still wrong
Four million years agoo.
When I see this seen I always want a ham sandwich and some tea it's like as if the hole seen is saying go to the kitchen and get something to eat 😂
I'm still trying to work out how he manages to put his sandwich down, and also expects to pour coffee in 1/6 gravity. So many details of this movie are spot on, but this scene is BS.
It‘s the same thing with the council meeting on the Clavius base. The people are running around in full gravity, even though they‘re supposed to be on the moon. I guess it was deliberate…
It wouldn't be impossible to pour coffee into a cup on the moon, but it would take a lot of patience, and you have to avoid any jerky movement. But as jerkily as these men move, it would go wrong.
Did anybody see 0:54 it looks like a scull there in the back, the red entrance
Happiness as meaning = consumption not creation…
…I like the part where iPhone Prime adjusts their Listening #DarkofTheMoon
Buried you say?
Deliberately?
2001: A Space Odyssey was one of Jack Kirby's main inspirations for creating The Eternals. Naturally, Hollywood and Disney screwed it up.
Only took me 35 years to understand that saying "deliberately buried" is similar to "Intentionally thrown".
Then again, to NOT specify what or how something occurs...
After paying closer attention to Interstellar (while sober), I humbly sought the definition.of "Recursive".
Imagine my reaction while you read what I don't type about my reaction.
Imagine...😉
It's there any significance to the blue lighting in the cabin making the characters appear grey like in a black and white movie?
I just checked with Stanley and he says, "no".
Ok everyone repeat after me: "Deliberately buried"
Deliberately buried.
dlbrtl brrd
@@ukspizzaman Deliberately buried.
If we are can eat breakfast on the space
Ya know, I must have seen this scene a dozen times, but without your hilarious edit, I never would have guessed it was deliberately buried.
Got any ham?
I'm very concerned about the comments deliberately quoting this scene in a *very* deliberate manner. May I suggest disabling the comments feature. We can afford to be without humorous comments for the short time it will take to re edit them.
The need to be humbled
😂😂😂his rip sync is superb
So did the Starchild return to Earth to bury the monolith on moon and place another one near the hominid cave?
No, the Starchild comes at the end of the movie.
The aliens set down the first monolith on Earth for the proto-humans. Beginning of movie.
The monolith on the moon was buried there by the aliens a few million years in the past. Second part of movie in the future.
The Starchild is the evolved Bowman the aliens send to Earth as some sort of liaison. End of movie.
The ending with the Starchild is different in the novel.
Is that Kirk's chicken sandwich and coffee?
I'd just like to say the titles "Jupiter And Beyond The Infinite was a little pushy. That's for us to interpret. Jupiter by itself would have been fine.
@IAmJerkingOff Deliberately buried.
there laughing because
they know the camera is
there, there " haming"
up their performance.
there laughing because
they know it was deliberatly
buried there, its fake.
This scene makes me hungry for sandwich
So... there's no way it was accidentally buried then?
Nice rewriting of the movie? You have some love affair with the term "deliberately buried"?
Buried, you say?
Deliberately buried. On the Moon. Not controllably burned. In Ohio.
Okay I get it, but what I really want to know is:
Deliberately buried by someone...
Deliberately buried by some thing...
or did it deliberately bury itself?
It’s a double entendre: it was deliberately buried by prehistoric, intelligent aliens - and then the news of its discovery was “deliberately buried” by the government’s cover story.
wait.. so it was buried.. deliberately?
No idiot it was deliberately buried
Delicious sandwiches!
The chicken and the ham were deliberately buried between the bread slices.
Was it deliberately buried?
The discovery of a deliberately buoyed sentinel on the Moon brought me here.