2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) Movie Reaction | FIRST TIME WATCHING | Stanley Kubrick is a GENIUS!

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  • Опубликовано: 5 авг 2024
  • Requested by Brian & Mark
    I love this! The masterful work of Kubrick and cinematographers Geoffrey Unsworth and John Alcott! Massive appreciation for 2001's Editor Ray Lovejoy too, his work just stuns me with that insane timing.
    P.S. I know I spoke more in this, but it's because of sections with music that I would need to cut out. I thought it was better to hear me expressing thoughts than to just cut out huge chunks of the movie or have it silent.
    TIMESTAMPS
    0:00 Intro
    1:08 Reaction
    40:58 Review
    46:15 Trivia!
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Комментарии • 305

  • @miggyluv
    @miggyluv Год назад +45

    Every time I watch this I am in awe. Apparently we aren't supposed to understand the ending because it's beyond the concept of mere humans. He does meet aliens and they help him transcend into a higher being.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад +13

      Same here!! When I was editing, I was in even more awe re-watching scenes etc. So good! Ah yes, apparently so. I am glad I came to a relatively good understanding of what some of it meant, if not all of it. I quite like that it's left unknown though, left to the imagination and allows the mind to wander.

    • @jtt6650
      @jtt6650 Год назад +3

      You may know this already, but the soundtrack was not composed for this movie. Kubrick was a huge classical music aficionado and he curated it from various composers of different eras (in this case both Strausses, Ligeti, and Khachaturian). And 2010 is awful. Don’t bother. It’s not Kubrick.

    • @mrmicklord
      @mrmicklord Год назад +2

      @@MoviesWithMarty The theme of evolution is also told by the soundtrack. The title music Also sprach Zarathustra is based on the book of the same name name by Friedrich Nietzsche where he introduces the concept of the Übermensch (next step for humanity). The same music is used twice in the film. First when the ape starts using the first tool, and again when Bowman becomes the Star Child.

    • @dolphinsrr
      @dolphinsrr Год назад +3

      @@jtt6650disagree. 2010 was well done

    • @SpearM3064
      @SpearM3064 Год назад +4

      @@jtt6650 Maybe not, but it _is_ Arthur C. Clarke. A lot of people don't know there were actually three books: 2001, 2010, and 2061. We only got to see the first two in theaters.

  • @DrVVVinK
    @DrVVVinK Год назад +12

    The first time I saw this it was at an Art House theater, on the 70 mm film, it has an introduction with the music playing before the start of the film, and the intermission. It was a fantastic experience! I wish more people get to experience this film in that way .

  • @eschiedler
    @eschiedler Год назад +19

    If you get a chance to rewatch it at a theater screening in full restored 70mm, then do consider it - truly an epic experience.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      Thank you Eric! I will definitely see it again in cinemas if I can, if it's shown there again. I can imagine it being very impressive! Thank you for watching Eric, what was your initial thoughts to the film when you first saw it?

    • @barrycohen311
      @barrycohen311 11 месяцев назад +2

      I did in NYC in 2018, The 50th Anniversary. It was epic.

    • @ludovicoc7046
      @ludovicoc7046 Месяц назад

      @@barrycohen311 I saw it in IMAX in 2018--brilliant!

  • @GrouchyMarx
    @GrouchyMarx Год назад +5

    3:06 First saw it in 1968, age 13 and the whole movie blew my mind including the artsy scenes, and watched 2001 many time after. The theater had a big wide screen with surround sound and it was awesome! If you ever get a chance to experience it that way, go for it. For reference, 2001 came out about 15 months after the tragic Apollo One fire and around 15 months _before_ the first moon landing by Apollo 11. So it gave audiences then (and now really) a glimpse of what a strong space based economy could look like someday.
    4:30 Notice the ones with their new weapons are standing more upright (self-forcing evolution?) than they had earlier, or their rivals. They figured out the clubs work better standing taller!
    5:39 In that case Marty, definitely do the sequel someday man! It a very different style than Kubrick's, made a long 16 years later for those of us who had given up on a sequel when it came out. Arthur C. Clarke wrote it and has two cameos in it, and Kubrick one. It will answer a lot of the mysteries. BTW, since you mentioned Star Wars, recommend the release order before any other arrangements, starting with the first one Episode IV.
    14:12 In the book, the Monolith activated its signal when the first sliver of sunlight coming up over the lunar mountains touch it in 4 million years. It was the Monolith telling its giant companion orbiting Jupiter: "the humans dug finally me up and they'll be coming there soon."
    23:07 Dude, I was thinking the same thing when first seeing this at age 13! "HAL can read your lips, dummies!" LOL!
    36:14 I've always thought the "aliens" were showing him the Big Bang and rapid expansion of the universe here, and all the matter, nebulae and weird planets that formed after.
    36:26 Sitting two rows in front of my dad and I in 1968 were a group of "hippies" as my dad called them. When Dave's trip thru in Infinite started Marty, I knew right away why they were here! LOL! And I agree the octahedron here 36:41 are the "aliens" escorting him.
    38:25 In the book they recreated a hotel he once stayed in, to give him a familiar surrounding.
    Learned several things in your trivia segment. Thank you. Since you want some non-scifi drama suggestions, hopefully you haven't seen:
    The Shawshank Redemption
    The Green Mile
    The Hunt for Red October
    Dances With Wolves (the original theatrical release only!)
    Field of Dreams
    Close Encounters of the Third Kind (the original theatrical release only!) I know this one's a scifi, but can't help it. Want to emphasize doing the original release _before_ watching the two other versions. The original has a more positive vibe to it and the others a negative one. Besides that, it's the original that impressed us in '77 which held its own going up against the very first and most awesome Star Wars of the same year. That was a great year for scifi Marty as we had two totally cool and awesome movies to watch... CEotTK and Star Wars, both I watched several times that year!
    These are popular reactor movies I'm sure you'll enjoy too. Watched your Andromeda Strain reaction. Awesome movie and vid you made there too! I love all the older scifis, especially from the 50s and will suggest some of those you'd like on another video. Please do "2010: The Year We Make Contact" (1984) made a _long_ 16 years later and one that even Kubrick said he liked, though he had nothing to do with making it. For fun, I'll tell you that both Kubrick and Clarke had cameos in it; Clarke 2 of them and Kubrick 1, so keep a sharp lookout! Good video you did here Marty and take care. 🖖👽

  • @miggyluv
    @miggyluv Год назад +9

    The monolith appears and humankind evolves each time they interact with it.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      YES! Thank you Michael, I thought as much. I am so pleased I realised this and a few other things before they happened when watching. I was blown away by the artistic styling of the film. It's wonderfully done

    • @Exeler-genannt-Vogelsang
      @Exeler-genannt-Vogelsang Год назад +1

      @@MoviesWithMarty as a german native it instantly resonated with me when i saw this as a teenager. in german there is a verb "begreifen", which essentially means "to understand". "be" in german is a prefix for giving a verb a direction towards something and "greifen" means "to grasp" or "to touch".
      So when the apes touched the obelisc they understood, or got a grasp of something. even as a midteen this film instantly spoke to me and all it said was "ask questions"

  • @akw141
    @akw141 Год назад +7

    Also, I agree with you. 2001 is art, not just a movie. You can call it slow, even lumbering at times, but there's a definite atmosphere and depth to it that's mesmerizing. And ,it's Kubrik. I'd recommend a dog food commercial directed by the man

    • @Dej24601
      @Dej24601 Год назад

      Yes, a one-of-a-kind experience.

  • @garybassin1651
    @garybassin1651 Год назад +15

    I saw this when it was released in 1968 in Cinerama. Our high school drama class took a field trip to Hollywood to see it. We were all blown away as it was something we had never seen before. Ten years later, Star Wars would do the same thing. You can Google Kubrick's explanation of what the ending means.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад +8

      Oh wow, Gary! That must have been a blast with the field trip too, to be able to watch it with others who were learning around you and getting to see/hear their reactions to certain scenes. It's stunning, isn't it! Oh really, wow I need to get on watching Star Wars sometime soon. I'm planning on watching in release order and do plan on watching the original theatrical version too, if I can. I did love 2001 so much, I'd looked up the ending but hadn't seen Kubrick's explanation, just that people had said that it was open to explanation. Thank you for that though, I will check out what he's said! Thank you for watching/commenting

    • @dolphinsrr
      @dolphinsrr Год назад

      9 years later

    • @garybassin1651
      @garybassin1651 Год назад +1

      @@dolphinsrr I'm sorry, I'm old!

    • @dolphinsrr
      @dolphinsrr Год назад +2

      @@garybassin1651 I'm old too. I'm 65. 😂

    • @garybassin1651
      @garybassin1651 Год назад

      @@dolphinsrr 70

  • @johnnie2638
    @johnnie2638 4 месяца назад

    There are many reasons to appreciate this movie. One in particular detail are the computer graphics shown on screens throughout the movie. The different screens showing status of different ship functions, the approach of the shuttle to the rotating space station can be seen on a computer screen in the cockpit. The different screens in the little space pod. All of those had to be animated because the level of actual computer graphics were at such an infancy in the late 60s. Real graphics of the time where they were used at all were simple line graphics due to the lack of computing power. This movie doesn't miss a beat. I've loved it since the first time I saw it back in the mid-70s.

  • @michaelvincent4280
    @michaelvincent4280 Год назад +2

    The book says it is a wormhole. The footage shows me that all this took place inside the giant monolith, where time and space is different. He's flying by miles of information gathered from across the universe, being shown the beginning of galaxies , including our own. You see our sun being born, and the solar system developing. The fly-bys are our own planet developing. This thing is teaching him where we all came from. That was a lot of stuff to shove into Dave's head all at once.

  • @billcheek8043
    @billcheek8043 Год назад +1

    I was 16 years old in high school when this film was in the theaters. I went with a group of my friends to see it about 5 times in quick succession (a couple of times on LSD, simply marvelous). The theater was CinemaScope (a curved widescreen) and stereo. The film ran for a year or more. BTW, I am a classically trained musician, with a degree in photography. Needless to say this is one of my favorite films.

  • @stischer47
    @stischer47 Год назад +1

    When it was reissued again in 1970 (at least here), I took my top sixth graders to see it. After the film, I asked if they had any questions. When they said "No", I asked them what the monolith was. My top student tilted his head a moment then said, "It represents God who intervenes at certain stages in human evolution to cause us to advance." I asked no more questions.

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Год назад +7

    2010 is a worthwhile film to watch but don’t expect quite the same standard as 2001. It does a reasonable job of expanding and explaining some of the things in 2001 but hasn’t aged quite as well. With your obvious appreciation of cinematography you need to watch more Kubrick films if you haven’t already. Each one is somewhat different and unique while still carrying the characteristics that made Kubrick special. I have a fondness for all of them but Dr.Stranglelove is probably my next favourite followed by A Clockwork Orange and then the rest. Oddly, as a huge Kubrick fanboy I have yet to see Lolita.

  • @mark-nm4tc
    @mark-nm4tc Год назад +3

    Glad you got round to watching what is possibly the greatest SF movie of them all. Its sci fi done as art and push-the-envelope SFX with no CGI whatsoever. Its just great old school, isn't it?. The influence of this movie is nothing short of nuclear...some scenes Mr Lucas liked a lot so to put them in Star Wars (6.26)😉?. The ape stuff was done in London on a movie set that could be spun around to get different angles. The backgrounds were shot by a static camera crew who did go to Africa (Kubrick apparently loathed flying). They were front-projected onto a big screen and for the daytime scenes, the set was very brightly lit to cut down on any shadows cast members may accidentally cast on the screen. Needless to say, the actors got a wee bit hot!.
    Keir Dullea - David Bowman - said the best scene for him was the moment the ape picked up the bone & figured out it could be a tool or weapon after encountering the monolith.
    And you're right, the stewardess on the ceiling and the crazy interiors on Discovery were done by the simplest trick in the book - rotating sets with a fixed camera. Bowman & Poole walked around inside what was effectively a big hamster/mouse wheel. And the mega-trippy LSD finale was done by 'slit scan', also employed in the title sequence of Superman (1978) - which you should see BTW.
    An explanation is here : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slit-scan_photography
    I think back in the 90's the Museum Of Film & Photography in Bradford did screen it in Cinerama - very widescreen.
    2010 is a decent-ish sequel, not up to Kubrick but still enjoyable in its own way, Roy Scheider is always great to watch. It explains a bit more.
    Now that you've seen this one, I thoroughly recommend going back to the 50's (not in a DeLorean unfortunately) and check out Forbidden Planet which is to that decade, what 2001 is to the 60's. Both are big milestones in the history of SF and should be in your blu-ray collection if you do physical media. The both have a place on my shelf...only the classics👍. Speaking of one gem of a classic...is Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1959) on the horizon?.

  • @richardb6260
    @richardb6260 Год назад +3

    In the mid 60s, there was a series hosted by Walter Kronkite called The 21st Century. It looked at new innovations and what they may mean for the future. One episode had an IBM computer that was the first with a simulated voice. As a demonstration, it sang Daisy.

  • @MaunderMaximum
    @MaunderMaximum Год назад +7

    Great reaction! Very astute commentary. This really dates me, but I saw this at age 13 in 1968 in its original release. Mind blown. The way it still holds up today- a testament to Kubrick's genius.

  • @deckofcards87
    @deckofcards87 24 дня назад

    2001 is among the great 20th century works of art. It inspires philosophical thought but I love that a lot of it's majesty is how mysterious it is.
    Another very original and influential film worth reacting to is Fellini's '8 1/2' (1963).

  • @MaikKellerhals
    @MaikKellerhals Год назад +1

    Nobody (I'm sure not even Kubrick) understands the ending. But it evokes such a deep sense of awe, this was never done after this...
    To me, it's the next step in human evolution. And how could we ever understand that?

  • @SG-if8iw
    @SG-if8iw Год назад +3

    Best reaction to this film I've seen on RUclips. It reminds me of my reaction when I saw it in 1971 on a full cinema screen while in college. Quite an awesome experience.
    Well done!

  • @tuttt99
    @tuttt99 4 месяца назад

    20:10. there is a pair of buttons on the suit forearm to darken or lighten the visor. Dave presses the 'dark' button right before he reaches the brightly lit antenna dish.

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 Год назад +2

    I saw/experienced "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968) in an Cinerama theater back in the day. Previous Science Fiction movies featured cardboard sets, fading/about-to-rise actors, and pulp novel plots for this sub B-movie genre. Stanley Kubrick raised the bar to the Moon before Apollo 11, which is how "Star Wars"/Space Operas came to be. 3:24 What is The Monolith? That question has been debated/argued for decades. 4:00 The Killer Ape of then-recent theories about early Hominids was shown in graphic detail. Speaking of Early Men, it is unfortunate that the actors didn't get AMPAS attention. (Did they think that Kubrick had a troop of trained Apes on tap?) 4:55 The "place holder" Classical music pieces were kept, instead of the commissioned soundtrack music, which even made the Pop music charts! 6:52 This is the antiseptically clean world of The Future, so "Star Wars" went "worn and dirty," in 1977. 15:35 Actor Douglas Rain's "HAL 9000" set the bar for other computers, such as "MU/TH/UR" of "Alien" (1979). Did you notice that the HAL 9000 has more personality than Dave Bowman or Frank Poole? 22:17 HAL is in conflict. 33:17 HAL was told to do things that contradicted his basic programming and "he went a little funny in the head." 35:09 Time to take The Trip. 36:40 To misquote a fictional movie character: "What you perceive/conclude is a reflection of what you bring/have with you." The influence of "2001" leaked into the real world. For years, there was a Monolith behind the University of Hawaii Chemistry building that emitted a low hum. "Also Sprach Zarathustra" became a "something BIG is about to happen" musical cue in later movies. Discussions/arguments/musings on this film have gone on for decades. On to "2010" (1984)!

  • @Asher8328
    @Asher8328 Год назад +4

    I don't think you're reading too much into it to say that the astronauts looking at the monolith in wonder was meant to parallel the scene where the apes did the same. In fact, I've always believed that was Kubrick's exact intention.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      Fantastic, thank you Asher! It's wonderful to know that others thought the same and that it's not too far fetched of a thought. It may well have been. I wonder if there's any interviews with him regarding it anywhere... I've not looked. Thank you for watching and commenting 😊

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Год назад

      - also, the sun comes up and the sunlight falls on the monolith for the first time since it was buried.
      Based upon the sequel novels, the original site of the first monolith is also underground and discovered by archaeologists.

  • @richardb6260
    @richardb6260 Год назад

    There was a terrific book about the making of this film that came out not too long ago. In that book, effects supervisor Douglas Trumbull revealed that there were several attempts to depict the aliens behind the monoliths. But none were satisfactory. So, Kubrick decided to let the monolith stand in for the aliens. Trumbull goes into detail on the many techniques they tried to creat the aliens.

  • @macroman52
    @macroman52 Год назад

    Speaking of the slow style of the film, I am reminded of what "Mad Magazine" called their satire of the movie: "2001 Minutes of Space Idiocy".

  • @barrycohen311
    @barrycohen311 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is only one man's (me) interpretation- The monolith gave the apes/hominids the knowledge to use tools. So we see the tools morph from animal bones to some type of nuclear satellite. At that level of human progression, the monolith then appears again on the moon, and beams a signal towards Jupiter. Hence the eventual mission with Dave and Frank. Humans wanted to explore it further, as it was perceived as alien/intelligent life outside of Earth. The alien force, for lack of a better term, placed Dave into some type of 'Human Zoo' cage. To study him further? The scenes of him looking at himself aging, were just a fast way of him aging to the point of his death. At his death bed, they gave Dave a type of rebirth as the 'Star-Child.' Perhaps the next step in human evolutionary history/biology.

  • @4325air
    @4325air Год назад

    I was in my third year of college when I first watched this film in a theater. It was absolutely stunning!!! You must understand that at that time, the Space Race with the Soviet Union was in full swing. Almost every day was some new discovery in astrophysics, materials, and everything needed for space travel. We were on the cusp of lading on the moon. The budget for all of this was, pardon the pun, astronomical! Folks nowadays cannot fathom how much "space" consumed our attention. At the rate of invention and discovery, it was entirely reasonable for us in 1968 to assume that such a plot could be fulfilled by 2001. However, as events proved, the economics of the Space Race were simply unsustainable. As I said, though, you just had to have seen this on a wide-screen in a theater with surround-sound.

  • @les4767
    @les4767 Год назад +2

    I was fortunate to see this film in the Cinema during a re-release back in the early 1980's. To say my mind was blown would be an understatement. To this day, I've never seen a film this amazing in production, concept, direction, cinematography or effects(The late, great Douglas Trumbull, Wally Veevers and Stanley Kubrick). I cannot find a single flaw in any of it. Seeing it on the big screen was a spectacle unmatched by any other film I've seen. Easily in my top 10 films of all time.

    • @bretcantwell4921
      @bretcantwell4921 11 месяцев назад

      I first watched Fellowship of the Ring on a 16 in computer monitor and wept afterwards realizing the experience I'd missed out on.

  • @drnanjo
    @drnanjo 8 месяцев назад

    I saw it for the first time when I was just 13. Although I was beginning to think abstractly about life and the universe at that time, it was almost traumatic. And sadly, I had no one to discuss the movie with. I am now revisiting it, as a work of art and in relationship to its sequel (quite a good movie, actually) and Clarke's 4 novel series. I am grateful that now, so many years later, I have other thoughtful folks here, courtesy of RUclips, to share their thoughts with me about this monumental film. Thank you, dude.

  • @jtt6650
    @jtt6650 Год назад +1

    I saw this in an IMAX theater when they brought it back for the 50th anniversary in 2018. It only ran for about a week where I live in PHX, but I went every day. I even saw it in California a couple weeks later. There’s nothing like it. You would freak out, Marty. As you might imagine, you’re getting a tiny fraction of the overall impact watching it on a small screen. If you ever get the chance, drop everything and GO!! 🤓

  • @BaccarWozat
    @BaccarWozat 9 месяцев назад

    You may be surprised to learn that some of the zero gravity effects were first done in Doctor Who. Kubrick saw an episode (possibly the one in "The Daleks' Master Plan" with Katarina in the airlock), and had someone in his production company contact the BBC to find out how it was done.
    The reason HAL went crazy and killed the other crewmen was that he was required to lie to them about the mission in order to keep it a secret until they arrived at Jupiter. He even had to lie about lying to them. As you may have noticed from modern AI programs, it doesn't take much to set them off.

  • @BruceCarroll
    @BruceCarroll 10 месяцев назад

    "I'm looking too deep into it."
    I've never laughed harder!
    Frank Poole's birthday call from his parents is a pre-recorded message. It takes a radio signal approximately 40 minutes to reach them so far away from Earth. Real-time communication is impossible, and you have to wait nearly an hour and a half to get a response. You'll see this when the technicians on Earth respond to the failed AE35 unit.
    When you see Frank and Dave at two different angles, a large mirror was used.
    The virus was just a cover story. The real story was they found the monolith buried on the moon. It was clearly a created object and had been buried 4 million years previously.

  • @ladydigger
    @ladydigger Год назад +1

    I was 13 when I went to Leicester Square to see this on a huge screen. Nobody there had seen anything like this and when it was over and the credits rolled the cinema was completely silent. After about 3 minutes the entire audience got to their feet and applauded loud and long. No other film has ever come close to this masterpiece.

  • @eZTarg8mk2
    @eZTarg8mk2 Год назад +2

    I love Kubrick's movies, and this was his first with layered narratives, visual and dialogue idiosyncrasies that shift context of the story presented. You spotted the silk screen back projections for the earth scenes, and if you watch the space sequences there are very blatant lighting errors and motion errors that seem very deliberate, given the attention to detail with everything else Kubrick filmed. The monolith itself, if you rotate it 90 degrees, you might get a better understanding of what it represents...the long sections of black screen at the start, middle and end of the film tie into that as well. (this theme of shifting perspective by 90 degrees is repeated throughout the film, along with graphical displays showing a rectangle intersecting a circle or eye). A version of the monolith appears in each subsequent film he made.
    I think you missed the opening dialogue of the conference, there's no outbreak on the moon, it's a false flag cover story that NASA are trying to spread, so they can conceal the discovery of the monolith from the public.
    Thanks for the reaction, it was an enjoyable watch

  • @Kev5ter
    @Kev5ter Год назад

    I thinK I read somewhere that the famous jump cut was inspired by a similar effect at the beginning of the 1944 'Powell and Pressburger' film - 'A Canterbury Tale'. This duo made many great films that would be worth watching if you haven't already. This is one of their smaller offerings - it has a minimal plot but it is so evocative of the way we would like to remember living in a English country village that it has become one of my favourites! Anyway - worth checking the jump cut!

  • @davidfox5383
    @davidfox5383 Год назад +1

    A great, appropriate reaction to my favorite film. This movie has a deep personal connection. I first saw it at 6 years old in 1968 from the back seat of our family car at a Texas drive-in theater. The final image of the Starchild completely haunted and unsettled me... I could not look at a movie poster or image of that shot again as a child. It was not until my first year of college I finally went to see the movie again and fell madly in love. 2010 is like entertaining prose compaired to the cinematic poetry of 2001. Don't go in with any expectations and you'll enjoy it on its own merits. Interestingly, the special effects are much more believable in the original. The 4K UHD blu-ray of this film is generally acknowledged to be one of the best titles on physical media... the remastered picture quality is stunning and it does eliminate that brick-like mottling in the Dawn of Man sequence that was unfortunately captured in the 1080p version and previous blu-ray. However, the best way to view this film is on a curved Cinerama screen. I approximated this effect on my VR headset using the Skybox video player, but the resolution isn't high enough on the Quest 2 headset to catch all the details. Someday, I suppose. Also, after you see the first Star Wars (episode IV, A New Hope from 1977 - watch the films in release order) you will see the huge influence 2001 had on the look of the film, and you might enjoy (just for fun, not a reaction) a cute film called 5-25-77, which has many homages to the two movies. Thanks for giving me another channel to subscribe to and enjoy!

  • @user-ji3sx9gz8k
    @user-ji3sx9gz8k 8 месяцев назад

    I once got to see this at the Cinerama Dome theater in Los Angeles. The Dome has a huge, curved wrap-around screen. It was spectacular!

  • @rantandroll7583
    @rantandroll7583 Год назад +1

    I never expected to see Buddy Hackett in a 2001 reaction vid. Nice.

  • @les4767
    @les4767 Год назад +1

    For the first sequence on the Discovery shot where Bowman(Keir Dullea) was descending down the ladder to the centrifuge room on one side of the screen and Poole(Gary Lockwood) was sitting on the other side, Poole was literally strapped to his seat while the room was upside down so Bowman could come down the ladder naturally. The entire room set was on a mammoth powered wheel that could rotate the whole room to any degree at speed.

    • @anorthosite
      @anorthosite Год назад

      And in that scene, Poole's food kept "falling UP" off his spork, and splattering down across the set XD.
      Kubrick later ordered the set Dismantled, to prevent someone else from using it to produce a sub-par sequel.
      That's why you don't see it in Peter Hyams "2010: The Year We Make Contact".
      A decent film in its own right, but more prosaic/voice-over expositional, and dependent on CGI.

  • @jimralston7562
    @jimralston7562 10 месяцев назад

    My favorite all time movie. I first watched it at age 7 in 1968, and saw the 70mm Nolan enhanced version in 2018 (50 year aniv). A masterpiece and fully enjoyed your reaction! We studied the movie in 9th grade Humanities class. Imagine the irony when HAL (the ultimate human "tool") nearly stops our evolutionary ascension because we're flawed and he isn't! Just one of the ironies. Symbolism is throughout. One example" Discovery is shaped as a sperm trying to reach Jupiter (the ovum)... thanks for the great reaction!

  • @michaelvincent4280
    @michaelvincent4280 Год назад +4

    Interstellar was an homage to this film. Many many easter eggs in it. Can't stop watching it, either.

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit Год назад

    I generally don't care for sequels but "2010: The Year We Make Contact" (1984) was very well done despite Kubrick not being involved. It treats the original with respect without trying to be "fake Kubrick". It does answer many questions and the cinematography is amazing.

  • @focalized
    @focalized Год назад +1

    The ending is the idea of life neverending. Death being part of it. A new creation of life some how.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      I like that idea of the end. Since watching the film, it's pretty much what I've been thinking the film ending may have been going for. Thank you focalized!

  • @mercurywoodrose
    @mercurywoodrose Год назад

    i saw this with my my dad, a physicicist and rocket scientists turned artist, live in the theeatre at age 9, or 8. i had been exposed to moder n art, my dad did light sculptures like the near end scene. im still living in this world. waiting for the star child. not literally, but this is always going to be my favorite film.

  • @lakephillip
    @lakephillip 28 дней назад

    I was 12 years old, in 1968. I traveled on a commuter train,(In those days my Mom thought I was old enough to go to a theatre 45 miles away)from Suburban Chicago to Downtown Chicago to watch 2001 on a curved screen. With the Overtures, and Entr'acte, it was 3 hour event with 4-5 trailers. I loved the colors, but as a 12 yo it was difficult to understand the end.

  • @stevetheduck1425
    @stevetheduck1425 Год назад

    Hotel room: Louis 14th decor, 1970s style lit dancefloor, mirror is over the bath rather than the washbasin, and a hidden commode in a bench to one side. And no doors, but one doorway, until the monolith appears...
    Something similar happened in an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, a hotel called 'The Royale', created from a book the astronaut had with him.

  • @lesgrice4419
    @lesgrice4419 Год назад +1

    Apparently the StarChild was crafted out of wax and then placed in a blacked out room under strong lighting where it was to be filmed. One member of the crew watched over it, left and came back and freaked out as tears were coming from the StarChilds eyes, he ran out the room screaming. But it was the heat from the lamps that were making the wax run like tears. The protagonist in this is us, the human race and its our evolution in the hands of an intelligent life (some folks say God), they put Bowman in a room they thought he would be comfortable in while they studied him, like a zoo. He transforms into the StarChild, the next stage in our evolution, a complete specimen, one that lives at peace with itself. And others.

  • @grimruin
    @grimruin 6 месяцев назад +1

    I skimmed the comments and I didn't see anyone mention the reason HAL was killing everyone. This is explained in the books and the second movie: he was designed to be very accurate and truthful, but then he was also given orders to lie to the (awake) crew about the real reason they went out to Jupiter. He couldn't handle these conflicting instructions and tried to resolve them by killing the crew: if there's nobody to lie to, he could just go on with the mission on his own.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  6 месяцев назад

      Legend! Thank you so much for this. It's funny you comment this now, as I'm about to rewatch 2001 (in my own time) before I watch 2010 sometime soon.
      That's actually a pretty good reason for HAL doing what he did. Thanks for letting me know! I haven't read the book yet, but I will do eventually as it seems like it would give some extra detail to the story. Yeah, if you'd be interested though, I'll be watching 2010 on the channel

  • @rcmorl6390
    @rcmorl6390 8 месяцев назад

    Dead on about the cinema viewing. First saw this on release. My middle school class walked to the nearby theatre for a specoal matinee....never anything like this, think id heard the blue danube, but not the full in surround sound, that choral piece, mindblowing the visuals from color to technogy to weigjtless every detail imaged as acurately as possible space travel the moon landing on the tv was grainy but exotic, here its reality.. walked back to the school in a mindfilled daze of confusion and awe.
    If your looking for more spatial realism, have you ever seen space 1999, takes a lot of cues from this movie. From the Gerry Anderson team...ufo, captain scarlet etc.

  • @StreamingNomad
    @StreamingNomad 11 месяцев назад

    A note on the cockpit or control color red - it’s actually scientific, and is used in astronomical observatories and other night/dark situations where you need to be able to view or document paper print, but not destroy your acclimated dark vision. Red wavelength light allows for this.
    So cockpits will be using it to allow the pilots to read yet see the darkness of space or the moon

  • @stevetheduck1425
    @stevetheduck1425 Год назад +1

    Light inside the landing bay: red for danger: vacuum, it appears several times in the film.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      Oh yes! Great spot. I recall thinking that the red light could signal danger, but didn't quite connect that the light meaning danger could be due to the vacuum. Thanks for watching along with me Steve! I hope you're well, take care (Apologies for the delay, I'm working through the comments)

  • @michaelt6218
    @michaelt6218 Год назад +1

    "I'm just in awe... in disbelief that they've made something so beautiful..." Yes, I agree 100%. I first saw this in 1968 on one of the gigantic curved 70mm Cinerama screens in use at the time. THAT was a stunning experience. But what's most incredible to me about Kubrick's (and Clarke's and Trumbull's) achievement is that still today, 55 years later, no has has ever made a better, more convincing, or more awe-inspiring science fiction film than 2001.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      It is truly a masterpiece Michael! Thank you so much! I'm glad you agree. Now that I'm back in my own place I'm going to get the 4k of this and watch it again in all it's glory. I can't wait to be in even more awe at the gorgeous cinematography.
      Oh wow, that really would have been an *experience*! I'm also going to watch this in VR, which will be the curved IMAX style screening, so I'm hoping it will be as near to what it originally looked as possible. I can't wait!
      Most definitely! Although I think a close second for me is Interstellar. I'm sure you've seen it, but if you've not it's stunning. A lot of the visual effects were done using correct (as of the time) mathematics etc. Nolan is brilliant in that respect, just like Kubrick.
      Thank you so much for watching, I really appreciate it

  • @daveofyorkshire301
    @daveofyorkshire301 4 месяца назад

    Try "Silent Running"
    _Silent Running was given a $1,000,000 budget and a guarantee of final cut to first-time director Douglas Trumbull, who had previously worked on the special and visual effects for films such as the 1968 release 2001: A Space Odyssey_

  • @thomasfahey8763
    @thomasfahey8763 20 дней назад

    This film was released before we actually were able to see the entire earth from space. Apollo 8 orbited the moon Christmas of the same year. Kubrick’s films had a ridiculously outsized influence on western culture that most people were never even aware of.

  • @xrusted
    @xrusted Год назад

    This film was the firsrt to show video phones and tablets. However the first film to show A.I. was Metropolis 1927. This film was a game-changer when it came out -- nobody had ever seen anything like it previously. Kubrick was literally creating cinematic alchemy -- along the same genius as Shakespeare and Leonardo Divinci. Thankyou for doing a reaction to this amazing movie -- much respect !!!

  • @punchfisttop
    @punchfisttop Год назад +4

    Love your reaction... This is one of the greatest cinematic achievements ever done. Long live Kubrick!!!

    • @eclat4641
      @eclat4641 Год назад +1

      Well… long live his movies😊

  • @AlanRogers250
    @AlanRogers250 3 месяца назад +1

    Watching on a normal movie screen or on a television doesn't do this film justice. I saw it when it came out in 1968 on a Cinerama screen in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The nearest equivalent today would be IMAX
    In Cinerama there are three angled screens surrounding the audience do you feel like you are IN the movie. Amazing experience.

  • @stevetheduck1425
    @stevetheduck1425 Год назад

    Built little sets when they could have used art. Many of the shots in this film used large-format photographs, lit from behind: transparencies.
    The Africa shots (and many of the projected backgrounds of Africa, too) were still photos, and the moon seen from space was art based upon photos (no Apollo mission had been there yet, which is why the moon's surface has sharp features on it, which are vanishingly few in actual fact.
    Many shots of spaceships are also still photos, most often the Moon bus and the nuclear platforms early on, but there were also models used, some quite large.

  • @parsifal40002
    @parsifal40002 3 месяца назад

    Arthur C Clark and Stanley Kubrick left the interpretation of the meaning of the film to the viewing audience.

  • @richlisola1
    @richlisola1 8 месяцев назад

    That monolith Tars thing! Actually Nolan designed Tars to look as it did as a nod to 2001 and Kubrick!

  • @eclat4641
    @eclat4641 Год назад +1

    People are used to having a movie explained… but this one as you see is different. 😊

  • @charrid56maclean
    @charrid56maclean 11 месяцев назад

    Yeah just imagine trying to figure out what this meant in the 70s. 😂. The end is a zoo type setting for Dave as he is now on display. There are sounds of laughter. That Attenborough bit was so funny.

  • @jamesburns4180
    @jamesburns4180 Год назад

    Kubrick said the ending is Dave Bowman is in a zoo type environment. With his surroundings of what the highest beings thought was comfortable for him. Just like how we make surroundings for animals in zoos. They are what we think makes them comfortable. When he becomes the star child he is left watching over earth. What happens next is whatever you think. This is what Kubrick thought was his ending. He said that whatever ending you think is just as applicable.

  • @themoviedealers
    @themoviedealers 8 месяцев назад

    The call to the daughter was a live call because they were in close proximity to the Earth. The call from his parents was recorded because they were way out, headed to Jupiter, and the time lag would be far too long to have a conversation.

  • @arturocostantino623
    @arturocostantino623 Год назад +2

    The reason for the distance between the engines and the ship is they’re nuclear powered

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      Ooh! Thank you for this, handy to know. I'd not realised those suckers were nuclear!

  • @andrewwoodhead3141
    @andrewwoodhead3141 10 месяцев назад

    ""wait, if the whole thing is rotating , how is that guy sat there constantly ?'' Are you for real !?!

  • @jamielandis4308
    @jamielandis4308 Год назад

    One of the best forgotten films of the 80’s is 1984’s “2010: The Year We Make Contact.” It is not as artsy and complicated, but continues the story in a more traditional sci-fi movie. Like “Alien,” it holds up very well, even after 40 years. The cast is stellar with Roy Scheider, John Lithgow, Bob Balaban and Helen Mirren. It is a must. “2001: A Space Odessey,” came out eight years before “Star Wars.”
    The crew compartment set of Discovery was a huge rotating carousel, thus allowing Bowman to jog around without cutting. The birthday message was a recording. While it isn’t mentioned, when that message was received, Discovery was beyond the orbit of Mars so transmission time from Earth to ship was over 20 minutes.
    The opening scene of the John Landis movie, “Dark Star,” begins with a transmission where an official talks with the same inflection and lack of emotion of mission control. I’m positive that it was inspired by 2001.
    The novel and movie were written concurrently. There were changes though, due to budget. In the novel, Discovery goes to Saturn. In the movie it’s Jupiter. There was effects work done of Saturn which was later used in the movie, “Silent Running.”
    The score of the film is all existing classical music. The main theme is “Thus Spoke Zarathustra.” The men’s choral piece played during the moon bus scene was also used during the HALO jump in “Godzilla (2014.)”

  • @georgspence1417
    @georgspence1417 Год назад

    I was fortunate enough to watch this in 70 mm on the big screen recently. My mom and I actually watched this on its opening day back in 68. Watch the sequel 2010. It will explain a lot. I enjoy your channel and have subscribed.

  • @pixiesyay
    @pixiesyay Год назад +1

    They didn't learn to assert their dominance. They learned to use tools. It was a leap in evolution. But, of course, it did aid them in asserting their dominance.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Год назад +1

    Excellent, excellent commentary. As far as interpretation, Kubrick intentionally left it open-ended, but you pretty much nailed the accepted "interpretation". Very good! Not always easy to do on a first watch! "Dazzling" is the word I use for this movie. (Also his next movie, the very different, dystopian "A Clockwork Orange", which you may have seen already) (If not, that's definitely one for your list!). Outstanding reaction video. You pointed out lots and lots of stuff I never noticed, although that's very much the point with "2001"! As the videotape box used to say: "2001: The More You See It, The More You See IN It"! But you did some great zoom-ins on stuff I never noticed, so thank you!!!! The fact that you already knew Kubrick's work and style made this a special reaction. Your sensitive eye and appreciation for (and recognition of) great cinematography also made it great, especially since you had some slight ideas of how they achieved some of these effects. Rather than spoil the effects for you, that seemed to make you appreciate them even more, how "seamlessly" they were executed. GREAT channel, just found you, just subscribed and already I have videos to catch up on. See you on the next one! You're a great reactor!!!! Keep it up! I know it's a long slog for subscribers sometimes, but your reactions are definitely worth it, definitely special, definitely one-of-a-kind.

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 Год назад

      PS:: Outstanding edit as well!

  • @AndyLeMaitre
    @AndyLeMaitre Год назад +1

    Watch the sequel "2010: The Year We Make Contact" it answers a lot of your questions.

  • @philowens7680
    @philowens7680 Год назад

    If you have not seen "Dr. Strangelove or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb" you should, because you will see a surprising example of how Kubrick builds suspense.

  • @starry2006
    @starry2006 Год назад +1

    Do you know Vertigo, that's another beautiful film which can make you think.

  • @rbl4641
    @rbl4641 11 месяцев назад +1

    Art on film... a purposely enigmatic story, masterpiece - and yes 1968 it was an extraordinary vision

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  11 месяцев назад +1

      Definitely! It's a cinematic masterpiece. Yeah, it's brilliant! Thank you for watching RB, much appreciated

  • @NiallFernie
    @NiallFernie Год назад +2

    I would have thought that a lot of audience members who saw this when it came out sat staring at the screen right through the credits trying to work out what the ending means.
    IMO the effects still look better than a lot of more recent efforts.
    You mentioned that you've never seen Star Wars. If you are going to watch it, I'd recommend watching THX 1138 before you do, Star Wars and other George Lucas films contain more than one easter egg.

    • @miggyluv
      @miggyluv Год назад +2

      One of my favourite Lucas films is American Graffiti. That's when George Lucas first met Harrison Ford.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад +1

      It was such a mind boggling film. I think they must have. It really made me think. After I'd finished recording that day, I'd sat there stunned for ages trying to figure everything out, life, the film and what it all meant haha.
      The effects are definitely much better than most modern films, yeah. They managed to achieve so much more with practical effects (which are better IMO). Like the intro with the apes, the monitor screens, even the stargate scene (how they did this one blew my mind!).
      Ooh yes! Thank you for that, someone mentioned that THX film and I'm hoping to watch that one and will make sure to watch that one and then American Graffiti before I watch Star Wars. It's wonderful that they included easter eggs! It'll be interesting to see if I can spot them. I may miss some!

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад +1

      @@miggyluv Hi Michael! I completely forgot about American Graffiti being a George Lucas film, until I saw your comment earlier. I've been meaning to watch it as I love the style of the film having seen the trailer. It's one of my Dad's favourites and we keep meaning to watch it. I shall watch it here at some point for the very first time though! Wait... Harrison Ford is in American Graffiti?! How did I not realise! Also, I have yet to watch ANY Indiana Jones, which is another crime against movies on my behalf. I have between now and June to watch ALL of them haha (the new one comes out)

  • @sashaburrow6186
    @sashaburrow6186 Год назад +2

    I do recommend watching 2010 as well - its not as well directed but is quite underrated and answer a couple of questions.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      Hi Sasha! Oh yes, 2010 is definitely on the list! Thank you for suggesting it too. Oh brilliant, I didn't realise it answered questions, in which case I really cannot wait to watch it even more! I've seen the trailer and yeah, despite it looking a little different style wise, it's still pretty similar. Thank you and hopefully I'll get around to it soon!

    • @miller-joel
      @miller-joel Год назад

      2010 is a great movie. Much more literal and traditional, but still great on its own terms. Trying to replicate 2001 would have been impossible and a huge error. Just like trying to replicate Alien.

    • @eclat4641
      @eclat4641 Год назад

      Yeah it had some cool ideas .

  • @grimreaper-qh2zn
    @grimreaper-qh2zn Год назад +1

    Rumour was that the computer HAL was the Title IBM with the letters slipped one place left but that has been denied!!!!

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      🤯 Oh my god, WAIT it was DENIED?! I had heard it was that too... thanks for letting me know Grim! I hope you're well and thank you for watching!
      P.S. I just saw the interview where the woman mentions it. I still want to believe it though haha

  • @Majoofi
    @Majoofi Год назад +1

    The two movies I though of for you during this were Slaughterhouse-Five 1972, and Days of Heaven 1978

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад +1

      Hi Majoofi! Thank you so much for watching this with me and suggesting those. Great taste as I've seen the latter, Days Of Heaven and it's beautifully made in every way! Sublime acting too by Gere, Manz and the other cast members. I've not seen Slaughterhouse one though (briefly saw the summary of it, but don't want to spoil it), so that's being added to the list! Thank you for the suggestions!

  • @stpaley
    @stpaley Год назад +4

    being such a long movie there is alot to take in, but i think there was a dialogue where they mentioned the pandemic was a cover story so to keep people away from the monolith on the moon or maybe my imagination took hold and imagined more to the movie (that does happen, and usually that movie in my head is far more interesting)

  • @majkus
    @majkus Год назад

    The theater wasn't pitch black as the music was playing at the beginning; it played with the house lights up as the audience seated. It was in effect an overture. A few other films have done this, but it's uncommon (Star Trek: The Motion Picture was one example.).

  • @MaikKellerhals
    @MaikKellerhals Год назад +2

    "I'm looking to deep into it, i know..." - not possible ;)

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  11 месяцев назад

      Haha! It appears so, although I feel I "look too deep" sometimes into films. I think it's because I love all angles of films, whether it be stories, the process etc

  • @OroborusFMA
    @OroborusFMA Год назад

    It's one big homage to Nietzsche with an A.I. gone wrong subplot. Ape. Man. Overman. And the iconic title song is a reference to Nietzsche as well.

  • @Anton-ss1in
    @Anton-ss1in Год назад +4

    Now to watch 2010

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      Most definitely! Thank you Anton, that's on my long list to watch haha ;)

  • @richardb6260
    @richardb6260 Год назад

    One of my favorite films of all time. I saw it in the theater in 1968 when I was 12. I went on to see it 13 times on the big screen thanks to near yearly rereleases. It's such a turning point in the look of Science Fiction. Look at what came before and what came after. It's influence on the model work and ship design is obvious in films like Star Wars (the effects supervisor of Star Wars John Dykstra, worked on 2001). Another 2001 effects artist, Brian Johnson, went on to work on Space 1999 and Alien, which were clearly influenced by 2001.
    While the sequel, 2010:The Year We Make Contact, is more conventional and less artistically made, it's still a solid film that answers a lot of questions from the first film. It's a pretty faithful adaptation of Arthur C Clarke's sequel. In fact, Clarke was in daily contact with the director with one if the first dedicated computer links.

  • @johnmiller7682
    @johnmiller7682 Год назад +1

    The sequel 2010 is worth watching. It answers allot of questions. It's not done the same way. It's more your standard space movie. But well worth it.

  • @BeachcomberNZ
    @BeachcomberNZ Год назад

    You really must check out a channel called CinemaTyler, and watch his seven part playlist covering every aspect of how Space Odyssey was made. You'll be blown away at how Kubrick achieved what he did. It's the best, most thorough, 'making of' documentary there is about Odyssey.

  • @DavidHayes56
    @DavidHayes56 5 месяцев назад

    Trivia. Hoe HAL was named. IBM was THE computer company at the time, so they made HAL superior to IBM by naming it one letter before each letter in I B M [H before I, A before B, L before M].

  • @davidw.hulbertiv5211
    @davidw.hulbertiv5211 11 месяцев назад +1

    I watched 2001 in Juneau, Alaska...
    I was 16, it was 1971...
    I took LSD...
    Wow...

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  10 месяцев назад

      Woah, that sounds like it would have been one heck of a trip! But I can bet it was something else, especially that colourful sequence nearer the end! Thank you for letting me know and for watching!

  • @paintedjaguar
    @paintedjaguar Год назад

    12:07 I think it would be difficult without CGI to show pouring a liquid at one-sixth Earth gravity. The recent SF series "The Expanse" had a neat scene pouring a beverage into a cup that showed the Coriolis effect from being inside a rotating space station.
    14:23 The elongated ship design is to keep the spherical crew quarters well away from the nuclear powered engines. The pods along the spine I believe are some kind of storage.
    16:40 No, this wouldn't be a live call - too much time lag due to distance, the ship being somewhere out near Jupiter.
    17:46 I've just noticed the key light shining on HAL's "eye".
    43:59 There was no virus, that was just a cover story.
    The events of this film really aren't that hard to describe or comprehend, but Kubrick went out of his way to leave the audience in the dark, which I found quite irritating. Even so, as a lifelong SF reader, I had no problem understanding everything when I first saw this in 1968, with one exception - exactly why HAL went crazy (that is finally explained in the sequel, "2010: the year we make contact", which is a decent movie in it's own right). At the end, Dave is reborn, transcending his humanity, and returns to his origin to straighten some things out. Yes, "2001" is an amazing piece of cinema, but the endless debates over what it all means are mostly just Kubrick jacking off. The movie was originally inspired by Arthur Clarke's short story "The Sentinel", which described humans finding on the Moon a mysterious structure which then fires off a signal to its unknown extraterrestrial builders.

  • @Dej24601
    @Dej24601 Год назад

    HAL was not related to or a part of the monolith. HAL, computers, spacecraft, etc were just more advanced technological developments created by humans which started with a bone weapon.
    Clarke wrote the short book after the film, which helps explain some questions. Dave went through something like a wormhole or time warp that is often called the “StarGate.”
    Like a poem or haiku, this film suggests its themes, and is symbolic, and people interpret things differently and even change their interpretations as they grow over time.
    I first saw this when it first came out in 1968 in Cinerama and it was stunning on such a huge screen and altered my views on what cinema could achieve.
    Many theatres today hold 70mm Film Festivals that include this, which is definitely worth seeing. Several years ago, there was a limited release of it in IMAX in a few cities.
    In the pre-human ape scenes, there were a few quick shots of 2 actual baby chimps mixed in with the costumed actors.
    The little girl on the video telephone call who asked for a bush baby (a small primate species) is Kubrick’s daughter.
    Clarke wrote another excellent novel titled “Childhood’s End” which somewhat takes some themes from this and goes deeper into them. (But do not watch the tv movie made of it which was pure trash and completely missed the point of the book and its beauty.)

  • @grimreaper-qh2zn
    @grimreaper-qh2zn Год назад +1

    Arthur C Clarke had to write a book about 2001 A Space Odyssey because nobody understood the picture.

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад

      I can understand that, as it's pretty confusing and although I thought maybe I understood moments, I was probably way off. Thanks for letting me know, I'll have to check the book out. Much appreciated!

    • @8104587
      @8104587 Месяц назад

      The novel and movie were created together as a cooperative venture between Clark and Kubrick. As one plot evolved, so did the other.

  • @SeanVito
    @SeanVito Год назад +1

    I loved the realism in this film. They actually included a rotating centrifuge to create artificial gravity, which is a very real solution. Then there is the ai and common tech displayed. It's almost as if someone came from the future and told Stanley to make this movie. Or they took a lot of hallucinogens.

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Год назад

      The centrifuge rotated so that actors could stand at the bottom of it as it turned, sometimes with someone strapped into a seat up on the ceiling,
      Arthur Clarke and others made predictions about tech, such as a clip-board like computer that could also play video (in portrait format, which is the standard for devices today), or a computer that could assess human psychological states, for example.
      He also famously predicted or described the waterbed, something that did come to pass, but couldn't be put on the top floor of most homes.
      The 'drink peas through a straw' stuff is The Whirlpool Corporation's idea of the future, simply having plastic sachets which you drink from like what we actually use were beyond them, it seems.

  • @davidharrison9111
    @davidharrison9111 Год назад +1

    2010: The Year we make contact is the sequel to 2001 a space Odyssey David says My God it's full of stars a brilliant movie an excellent sequel

  • @davidorth5326
    @davidorth5326 Год назад +1

    Back in 2018, Christopher Nolan's restored version of 2001: A Space Odyssey was released for IMAX screens, and I made sure I got to experience it. BEST. MOVIE. VIEWING. EVER!

    • @MoviesWithMarty
      @MoviesWithMarty  Год назад +1

      Oh WOW! I had no idea he'd done that! Nolan is the MAN! Damn, I wish I'd known. I would have definitely seen it as my first viewing... let's hope in the future there's another experience the same! You are so lucky to have watched it in IMAX

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen Год назад

    Kubrick said he wanted to bring science fiction into the serious movie category as all the sci-fi before that were the monster on the ship or monster on the planet, aliens invading Earth type of thing. He wanted to make a serious mainstream sci-fi movie which he did brilliantly. All space type movies after owe their existence to this film, as you note Star Wars borrows directly from this movie as does the movie Alien.

  • @jamesraykenney
    @jamesraykenney Год назад

    Yes, definitely watch 2010! While it is a COMPLETELY different feeling film, It answers most of the questions you have, and also explains HAL's actions in an understandable way...

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Год назад

    Your trivia section was great. Some of that stuff I didn't know and I've read every book, interview, seen every documentary about the subject, lol. One last thing: almost EVERY Kubrick movie, from his first real film "The Killing" is worth doing, which ever ones you haven't seen! He doesn't have many! Don't know which ones you've seen already but I think you've seen at least three. So that leaves eight! THE KILLING (great debut, film noir heist film, very influential on Tarantino), PATHS OF GLORY (his first super-masterpiece, trench warfare in World War 1, beyond fantastic, totally essential), SPARTACUS (his only Hollywood job, some don't consider this a true Kubrick film since he had no control over it), LOLITA (brilliant, subversive, scandalous, fantastic acting, dark humor, amazing the movie was made then, much less now), DR. STRANGELOVE (another masterpiece, a wild satire on nuclear warfare with Peter Sellers playing three different roles) Then he did 2001. Then A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (dystopian dazzlement and disturbia! Another full blown masterpiece!) Barry Lyndon and The Shining you seem to have seen already. Then FULL METAL JACKET, and then Eyes Wide Shut, which isn't my favorite. Assuming you haven't seen all those, it's only 8 movies. And if you want to skip Spartacus (which is totally good), no one would complain, Kubrick didn't consider it a true film of his. Ditto his last movie Eyes Wide Shut, no rush to do that one! Ok, no more from me!

  • @TheBillproject
    @TheBillproject 2 месяца назад

    notice the details... man was the leader on earth but a toddler in space.. the walking in 9 gravity stumbling... the special toilet the baby style food and the sandwitches with crusts cut off... man must be reborn and forego technology... this movie is still a mystery played once a year at the vatican and is a diferent story depending on if you are an atheist or a religious person. notice the sound... there is no sound in space but as the emergency hatch fills with air it allows sound to travel

  • @DavidHayes56
    @DavidHayes56 5 месяцев назад

    HAL was told to keep a secret from the crew. That was like lying. HAL was not designed to lie. Having to keep the secret started causing issues with HAL's functioning (like the error that wasn't there on the antenna). That was why HAL decided he had to kill the crew to preserve the mission. The obelisk is an ancient transit system. The ones on Earth and the moon were a test to monitor and push prospective intelligences to evolve.

  • @jennifergrove2368
    @jennifergrove2368 Год назад +1

    Can you please please watch "2010: The Year We Made Contact"? It's not as beautifully aesthetically pleasing as "2001" but it's still just as interesting imo and the monoliths/Dave are back.

  • @stevetheduck1425
    @stevetheduck1425 Год назад

    Those orbiting satellites have national symbols on them: the Stars and Stripes, the French Armee de 'air, the Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force, Germany, and so on.
    Yes, they are indeed nuclear platforms.
    The wheel-station is Space Station V, Pan-Am airlines flies ships to it, other ships go to the moon bases from it, and the Discovery ('X-Ray Delta One' on the radio / TV comms) is the first ship intended to go out to the planets.
    The Soviets have a base on the moon as well 'Chilenka', and are intending to build an exploratory ship, as are the Chinese. These appear in the later novels and film.
    This orbiting nuclear platform business expected to happen in the future at the time of the film, and the Space Shuttle program had as one of it's missions the construction of such platforms, but it was never done.
    We got GPS, satellite comms. and the ISS instead.

  • @michaelvincent4280
    @michaelvincent4280 Год назад

    Age 15 I watched this film 14 times, 10 of which were Cinerama. My closest friend gave up after the fifth viewing. I just ate this up, and at some points was explaining bits of the film to adults watching nearby. Could not get enough. Built the models of the Bus and the Shuttle.