2001: A Space OdysseyReleased: April 3, 1968 Studio: MGM Genre: sci fi Box Office (numbers in millions): Domestic: 60.54 Worldwide: -- Adjusted for Inflation: Domestic: 409.68 Worldwide: 815.73 |
Directing: Stanley Kubrick Screenwriting: Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke Starring: Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, William Sylvester Review:“Man, from prehistoric times to a futuristic space age, is eerily defined in” VD “Kubrick’s metaphoric, thought-provoking, grandiose, science-fiction landmark film.” FS “Stunning images and imaginative script create an unforgettable viewing experience:” VD “the most spectacular and magisterial space movie of all time.” T98 The story centers around the investigation of the appearance on the Moon of a mysterious monolith whose radio signal leads to Jupiter. The audience learns that the first monolith appeared four million years earlier, giving insight to prehistoric ape-men how to use tools as killing weapons. Bowman (Dullea) and Poole (Lockwood), the astronauts on the mission, encounter “superior life and rebirth in some sort of embryonic divine form.” T95 The movie “is beautiful, infuriatingly slow, and pretty half-baked.” T95 So “why is this cold, oddly optimistic, overreaching sci-fi poem so interesting?” ML HAL 9000 (voiced by Douglas Rain), “the film’s major protagonist – an omniscient super-computer,” FS “has personal problems that make him a more engaging character than any of the humans in this or most other movies of the last few decades.” ML The movie doesn’t make it clear how “the lurking, unambiguous danger of the rogue computer” T98 fits with the monoliths, which “seem to coax humankind to make evolutionary leaps and transcend bodily and technological limits.” FS “Nevertheless…Kubrick’s vision…demands attention as superior sci-fi, simply because it’s more concerned with ideas than…pyrotechnics.” T95 The movie “hit home mostly with acid trippers (dig that time warp) and intellectuals (deconstruct that star child).” RS The film “also boasts distinction of having put Richard Strauss into the Top 40 with ‘Also Sprach Zarathustra.’” LM Sources:
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