Film Review
There are very few films that can rightly be described as visionary, in
terms of both accurately predicting the future of our civilisation and
redefining and reinvigorating the art of cinema. Stanley
Kubrick's visual epic
2001: A Space
Odyssey is one such film, arguably the finest science-fiction
film ever made and certainly one of the most influential and important
films of the Twentieth Century.
It is extraordinary to think that
a science-fiction film made before man had first set foot on the moon
should still be so highly regarded, with special effects that even the
latest generation of computer generated wizardry have yet to
surpass.
Buoyed up by the success of his earlier dystopian fantasy
Dr. Strangelove (1964),
Stanley Kubrick envisaged making what he considered to be the first serious
science-fiction film. In his view, all previous examples of the
genre were marred by unconvincing effects, absurd plots and grotesque
caricatures. (Amidst all the B-movie dross of the 1950s and '60s, the sci-fi genre
had thrown up some noteworthy films, including
The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951),
Forbidden Planet (1956) and
The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957),
but even these resorted to fanciful plots and were marred by some
unconvincing effects.)
By the mid-1960s, scientific reality was rapidly
overtaking science-fiction, with major strides in science and
technology revolutionising the lives of millions and radically altering
our view of the world. The arms and technology race between the
US and the Soviet Union was gathering momentum, prompting the American
government to commit unlimited resources to sending a man to the moon
by the end of the decade. This quantum leap in scientific reality
would have to be accompanied by a comparable leap in science fiction if
the genre was ever to be taken seriously again. Kubrick's
2001: A Space Odyssey provided just
that - the first modern science-fiction film.
Work on the film began when Kubrick contacted the writer Arthur C.
Clarke in 1964. Clarke had already acquired a reputation as a
visionary and a maverick and proved to be the ideal collaborator for a
director with similar traits who was in search of a storyline that was
both imaginative and scientifically plausible. The writer
sold Kubrick several of his short stories, one of which,
The Sentinel, provided the basis
for the film. Over the many months that followed, Kubrick and
Clarke worked closely together, developing a screenplay and novel in
parallel. Clarke would later write three further sequels to this
novel -
2010 Odyssey Two
(made into a film by Peter Hyams in 1984),
2061: Odyssey Three and
3001: The Final Odyssey.
On the strength of Kubrick's reputation, MGM committed a budget of six
million dollars and were initially very optimistic about the
venture. This optimism did not last long, as Kubrick's
perfectionism saw the shooting schedule slip alarmingly and the
production costs spiral out of control, ultimately reaching ten and a
half million dollars. When the film was initially released, it
received mixed reviews - some critics praised it as one of the greatest
movie experiences ever, others dismissed it as being boring and
pretentious. When the film failed to attract an audience in the
first few weeks of its initial release, the distributors were ready to
withdraw the film and write it off when, inexplicably, the box office
receipts suddenly took off. The film grossed 15 million dollars
in the United States alone and would achieve similar returns across the
globe - success that can be attributed to an accelerating public
interest in the NASA lunar project and the burgeoning psychedelic youth
culture.
2001: A Space Odyssey is best
known for its groundbreaking special effects which still manage to
amaze audiences and confound those working in the industry today.
These include the use of front projection (where a background image is
projected onto a half-silvered mirror in front of a studio set and
reflected into the camera), slit-scan (an electronic feedback effect
used for the stunning Star-Gate sequence) and model shots that were the
most ambitious and convincing ever realised at the time. For the
sequences in which one of the astronauts walks around the interior of
the
Discovery One spaceship,
a full-size Ferris wheel was constructed. The wheel was rotated
with the actor walking on the spot to create the illusion of an
astronaut walking around the inner circumference of the wheel,
apparently under the influence of centrifugal force.
The effects are just one part of the film's visual magic. Equally
impressive is the way in which shots are composed and edited together,
the best example being the celebrated jump cut that takes us from the
prehistoric era to the space age, an animal bone becoming a nuclear
weapon orbiting planet Earth.
Since there is so little dialogue, background sound and music are an
essential component of the film. Johann Strauss II's
Blue Danube Waltz played over
balletic shots of space vessels effectively suggest a species that has
arrived at the pinnacle of technological and social advancement, but
with a sense of irony since what we also see is man's smallness in a
vast, seemingly barren cosmos. Equally effective is the use
of Richard Strauss's
Auch sprach
Zarathustra, to underscore key stages in man's evolution,
coinciding with the discovery of the mysterious black monoliths.
This latter music is particularly appropriate for the film since it was
inspired by Friedrich Nietzsche's book of the same title which explores
the idea of man becoming a superman, losing his primitive superstitious
beliefs and acquiring a deeper understanding of the forces of the natural
world.
It is a testament to the imagination and discipline of the film's
authors that many of the scientific developments the film shows us have
become scientific fact. The film's prediction of routine space
travel may be somewhat optimistic but its portrayal of video-phones,
artificial intelligence and manned flights to other planets in the
solar system are either reality or about to become so. Anyone who
regularly interacts with the Windows operating system will identify
with Dave Bowman and his fraught relationship with his
computer. "Please open the frigging file!" "
I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do
that..."
One thing which continues to vex and bemuse spectators is the film's
ambiguous ending, which seems to defy any attempt at rational
explanation and has inspired a veritable mountain of literature
offering various interpretations. Originally, Clarke and
Kubrick envisaged a more conventional denouement in which Dave Bowman
finally got to meet the aliens who had been thoughtlessly littering our
solar system with those hazardous black obelisks. Kubrick was
reluctant to portray the aliens as the familiar men-in-costumes and
couldn't agree with Clarke on a suitable ending to the film. In
the end, the money ran out and Kubrick made a virtue of necessity by
crafting a more abstract and mystical ending which invites the
spectator to draw his own conclusions.
What we see is astronaut Dave Bowman approaching one of the strange
black monoliths in orbit around Jupiter. As he does so, he passes
through a light tunnel in space and ultimately finds himself in a
futuristic room furnished with antiques. Here, he sees himself
age and die. On his deathbed, the astronaut sees a monolith and
is transformed into a Star-Child that watches over the Earth. A
masterfully composed piece of abstract cinematic art, this climax to
the film is both poetic and poignant, although its precise meaning
remains elusive, changing subtly on each viewing.
One possible interpretation is the film's ending depicts the union of
two notions - the mortality of one individual man versus the
immortality of the human spirit. Only when man learns to
reconcile these two things will he be at peace with the cosmos and then
fully appreciate the true value of existence, without the need for
superstitious beliefs and fanciful self-delusion that goes by the name
religion. This seems to tie in with the less ambiguous themes in
the earlier part of the film - man's evolution from a savage animal to
a civilised being and his ultimate dependency on machines that acquire
human-like characteristics. The unifying theme is man discovering
his identity, taming his savage nature and thereby achieving a kind of
atonement with creation.
No single film has ever had the impact on a single genre that
2001: A Space Odyssey has
had. Every single science-fiction film made subsequently owes
something to this film, one which completely changed viewer
expectations of what the genre should offer in terms of realism and
visual impact. Both George Lucas and Steven Spielberg have
acknowledged the influence of Kubrick's film in their own important
contributions to the genre,
Star Wars (1977)
and
Close
Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). Watch a sci-fi film or TV series today
and you can be pretty sure to see something of Kubrick's masterpiece in
there somewhere. Kubrick never made another sci-fi movie
although he did have one more fling with the fantasy genre, the supremely
scary chiller
The Shining (1980).
© James Travers 2009
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Next Stanley Kubrick film:
A Clockwork Orange (1971)