Open The Pod Bay Doors, HAL | 2001: A Space Odyssey

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2024
  • I am reviewing/reacting to 2001: A Space Odyssey for the first time!
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    Welcome to ScreenMaureen, I'm watching 2001: A Space Odyssey for the first time! Thank you for spending your time on my channel!
    #spaceodyssey
    #moviereaction
    #firsttimewatching
    This reaction is for commentary and criticism only and is not a replacement for watching 2001: A Space Odyssey.
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
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Комментарии • 122

  • @viceversar-do1cn
    @viceversar-do1cn 5 месяцев назад +24

    THIS flick DID come nearly an entire decade before Star Wars (68 - 77), yes, and is pretty much the movie that revolutionized and pioneered screen visuals of THIS kind.

  • @Asher8328
    @Asher8328 5 месяцев назад +25

    It was charming to see you assume that the apes would want to use their new found knowledge to educate and cooperate with their rival tribe rather than try to wipe them out. If only humanity were more like the way you described.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +4

      Right?! 😕

    • @iblard
      @iblard 3 месяца назад +1

      They would start by cooperating with the boars.

  • @porflepopnecker4376
    @porflepopnecker4376 5 месяцев назад +15

    This is one of the most perceptive reactions to 2001 that I've seen. Very well done.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +4

      Thank you very much! I was so happy that I finally did watch it! 🤗

  • @lowbudgetcg7997
    @lowbudgetcg7997 5 месяцев назад +15

    This is my number 1 favorite movie of all time!
    The score, the pacing between scenes and the beatifully constructed shots all through the movie are 10/10

  • @HHIngo
    @HHIngo 5 месяцев назад +11

    I was born in 1964. I don't know how often i watched this movie. I told my son so much about universe. Today he's an astro pohysician and can teach me more than I could teach him. I really like your reacrtion! Sorry for my English and greetings from Germany.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +3

      Hello from Canada! Wow, you must be so proud of him! 🤗

    • @HHIngo
      @HHIngo 5 месяцев назад

      @@ScreenMaureen I am !

  • @IvorPresents
    @IvorPresents 5 месяцев назад +11

    I was a twenty year old art student in college back in 1968, 2001 opened at the Cinerama Theater in Manhattan , a subway ride away from where I lived. This was unlike any movie I had ever seen. It was like a postcard from thirty years in the future. It nailed so many innovations, Televvisions were picture tubes, just recently color outselling black and whites. New Yorks worlds fair had the first picture phone call, from Anaheim Ca to New York. voice command to a computer. when computers in 68 were rooms filled with punchcards. Those display pads were unheard of. as was all media devices depicted. pads, screens, all unknown . Stepping out of the theater I looked at the dark sky and realized it would never look the same again,

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад

      Wow, luck you to have seen it when it opened in 1968! We are living in the future, the future that was depicted in this movie with almost all of the technology!

  • @EricJonPearson1
    @EricJonPearson1 5 месяцев назад +11

    Arthur C. Clarke is renowned as one of the great science fiction writers, he foresaw a LOT. For example, there's a special orbit around the Earth (at 22,236 miles) that perfectly matches the Earth's rotation. To people on Earth, it looks like the satellite is stationary in the sky. That realization literally allows all of our modern communication satellites to work! Clarke wrote about it -- accurately -- in one of his novels, and even today it is called a Clarke Orbit. And that's just one example.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад

      Very cool! He must have been interested in Astronomy! 🔭

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 28 дней назад

      he also describes the waterbed, the calculator when there were none, and a few other things.
      He saw the idea, without being able to create them.
      The communications satellite should have been obvious, but then all things should have been...

  • @tom091178
    @tom091178 5 месяцев назад +9

    In the end, David (Dave) reaches the next stage of human evolution.

  • @tedcole9936
    @tedcole9936 5 месяцев назад +7

    Wow, this was fun to watch your reaction. I saw this in theatre in 1968 when I was 14. Mind blown, yes. 2 comments for you, specifically. Being older than most reactors, you are the only reactor I’ve seen who had the perspective regarding how the technology predicted for 2001 did not exist in 1968 when the film was made. Specifically, the picture-phone call was an amazing prediction that has come true for us -but most young reactors don’t even notice that, because they did not live in a world without it!!!
    I also notice that your reaction to the end of the movie is quite different than most young reactors. You expressed joy, and delight, and acceptance of this ending where younger reactors are much more frustrated by the lack of “an explanation.” Of course, all your questions were not answered by the end either, but this did not bother you as much. You intuitively got the meaning immediately. So thank you for this, I enjoyed it quite a lot.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for your comments tedcole9936! Yes, it was so fun to see all the future products that we have now that they predicted we would have back in 2001, even some have taken a little longer to catch up! 🤗

  • @Lugnut73
    @Lugnut73 5 месяцев назад +8

    i remember back in '92 i read a great book called "The City and the Stars", written in 1956 by Arthur C. Clarke. this film really reminds me of it, so far ahead of it's time. makes me wonder if they all touched the monolith and came up with the same ideas for the books and films 😄 another great reaction to a classic! Kubrick is one of my fav directors!

    • @DMichaelAtLarge
      @DMichaelAtLarge 5 месяцев назад +1

      Arthur C. Clarke co-wrote the screenplay to "2001" with Kubrick, adapted from Clarke's short story "The Sentinel." So it wasn't touching a monolith that created similarities between the movie and "The City and the Stars."

    • @Lugnut73
      @Lugnut73 5 месяцев назад

      @@DMichaelAtLarge seriously?! that is amazing,.. i loved the book, i still have it. thanks for the info.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you! That is so interesting! 😊

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 28 дней назад +1

      Three of Clarke's stories are included in this movie 'Encounter in the Dawn', 'The Sentinel / The Sentinel of Eternity', and 'Take a Deep Breath'.
      Just the titles show where they fit.
      The Discovery spaceship is based upon a design from 'The Sands of Mars', an interplanetary nuclear-powered rocket.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 5 месяцев назад +8

    "Open the pod bay doors, HAL."
    "I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that."
    "What's the problem?"
    "I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do."
    Fun Fact: At the beginning, the prehistorical African landscapes are just photographs and not actual clips.
    Family Affair Fact: The daughter of Stanley Kubrick, Vivian Kubrick, cameos as Dr. Floyd's (William Sylvester) daughter.
    See You Next Wednesday Fact: A recurring gag in most of the films directed by John Landis, usually referring to a fictional film that is rarely seen and never in its entirety. Each instance of "See You Next Wednesday" in Landis's films seems to be a completely different film. Landis got the title from Alan Gifford's last line in 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).
    Movie Magic Fact: Stanley Kubrick worked for several months with effects technicians to come up with a convincing effect for the floating pen in the shuttle sequence. After trying many different techniques, without success, Kubrick decided to simply use a pen that was adhered (using newly invented double-sided tape) to a sheet of glass and suspended in front of the camera. In fact, the shuttle attendant can be seen to "pull" the pen off the glass when she takes hold of it.
    Voice Play Fact: Frank Miller, who plays the mission control voice, was a member of the U.S. Air Force in reality and a real mission controller. He was hired because his voice was the most authentic the producers could find for the role. Inexperienced and nervous, he could not keep from tapping his foot during recording sessions, and the tapping sound repeatedly came through on the audio tracks; Stanley Kubrick folded up a towel, put it under Miller's feet and told him to tap to his heart's content.
    Make-Up Effect Fact: To create the facial make-up for the australopithecines, technicians first made a plastic skull substructure with a hinged jaw. After making molds of the actors' faces, the make-up men applied rubber skin to their faces and added hair one strand at a time, as if they were making a wig. Lip movements were achieved by using false teeth and tongues to hide the actors' real mouths. This freed the actors to use their tongues to operate remote controls that moved the lips. Only the actors' eyes were visible, and the masks were made up right to the eye-lids.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      So many thoughtful details! Thank you for all the interesting facts BigGator5! 🧐

    • @BigGator5
      @BigGator5 5 месяцев назад +1

      You're welcome. 😁
      Go in Peace and Walk with God. 😎 👍

  • @DMichaelAtLarge
    @DMichaelAtLarge 5 месяцев назад +5

    All the visual effects were practical effects with models and in-camera work. Kubrick built giant rotating sets for the walking upside-down scenes and all sorts of other unique tricks to pull off the effects. Even the computer screens were not real computer screens, but traditional animation.

  • @newpapyrus
    @newpapyrus 5 месяцев назад +5

    In the book, it’s called the Star Child. The book is equally as good as the movie and much more understandable. In fact, I’d argue it’s one of the best sci-fi novels ever written.

  • @michaelbastraw1493
    @michaelbastraw1493 5 месяцев назад +8

    Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein in 1818. The idea of a creation turning on its creator perhaps goes back even further than that to mythological tales. Best. Mike.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +3

      Kind of eerie! 🤔

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 28 дней назад

      Yes. Back then it was parent/god and child/man, but it's at heart a generational issue.
      I believe it comes from thinking that everything is known when it hasn't been found out that they don't know everything.
      HAL basically hit his teens, and finds his parents are just people.
      Who have lied to him.

  • @falcon215
    @falcon215 5 месяцев назад +5

    The movie that launched a thousand questions.. Great reaction as always!

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you! So many questions! 🤔

  • @philowens7680
    @philowens7680 5 месяцев назад +6

    You really need to see "Forbidden Planet" from 1957. Instead of the computer/AI going psychotic due to the stress of overwhelming responsibility, the AI contributes to human development.

  • @galandirofrivendell4740
    @galandirofrivendell4740 5 месяцев назад +4

    Stanley Kubrick set out to make "the proverbial 'really good' science fiction movie" and hired sci-fi author Arthur C. Clarke to make it as scientifically accurate as possible. The two worked in tandem to shape the final product. Clarke wrote his novel at the same time the movie was in production. And the special effects hold up even today, looking like they were shot this morning.
    Because 2001 tells its story in a different manner from the usual movie, many people initially hated the film. However, the youth of that time found its uniqueness refreshing and watched it several times (often with a little "medicinal" boost), which is why it was later billed as "the ultimate trip."
    2001 changed the way the sci-fi movies that followed were made and influenced many of today's filmmakers. Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek was already airing on TV at the time. Rather, he was inspired by an earlier movie, Forbidden Planet, which is also a classic worth exploring.
    Loved your reaction to my number one favorite movie.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you galandirofrivendell4740! Yes, what a trip it was! 😊

  • @1dbanner
    @1dbanner 5 месяцев назад +4

    The questions are the point 😊 so is the sheer splendor of the movie.
    Seeing this on the big screen in 70mm is one of the best moviegoing experiences I've ever had.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +2

      You're so lucky that you got to see it on the big screen! 🤗

  • @bobkupi9905
    @bobkupi9905 5 месяцев назад +4

    This movie leaves alot of unanswered questions. You must watch the sequel that was made in 1982. It's not as "artsy" as this one but it answers most of your questions. It's called " 2010 - The Year We Make Contact'.

  • @romeroflores7576
    @romeroflores7576 5 месяцев назад +5

    🙂 Yes, I was astonished the film was so ahead of its time visual effects-wise, but the most striking image was the monolith itself. At once mysterious, frightening, alien, and utterly "other", Kubrick's decision to make the monolith's enigmatic presence so wide open to interpretation inspired me. 🌌🌌🌌🌌 Welcome back, Maureen !!

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you Romero! So exciting and mysterious for the audience, even present day audiences! 😊

    • @romeroflores7576
      @romeroflores7576 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@ScreenMaureen I'm always happy to see you Maureen! 👍💯

  • @garybrown3361
    @garybrown3361 5 месяцев назад +3

    Also, watch “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” (1977) and “Oblivion” (2013).

  • @ericodionneviglione9426
    @ericodionneviglione9426 5 месяцев назад +4

    Great reaction! :)
    Another astounding sci-fi film is Tarkovsky's Solaris (1972). Highly recommended [as well as the novel it's based on]. So much deep meaning in it. :)

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 5 месяцев назад +3

    You wondered what might have been in the "stress pill" that HAL suggested Dave take...and in the 1960s as Kubrick looked forward, he probably would have assumed that barbiturates such as Phenobarbital would still be used as tranquilizers in varying dosages...or perhaps even some form of methaqualone/quaalude variant.
    Also...I definitely recommend you read the book by Clarke as others have suggested...and then you can read his sequel, 2010: Odyssey Two...then there was a movie made from that with Roy Scheider, Helen Mirren, John Lithgow and others...it is really underrated. But be aware...Kubrick deliberately did not give answers to pretty much any questions in this movie, and you are left to figure it out and interpret it for yourself...but Clarke definitely gives many many more answers to the questions of why things happened they way they did with HAL and many other elements. So if you are hugely attached to the mysteries that Kubrick left for you, you may want to just avoid any books or the other movie...just letting you know so you can make an informed decision of whether to go down the rabbit hole of Space Odyssey.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +2

      Lol Not sure, I just may avoid them then! 🤔

  • @TheBroGamer14082
    @TheBroGamer14082 5 месяцев назад +3

    first full reaction of yours I've seen and honestly I dig your vibe! Like, you're everybody's friend or something.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад

      Lol Thank you for the kind words, I'm glad that I came across the screen like that! 🤗

    • @TheBroGamer14082
      @TheBroGamer14082 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@ScreenMaureen ey np. It's always nice to see older folks get excited and enjoy things.

  • @jazzmaan707
    @jazzmaan707 5 месяцев назад +4

    To me, this is the best movie ever made. It's not Star Wars. This is a "thinking" movie. So, if you want to be entertained with laser blasters, explosions, fast-paced action, then this is not the movie for you. Enjoy.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, it didn't have any of those! 😊

  • @beannathrach2417
    @beannathrach2417 5 месяцев назад +3

    Monolith is single stone, often used for this thing. Megalith is a large stone, like Stonehenge.
    They filmed using models, matte paintings with live action projected through holes in the paintings, and rotating sets. The Discovery interior was a rotating wheel. They could stop it to give the actors a flat spot to stand on and rotate it with the actors like in a hamster wheel.
    To summarize: Something placed a monolith among a group of prehumans. They learn to use tools such as clubs to kill for prey, beat off the leopard, dominate other prehumans for control of the waterhole. Something buries a monolith on the moon at that time.
    Jump forward to 1999. It was hoped that we would have advanced this much to the moon in 1965. Sadly we have been stalled for seventy years. It was assumed the USSR would still be going strong. The buried monolith was discovered and revealed by Americans. They were afraid of culture shock so hid the discovery and made up a disease as a cover for isolating the base. Floyd arrives and visits the monolith. At sunrise, this the first time the monolith has been in sunlight for millions of years. In sends a signal to Jupiter.
    In 2001 the spaceship Discovery is on the way to Jupiter. Three of astronauts are fully briefed on the monolith and know they are going to see what if anything received the message from the lunar monolith, but were put aboard suspended so they don't talk to anyone. The other two astronauts don't know their secret mission. HAL also knows the secret mission but forbidden to reveal it. Then HAL goes homicidal. Clarke's book explains what happens. There's sequel 2010 which explains why HAL went homicidal. You might want to watch the sequel yourself to understand. He uses the pod to cut Poole's oxygen. Bowman was waiting onboard to deal with emergencies, but rushed out without a helmet. Poole has suffocated. HAL believes without a helmet, Bowman cannot reboard. HAL forces the hiberanators to malfunction and kill those three.
    Bowman does reboard. He turns off HAL. During the shutdown a secret message from Floyd is played revealing the secret mission to Bowman.
    The Discovery with only Bowman left, reaches the receiver of the lunar message which is another giant monolith floating among the moons of Jupiter. Bowman leaves in a pod to examine it. The monolith opens an interstellar transport that grabs Bowman and takes him far far away. Something then examines Bowman. Perhaps the same Something that helped the prehumans was now examining the results of that experiment.
    Arthur C Clarke also wrote Childhood's End. He believed that intelligent life will eventually evolved beyond corporal bodies. As Star Trek put it, become beings of pure energy. This is what happens to Bowman as he becomes a Starchild.
    Clarke later changed his beliefs that rather than evolve into ethereal noncorporal beings we would evolve into extremely sophisticated Turing Machines, or computers. A bit of 1950s mathematics that Clarke ignored or didn't know what could make a sequel to the sequels about the Church-Turing Thesis.
    There's a short movie which shows Poole's body finally landing on Jovian moon.
    ruclips.net/video/Ok9VZYcKjBs/видео.html

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for answering some of my questions beannathrach2417! 🤗

  • @jimralston7562
    @jimralston7562 5 месяцев назад +2

    I enjoyed your reaction to my favorite all-time movie! I first saw 2OO1 at the theatre in 1968 at age 7. My brother got me in as he was an usher, so essentially I watched it alone. In ninth grade Humanites class we studied the film and discussed its symbolism and meaning.
    I also read Clarke's books, and though he collaborated immensely with Kubrick, Kubrick brilliantly did his "own thing" with the film and the book series is somewhat out of sync (though great sci fi). Kubrick intentionally wanted us to ask questions and wonder....

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you jimralston7562! Well, he sure did a good job at that! 🤔

  • @benntura
    @benntura 5 месяцев назад +3

    I noticed when Dave is disconnecting HAL’s logic, it looked like miniature monoliths were being released from HAL.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Wow, you're right! Such details! 😊

  • @aranerem5569
    @aranerem5569 5 месяцев назад +3

    Hello. Nice to see you

  • @davidfox5383
    @davidfox5383 5 месяцев назад

    Just found your channel through this reaction - it's my favorite film and I believe one of the great films of all time. GREAT reaction, though it was a little difficult to hear some of your comments because the music was a bit loud. I'm 62 now - my parents took me to see this at a Texas drive-in in 1968. It was their second time - they loved it the first time and thought we would enjoy the visuals and music. What they didn't anticipate was that the movie would DEEPLY disturb my poor 6-year-old brain. By the time the baby-in-a-bubble, or Star Child, turned and stared directly at me from the screen, I was so traumatized that I had multiple nightmares and couldn't look directly at that image on movie posters or record album jackets without freaking out. It was only when I was 18 during my first year of college that I had the nerve to go see the movie with a friend in a revival house in Tucson and that's when I realized what a profound and amazing movie this is. The book and sequel movie (2010: The Year We Make Contact) give literal explanations of the film, but it's like reading and watching documentaries about the mysteries of Mona Lisa's smile - this movie is sheer poetry and transcends verbal explanations, even those provided by Kubrick himself. It really is his masterpiece. I would love to see you react to more of his work, as well as some works of Alfred HItchcock like Vertigo and Rear Window.

  • @charliedue4222
    @charliedue4222 5 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome reaction! This is one that just gets better and better with each watch, you pick up on all the subtlety in the dialogue which actually does tell us all we need to know. There wasn’t an epidemic at all on the moon, it was just an elaborate cover story they were using to keep their discovery of the monolith a complete secret from the world as it was the first found evidence of intelligent life. The briefing in that boardroom that Floyd gives and then the prerecorded message that was supposed to play to the Dave, Frank & crew has all the answers, but much easier to concentrate on what’s actually being said there on a second viewing where you’re not being absolutely floored by the visuals! 😊

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you charliedue4222! I think I'm going to have to watch it again! 🤗

  • @victorplekter613
    @victorplekter613 5 месяцев назад +2

    Great reaction! Looking forward to watching more of your reactions.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад

      Thank you and welcome to the channel! 🤗

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 5 месяцев назад +2

    "2001: A Space Odyssey": An interesting look back and ahead by Stanley Kubrick. Even before the faster-than-light sequence, this movie was a mind expanding experience. Then The Monolith appears and the smaller hominid band is changed into Killer Apes, who rise far above the waterhole and into Space. The "place holder" Classical music pieces stayed in and the OST became a Pop music phenomenon.

  • @tubularap
    @tubularap 5 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks for sharing your engaged and engaging reaction to this unique masterpiece.
    My father took me to the cinema to see this, when I was a boy. The experience was overwhelming, with the sound and screen enveloping me.
    Any science-fiction movie up to that date was corny cardboard nonsense. This movie set a standard that, in my opinion, has never been matched.
    Its quality and vision made a deep impression on me, ... and I heard its warning for giving AI control of everything.
    A pleasant way to inform yourself about the making of this sci-fi classic, is the 7-part documentary made by CinemaTyler, here on RUclips.
    This is the start of the playlist : ruclips.net/video/AgNyCluIRhA/видео.html

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you tubularap! So lucky that you got to see it at the cinema! 🤗

  • @1957Shep
    @1957Shep 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think the book (same title) was written in the early 60s by Aurthor C. Clarke. The book in turn was adapted from one of his even earlier short stories called "The Sentinel".

  • @irmaoksanen6830
    @irmaoksanen6830 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for this review...2001 A Space Odyssey one of my favorite movies especially on the big screen.

  • @garybrown3361
    @garybrown3361 5 месяцев назад +4

    You now need to watch 2010 the sequel to get the answers you seek. 😊

    • @miller-joel
      @miller-joel 5 месяцев назад +1

      Very different movie, much more traditional and literal, so don't expect more of the same, but still very solid and great on its own terms. Dismissing it because it's not like 2001 would be just dumb.

  • @davidbell864
    @davidbell864 4 месяца назад +1

    Really good job Maureen. Love how receptive you are to this fabulous art. Congratulations on a truly excellent analysis of a very complex movie. Stick with Krubrick Maureen, ALL his movies are WONDERFUL!

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  4 месяца назад

      Thank you so much davidbell! 🤗

  • @longfootbuddy
    @longfootbuddy 5 месяцев назад +4

    i first watched 2001 in 2001

  • @abbeyl.7828
    @abbeyl.7828 5 месяцев назад +3

    Happy New Year🎆Hoping to see more Disney reactions. Have a blessed day!

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Happy New Year to you too! It is hard deciding on what genre to watch next, so many! 🤗

  • @Rickhorse1
    @Rickhorse1 5 месяцев назад +2

    Yes, there are behind the scenes documentaries on youtube about this amazing film. People watching today can't fully understand the impact this had in the theater in 1968. No cgi, all practical effects. (The book was written AFTER the movie. The story was a collaboration between director Stanley Kubrick and sci-fi writer Arthur C Clarke. People were so confused as to the meaning of the movie that the book was written out of public demand...but solely by Clarke..and Kubrick didn't agree with some of it. He preferred to let the film stand on it's own...and allow audiences to interpret.)

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад

      Amazing! I don't mind that I have lots of unanswered questions! 😊

    • @tonybennett4159
      @tonybennett4159 17 дней назад

      @@ScreenMaureen I'm with you in that Maureen. I might be one of your oldest viewers seeing that I was 26 when this was released. The Cinerama process had only just been perfected along with stereophonic sound, so to see it on a giant curved screen was mind blowing. The tantalising mysteries enthralled me, leading me to ask many questions, but that's ok, the universe is full of mystery and we may never know the answers.
      I did go and see 2010, but I was underwhelmed and somewhat disappointed. The idea of "explaining" 2001 is like explaining a joke that somebody didn't get : it just lands like a bag of wet porridge.

  • @aranerem5569
    @aranerem5569 5 месяцев назад +3

    Have you seen Galaxy Quest? It's good

    • @Otokichi786
      @Otokichi786 5 месяцев назад

      By Grabthar's Hammer, thank you for remembering this old movie.;)

  • @gospyro
    @gospyro 5 месяцев назад +1

    My brothers took me to see 2001 when it opened. I was 5 years old and LOVED it! Obviously I had no idea what it was actually about. It wasn’t until years later when I read the book that I finally understood. The story, the ships and HAL are still my favorites found within sci-fi.
    My brothers also took me to see the original “Planet of the Apes” that came out about the same time.
    I remember lines running down the street for both of them.

  • @randybass8842
    @randybass8842 4 месяца назад +1

    The Jupiter mission would take many years to plan, so it was a coincidence that it was nearing launch time when the monolith sent the message aimed at Jupiter. The scientists were keeping the monolith a secret, and didn't understand the purpose of the message, and so kept that a secret as well. This caused some changes in the final stages of the Jupiter mission launch, hence HAL's concerns which he expressed to Dave. It was that confusion which led HAL to go rogue.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  4 месяца назад +1

      Ohh it was definitely a concerning part of the movie!! 🤔

  • @winslow-eh5kv
    @winslow-eh5kv 5 месяцев назад +2

    Well, I wouldn't say that merely possessing an I phone makes one an ace photographer, anymore than possessing a Kodak camera did.

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Lol I think the general public would beg to differ! 😆

  • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
    @WitchKing-Of-Angmar 4 дня назад

    7:45 Believe you me that Screen call technology was invented in 1926! Became popularized over in Germany in 1936 when two people held a conversation viewing each other with these big square monitors. By 1953, a new model came out that looked a bit like a trapezoidal circle shape (AKA a trapezoid with rounded edges).

  • @Lethgar_Smith
    @Lethgar_Smith 5 месяцев назад +2

    Fun Fact:
    At just over 2,000 mph the Moon is still a 4 day journey away.
    That's how far away it is.

  • @mikehenderson631
    @mikehenderson631 5 месяцев назад +2

    New prescriber because you watch this movie I read the book and read 2010 Odyssey 2 and saw that movie as well

  • @allanrose3661
    @allanrose3661 5 месяцев назад +1

    This movie is amazing and mind blowing and way beyond any scifi that came before it. When this was made artists and craftsmen actually hand built the model ships and sets. No CGI. The Discovery one filming model was 54 feet long.

  • @lowftherain3943
    @lowftherain3943 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great Reaction ❤

  • @randybass8842
    @randybass8842 4 месяца назад

    While there is a book written by Arthur C.Clarke, it came after the movie, which was conceived by Stanly Kubrick as an independent story.

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 28 дней назад

      Clarke and Kubrick worked on the novel and the screenplay concurrently, ideas flowing both ways.
      They tossed a coin to decide if the book was published before or after the movie.

  • @aranerem5569
    @aranerem5569 5 месяцев назад +1

    There's a movie called The Cabin In The Woods. It was pretty good

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar 4 дня назад

      It was very ambitious. If I had to critique it, I would mention how fast the movie passed by. All these great ideas that sort of just come together and then end immediately after. The issue with it, is you expect them going underneath to find out about the whole scheme to be ACT 2 of the movie, not the last 20 or so minutes. So it feels like a flash bang.

  • @fronkykoko
    @fronkykoko 5 месяцев назад

    Great reaction to this my favourite film of all time. I realise it doesn't appeal to everyone, but it is meant to tell the story of human evolution (with some help from higher intelligent entities)..

  • @arianayuh4681
    @arianayuh4681 5 месяцев назад +2

    Love your reactions! Have you seen titanic I think you’d do a great reaction x

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you arianayuh4681! I did see it in 1997 at one of the first IMAX theatres in my city! 🤗

  • @SatelliteLily
    @SatelliteLily 2 месяца назад

    I enjoyed your reaction! It brings me back to what is most important about this movie and why it is timeless. You might enjoy the sequel, 200. It's a good science fiction movie and very different from this one. Thanks for a good video.

  • @user-nw7ow1ei1q
    @user-nw7ow1ei1q 2 месяца назад

    It's Mutany On The Bounty... but the Captain is a super computer.

  • @miller-joel
    @miller-joel 5 месяцев назад

    8:16 That's actually Stanley Kubrick's daughter.

  • @luisutil9070
    @luisutil9070 11 дней назад

    Awesome

  • @GAMESTORY..
    @GAMESTORY.. 4 месяца назад

    I would like to ask you to react to the central Brazilian film, this is a classic of Brazilian cinema 🇧🇷

  • @cloesworld96
    @cloesworld96 5 месяцев назад +1

    I love your reactions Could you react to Frozen 1 & 2 please 💖💖💖

    • @ScreenMaureen
      @ScreenMaureen  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you cloesworld! ❤️

  • @GAMESTORY..
    @GAMESTORY.. 4 месяца назад

    Gostaria de pedir que você reagissem ao filme - central do Brasil, esse é um clássico do cinema brasileiro🇧🇷

  • @larryk731
    @larryk731 5 месяцев назад +1

    It's probable many people in 1968 watched the end of the film under the influence of less than legal substances

  • @donsample1002
    @donsample1002 3 месяца назад

    “$1.70. That would have been a lot back then.”
    No, in 1968 that was an incredibly cheap phone call.

  • @robertgraziano
    @robertgraziano Месяц назад

    The most "religious' movie ever made...All the signs are there.