DARTH SABER
Master Member
Wasn't there supposed to be an ending in which the Star Child returns to Earth and destroys all the Nations orbital weapons?
That was inthe book I think...haven't read it in a long time though.
Wasn't there supposed to be an ending in which the Star Child returns to Earth and destroys all the Nations orbital weapons?
So who wants to go on this one way trip to ascension Bowman took?
If you had the chance...
Would you go?
And yet to some degree I do share Art's general desire to know something of an artist's intentions, and indeed something of their intelligence... As a teenager, I only began to appreciate a lot of Modern Art - the more impenetrable works of Picasso, Miro, Klee, Duchamp - when I read about it. And when viewing today an impenetrable piece of contemporary art I am often clueless as to whether I'm looking at the product of a fine intelligence and sensibility, or the work of a cretinous, dim-witted chancer, as exemplified by Britain's alleged greatest artists, Damien Hirst and Tracy Emin.
Art you sound very literal and linear in your approach both as a photographer and an observer of art. It's just how you are wired, and there is nothing wrong with that -- you are who you are.
I loved Memento... that has to count for something towards the non-linear side, right?lol:lol
Perhaps I can enlighten you then a bit on some of Kubrick's thinking... It seems his vision of the movie is less metaphysical than mine. When asked (Playboy interview 1968) if the film had anything to do with God he replied 'everything', but went on to explain only in the sense that highly advanced aliens might share every characteristic we attribute to said God. Which, as I see it, would rule out mysticism entirely, since these godlike aliens would've developed from chemical ooze within the universe just like us. When he says 'every attribute' he must surely be omitting God's creator role.
Some other clues may be drawn from Kubrick's response to a viewer letter in which the writer concludes that the film is structured like Jung's dream structure, which consists of 4 acts, named by Jung as: Introduction, The Plot Thickens, Crisis, Resolution. The writer points out that the slab, which he calls 'knowledge', introduces the 4 Jungian dream acts.
Excerpts from the letter:
"2. The Plot Thickens - an overeducated doctor is congratulated on a completely innocuous speech, and he, in turn, congratulates his colleagues on a discovery which took no more initiative than a dog discovering a bone. Knowledge is turned against them. It deafens them. It overwhelms them. So, to discover its origins they send a ship, captained by a man of humility, calm under pressure, an artist; in short, a hero. Knowledge on board in the form of a computer tries to thwart him...
3. Crisis - the hero arrives at the point of discovery (monolith and stargate)... a more terrifying experience than his bout with the computer, for as we discover...
4. Resolution - the discovery is not of some new strange world but of himself...
But whose dream is it? Yours of course, but I think you asked yourself if you were so much different than the rest of us and you decided you were not and so you made a film.
-Frederic P. Lyman, California"
Kubrick responded, "Thank you for your fascinating note. You are very perceptive indeed."
Indeed. And partly for this technical reason: KubricK didn't just want good special effects, or better special effects than had gone before, but set himself the insane goal of making a movie where you coudn't tell visually that the shots even were special effects. He was quite clear about this. And by ****** did he succeed. Indeed there is nothing inferior about the space station and its motion to any such modelwork or motion in SW or anything since. If you were to film that space station today it simply could not be done any better than it appeared in 1968. This is ASTOUNDING. And everyone - especially SW fans - should be on their knees thanking Kubrick for lifting FX in a single bound to this level.
I have always been amazed how Kubrick got all of that right. and when there would been no gravity, there isn't,
Although I love the film, there is one major and blatant flaw in the film regarding gravity.
During the trip on baord the pan am shuttle we see theres' clearly no gravity. Things are floating around, Floyd has to use a zero gav toilet etc.
Kubrick remedies this by having the stewardess wear some kind of velcro gravity boots.
After the shuttle docks at the space station we clearly see there is artifical gravity due to the centrifugal force generated by the stations rotating motion.
Now, here's the major flaw...After the space station floyd and the rest of his team are in a small shuttle going to the location of the Monolith....The shuttle has gravity.
You could easily say that the shuttle had some sort of unknown technology creating gravity, but then again, why wouldnt the Pan Am shuttle also have this technology?
Kubric also went out of his way to clearl;y show how the rotating space station is able to generate artificial gravity but the gravity on the small moon shuttle remains a mystery.
Why?
I never saw the Moon Suttle having gravity as they are all seated. And the Moon does have gravity, so traveling just above it's surface or sitting on it's surface one would experience 1/10 Earth gravity. So that would apply to this scene.
Just a friendly heads up it is closer to 1/6th. :thumbsup
Doug
I think it's because the moons gravity is in play. I have to re-watch that scene now.
edit: Bry beat me to it.
Doug
I edited my post while you guys were answering , I did mention the moon gravity in my edit and also pointed out that one of the guys was walking around the shuttle (with no lunar gravity effects) and they also pour coffee in a cup for Floyd with no lunar gravity effects.
Brings up an interesting point -- what does liquid being poured look like at 1/6th earth gravity?
Doug