New for 2013: An In-Depth Analysis of Kubrick's 2001: a Space Odyssey
An anonymous reader writes "Long time /. member maynard has written one of the most obsessively detailed and extensive analyses of Stanley Kubrick's classic 2001: A Space Odyssey seen in some time. At more than 22,000 words, it contains still images, film clips, musical score selections and copious references, including by Piers Bizony, author of Filming the Future, Nietzsche, Foucault, Freud, and film theorists like Bazin, Kracauer and Zizek. It's already gained some notoriety, having been retweeted by Nicholas Jackson, former editor of the Atlantic Monthly and Slate. Anyone who loves the film or SF in general should find this an amazing read!" I don't know whether it can topple my all-time favorite analysis of 2001, Leonard F. Wheat's Kubrick's 2001: A Triple Allegory .
as this analysis.
Remember the scene in Annie Hall where Woody Allen picks an argument with a man showing off his knowledge of Marshall McLuhan?
and I might actually finish. As far as OCD dissections are concerned - I salute the author.
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"Drug trip" doesn't appear anywhere. Fail.
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Toynbee Idea
In movie 2001
Resurrect dead
On planet Jupiter
I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
You have better chances finding a needle in a haystack than meaning in Space Odyssey. It's pointless to try and picture the movie for more than the pretty show it was: while it admittedly looks gorgeous even today, it didn't have much to offer beyond the special effects. Space Odyssey was the Star Wars or Avatar of the '60s, the only difference being that instead of relying on simple or shallow story and characters, it did away with those things entirely.
According to his LinkedIn, maynard was a sysadmin in MIT's Laboratory for Nuclear Science, and while there, graduated from neighboring Harvard with a liberal-arts degree, presumably through nights-and-weekends courses.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
And it still has better effects than anything made today and a great story line. (which is open to interpretation)
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Uhhh. Hi folks!
I'm in Aussieland, where everything that moves is poisonous, and it's past 11pm. If there are any questions, I'll try to answer as timely as I can. But the wifey has dibs too.
Pretty fracking cool /. and thanks timothy! And it's aright if you think there's better words out there on the film. Damn thing has embossed more ink on paper than just about any flick in existence. I just couldn't help myself 'cause I love the movie. So I wanted my say too.
Whoa.
...I've just started reading it, and I'm not sure how seriously I can take a piece that purports to be an in-depth commentary yet can't even spell Arthur C. ClarkE's name correctly.
TL;DR, the gang sign of illiterate idiots.
Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
I don't know whether it can topple my all-time favorite analysis of 2001, Mad Magazine's "201 Minutes of Space Idiocy".
What might have been insightful commentary was undermined by the sexist wisecracks under the pictures, so I stopped reading.
I piss off bigots.
>> In almost every way this film should have failed. But it didn't. Instead, it's considered a great masterpiece. Why?
Because people would be too embarrassed to admit that they found it slow-moving, impenetrable, and dull?
I just watch it for Leonard Rossiter -- Rigsby in space!
TL;DR, the gang sign of illiterate idiots.
TL;DR
Don't feed the troll.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
ah, Marshall McLuhan...confusing the hell out of undergrads studying Comm Theory with one quotation...
I'm going to have to check out Annie Hall now.
FYI, McLuhan's quotation, "The medium is the message" is a tautology. It's like saying on the topic of candy, "The shape is the taste"
skittles and M&M's have the same shape, but very different tastes...what I mean is, McLuhan's quotation is only erudite if you take a ridiculously reductive understanding of communication theory...
My response to McLuhan when I used to teach Comm Theory: "The message is the message, the 'medium' is the channel by which the message is transmitted"
I used it to introduce the Shannon-Weaver Model.
The value of McLuhan's quotation is this: it introduces us to a deeper, more complex understanding of Communications analysis...it isn't valuable in and of itself, but it teases us with notions best explained by others.
Thank you Dave Raggett
Any symbolic or allegorical content that requires decades to decode is of no interest or relevance to anyone. If that was the intent of the work, it has failed. When all is said and done, 2001 is a generally well-made (for the time) and entertaining SciFi that has some significant plot holes and problems.
Shakespeare's definitely of no interest or relevance to anyone then. His works have been analyzed, decoded and reinterpreted for *centuries*. Like Shakespeare (or art that's more abstract), you can walk away from 2001 it with just the surface story, or you can dig deeper to find additional layers of meaning. The meaning may or may not be what the creator intended, and can be shaped by biases of the person and what period they live in, but if it makes enough people sit back and seriously think about it, it has succeeded in ways that can't be measured by box office revenue.
I'm not saying 2001 deserves of all the praise it gets, but your main premises for both the movie and this analysis ("who cares"; "no interest or relevance"; "failed") are clearly wrong.
And if it has "some" significant plot holes and problems... that's still far fewer than most major sci-fi films in the last three decades.
Any symbolic or allegorical content that requires decades to decode is of no interest or relevance to anyone.
That's it, everybody! Last one out, get the lights.
Breakfast served all day!
Read through the review. Not impressed. It has the requisite references to Nietzsche and Focault found in too many pretentious philosophy papers. There's obsession over the movie's presentation of zero-g and rotating space station issues, as if those had great philosophical import. In reality, they're severely practical - 2001 was the first movie with the budget to show space realistically. (And one of the last to try.)
There's a long analysis of Hal 9000's motivations, with much emphasis on Hal's growing "self awareness". This misses one of the big points of the movie - Hal had been ordered to make the mission succeed, and that goal had a higher priority than keeping the crew alive. To academics today, that's an alien concept. It wasn't alien in the 1960s, when there were still many WWII veterans around. See "Twelve O-Clock High" for a clear expression of the "mission comes first" mentality. Or "633 Squadron", which is even clearer about the need to send men to their death just to advance the tactical position slightly. Or, if you're in a hurry, read "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner", which is a five-line poem. Those were understood concepts for those who lived and fought through the first half of the twentieth century.
The paper has yet another attempt to explain the ending. Clarke himself once did, and that's probably the only explanation worth reading. Realistically, the ending looks like a writer getting stuck. Some writers and directors have a real problem with endings. Woody Allen was famous for that. Good writers try to avoid pat endings, but alternatives may just lose the audience. That's 2001.
Anyway, that long review is much less profound than it would like to think it is.
aka 'skimming'....
the author of TFA definitely babbles on about imaginary correlations to other philosophical ideas...stuff that most likely wasn't on Kubrick's radar screen...but there's good stuff in there...
he draws out more commonalities between the monkey/bone, humans/nukes, hal/monolith thing and the author summarizes these notions succinctly (when he bothers to try and summarize)
ex: here he tries to further elucidate his interpretive theory by comparing to other Kubrick films...he summarizes Clockwork Orange:
That's good stuff...especially viewing Kubrick's work as journalistic and attempting impartiality while depicting the ideas clashing on screen.
I wish someone had explained that to me before I saw Kubrick films...it would have spared me alot of misunderstanding and saved me time which I could have spent thinking of more productive things...like this..."Kubrick's films are awesome but they are unsettling...he shows rape and it might feel like he is somehow glorifying the act, but he's attempting to be impartial where other directors might not..."
Thank you Dave Raggett
So you're an illiterate idiot or why the need to speak up?
Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
So, *your* idea is solid...the fact that the channel by which the sender and/or receiver choose to access the information can affect how they interpret the symbols, which drives their social construction of reality...
yes!
But McLuhan wasn't saying that in his work. Have you read it? Yikes...it's dense like a philosophy text.
McLuhan was more in 'TED talk' mode, breathlessly in wonder at the potential insights gleanable from the act of analyzing human communication with the tools of the network engineer.
Again, I can agree here.
My main point is, *you* are responsible for these ideas, via expanding your mind cybernetically to factorize symbols which were previously to fuzzy to factorize accurately. That's *your* ideas...McLuhan isn't in the picture...
except that in modern American discourse, his quotation is often mentioned...the continued use of it means it has to 'mean' something...so we project *our* ideas on it...
so yeah, it is a 'good quotation' in that it can be applied many ways! to me it is bad in that if the hearer wants to know more of the idea, and investigates the origin of the quotation...well, they are usually destined for more confusion not more understanding
Thank you Dave Raggett
Apparently, you can't even understand a simple sentence. I didn't say that it was useless to use artistic works as the basis of further reflection or creation. I said that if an author puts content into a work that takes others decades to decode, then the author did something wrong.
Shakespeare, Clarke, and Kubrick were competent artists, and you can be sure that any meaning they intended you to find in their work, they have made pretty clear. Any meaning that takes you decades to discover is not meaning they put in, it's something you created on your own.
Apparently, you can't even understand a simple sentence. I didn't say that it was useless to use artistic works as the basis of further reflection or creation. I said that if an author puts content into a work that takes others decades to decode, then the author did something wrong.
Ah I see. I guess I didn't decode your original sentence right away...
Ha!
What's funny is, by my own logic, the fact that you still make that argument makes it true, in a sense...
Because of what I said here:
I'm giving you the credibility enough to read/think about your posts and ideas...that mental action on my part opens the door for you to take that credibility and turn the table, so to speak...
Fine! We can agree to disagree on that point ;)
Thank you Dave Raggett
True, but decoding Shakespeare or 2001 doesn't mean that everbody decodes it quickly, it means that some people decode it quickly.
Any comment on this review of your book?
I come here for the love
I assumed you were the author being featured in this thread. Mea culpa. The commenter I linked to appears to be off the boil, yet Amazon is featuring her comment. Anyway, sorry to have thrown all that at you...
I come here for the love
.
"Star Wars", a few years after that, was really the second compelling space movie, yet it has survived and thrived, in a dandelion kind of way, thanks to the infinite promotional abilities of G.L. At the time I was impressed with Star Wars, but the franchise has not weathered well. If Stanley had tried to make 7 movies about "2001", they would have collectively suffered the fate.
Some things are ground breaking. "The Matrix" pulled the rug out from under "Star Wars 1: The Phantom Edit". Ground breaking things do that. Matrix 1 1/2 & 2 were about as bad as SW1. "You can't go home again"...but that doesn't take anything away from the original effort.
So I'm sorry Kubrickians but there is a REASON why nobody else has made a film in the vein of 2001, because anybody else would have been called to the carpet for making a movie with no plot, narrative, story
Here you are so right. You can't be groundbreaking in the same movie category twice, without creating a new category. The closest I've seen a movie come to this is Godfather two, after the blockbuster that was one. Yet even then there is not a lot new. I think two worked because Michael surprised us in being almost as compelling as Vito. In that sense, it was more like Toy Story Two, an equal to One but nothing new really.
, frankly if it wasn't for the (sadly too damned short) parts with HAL there really wouldn't be any real characters at all, just bland empty vessels.
Maybe you prefer the Star Wars 1 approach of cloning characters to fill the screen? For me, sparse is good. Works with dialog, and especially with music, in my view.
It reminds me of how nobody but Terrence Malick can make a Terrence Malick movie because only Terrence Malick gets a free pass from the critics to be as pretentious as he possibly can without getting called to the carpet.
And only G.L can....And only Steven Spielberg can... And only Michael Man can...While you are at it, you could say that only Robin Williams/Jim Carrey/Al Pacino can play an R.W./J.C./A.P. role...And then what have you said? Not much. Some actors/directors are known for a wide variety of roles (Marlon, Bale, Tommy Lee & Ron Howard come to mind) while the majority are mostly monochrome -- even De Niro, for all his greatness, is somewhat monochromatic.
Challenge for you -- come up with one or more movies that have held their appeal over 20 or 30 years of re-watching and movie making progression. Then consider that "2001" is just shy of 50 years out of print. For me, searching for something as equally enduring from the 60s leads me to "Lawrence of Arabia", at 51 years old. But if you didn't like Kubrick's 2.21 to 1 aspect ratio, you probably won't dig Lean's 2.20 to 1. And "2001"'s 160 minute running time looks nearly instantaneous compared to LoA's 187 to 228 minute verboseness. And what's the deal with all those quietly walking across the desert scenes?
I come here for the love
Wizard of Oz. Gone With the Wind. Sword in the Stone. Romeo and Juliet. Taming of the Shrew.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
That when encountering advanced alien civilization(s), we will be presented with something that can either be shot in a studio (see the hotel room scene in 2001) or on location (faked beach scene in Contact)
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... wrote what is more likely to be the definitive book on "2001 - A Space Odyssey", back in 1968.
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
it is not being a prick to point willful ignorance and stupidity that is deliberately insulting and itself condescending. TL;DR is part of the culture of the glorification of stupid, the denigration of intellect. to call it what it is is compeltely justified.
The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.