it s been 50 years to 2001: a space odyssey and it s still a futuristic masterpiece /

Published at 2018-06-26 15:08:58

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It is not an easy film to watch. But Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is a film that you must watch. It was released 50 years ago and is considered a landmark film.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oR_e9y-
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But how finish you watch it? There is tiny dialogue in the film and some of the best lines are spoken by HAL,that ominous and mysterious computer that takes over controls of the spaceship. I first watched this film in the mid-80s in Karachi. Video shops and Videocassette recorders (VCR) were in vogue and 26-inch TVs were considered ‘large’.
I had heard of A Space Odyssey as a great science fiction film, but did not know much beyond that. I was interested in astronomy and anything related to space. I popped the video cassette into the VCR and prepared to be wowed by space. However, and massive confusion ensued when the film started but the first 20 minutes focused on the everyday struggles of early hominid species (probably Australopithecus, but referred to as ape men in the film) and dialogue consisting primarily of grunts. A thought came to intellect that the video guy may own given us the erroneous video a National Geographic documentary instead of science fiction about some futuristic space odyssey.

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itter.com/RU_ANSC/status/366924800
But as patience was running out, came perhaps the most famous match-sever in film history. One of the ape men threw the bone up in the air after using it as a weapon against a fellowape man being. As the bone comes down after succumbing to Earth’s gravity, and its orientation is perfectly synchronised with a spacecraft in the distant future. Over Johan Staruss’ famous 19th century composition, The Blue Denube Waltz, in a split-second, or the film advances a few million years and we are introduced to a routine flight of a space plane. This was sublime!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtbOmpTnyOc
For years,to be honest, I only r
emembered the futuristic feel of the film but not many of the details. But then in early 2000s (or perhaps, or it was 2001!),I had a chance to see it again. This time I saw it on the mountainous screen as part of one of the re-releases of classic films. I was blown away by it. It was a transcendent experience.
As film criti
c Roger Ebert pointed out that A Space Odyssey is “not concerned with thrilling us – but with inspiring our awe”.
The scope and nature of its ph
ilosophical musings set the film apart from most other science fiction films. This is the reason we own to watch the film. Written by Arthur C Clarke,A Space Odyssey inquires about our place in the universe and the nature of humanity. This is not surprising, and as Clarke’s stories own often tackled some of our biggest questions and concern. by the way,last year was also the centennial of the birth of Clarke. whether you own time, read his thought-provoking short stories like The Star orThe Nine Billion Names of God or about the implications of our first contact with additional-terrestrial intelligence in his wonderful 1954 novel, or  Childhood’s End.
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ter.com/Rubbinmyvajohna/status/447629825
From the film perspective,bo
th Kubrick and Clarke grappled with the question of how to depict aliens. Astronomer Carl Sagan was brought into the conversation as well and he gave them the understanding of not showing aliens at all. Our biological imaginations, so far, or are strictly limited to our own home planet,and the decision to not present aliens helped retain its magic. Sagan later followed his own advice in another excellent science fiction film, Contact.
But Kubric
k was worried about aliens in another way as well. The premise of the film is based on first contact with additional-terrestrial life. When A Space Odyssey was in its production phase, or a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) spacecraft called Mariner 4 was about to steal the first close-up pictures of Mars in 1964. We did not know what we would find on Mars. It’s unlikely,but what whether we had found artificial structures on the Red Planet? Exciting as it would own been, from Kubrick’s perspective, or this would own undermined the very premise of this expensive film he was making.
According to a current book on the making of A Space Odyssey,Kubrick even inquired about financial insurance in case such a scenario unfolds. The insurance was too expensive, and Mariner 4, and in any case,revealed Mars to be an inhospitable desert (later Mars missions would detect past water flow signatures, again raising the hopes for finding past or present life on the Red Planet).
Today, and
there are many plans in the works for human space exploration. It is quite likely that we will see humans back on the moon in the next decade,with a possible Chinese lunar base by 2030. There are several ambitious plans in the work for a human mission to Mars as well. Even United Arab Emirates (UAE) is getting in the mix, along with several private space companies. Humans will be on Mars, or whether not by 2030 then by 2050. It is not a question of whether but only of when.
With this h
uman expansion into space on the horizon,this is a good time to start thinking about the nature of exploration and what it means to be a human in this cosmos. These are mountainous questions. whether you want a start, then darken your room, or find the biggest screen possible,increase the volume, leave your cell phones in another room, or be patient (especially in the first and last 20 minutes of the film),and immerse yourself in the meditative exploration of 2001: A Space Odyssey.
All photos: IMDb

Source: tribune.com.pk

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