2001: A Space Odyssey is the greatest film ever made unless you disagree which is like totally fine

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  • čas přidán 7. 08. 2021
  • Main channel: / @exurb1a
    Also, that should've been there's no guarantee we won't return to the dark ages
    Kubrick being uncharacteristically explicit about the meaning of 2001, as mentioned: • Video

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @tallSycamore
    @tallSycamore Před 3 lety +2931

    I saw "2001" in 1968 when it was first released, and I was 14 years old. This was a time before people became blasé to space travel and I was riveted by its depiction of the unknowing vastness of time, space, and creation. The cinematic pacing was perfect. I went on to have a career in digital fx because of it, and still count it as my most influential and favorite film.

    • @yellow01umrella
      @yellow01umrella Před 3 lety +10

      A Clockwork Orange is my fav

    • @tallSycamore
      @tallSycamore Před 3 lety +63

      @Gonda Most of us had black and white tvs with rabbit ears for antennas. The first color NASA image of all of earth from space, as a blue ball, was released in 1972. For a while, before cable and the internet made it mundane, the world was captivated by the vision of exploring our planetary neighborhood. "2001" was a brilliantly artistic, poetic, and enigmatic road map to the unknown.

    • @tomc.5704
      @tomc.5704 Před 3 lety +24

      @@tallSycamore I've spent a lot of time marveling at how much things have changed, how fast, that we're still changing, that change is accelerating.
      But for all that, I still don't get it. I was born in '95. I have a good grasp of how cell phones and internet have changed things, but I simply can't imagine what it was like seeing 2001 Space Odyssey, the moon landing, and the first picture of Earth from space. I don't understand, and I can't understand.

    • @tallSycamore
      @tallSycamore Před 3 lety +16

      @@tomc.5704 It's like the moment in the film when the gloved hand of an astronaut reaches out and touches the obelisk.... it was transformative, and forever after, altered my perspective.

    • @webm1nd
      @webm1nd Před 3 lety +1

      @@tomc.5704 it's Qualia, you can read about it however much you want you won't understand it. Watch Exurb1a video: There's no such thing as Orange.

  • @g4merboie789
    @g4merboie789 Před 10 měsíci +495

    Just watched it like 10 minutes ago. The part where hal begs for his life is so haunting.

    • @tusharmehta4890
      @tusharmehta4890 Před 5 měsíci +13

      Plus with his song

    • @shahzadirani
      @shahzadirani Před 4 měsíci +12

      that, and the part before the intermission where Hal lip reads what David and Dr. Frank Poole are talking about.

    • @jtbbrown3457
      @jtbbrown3457 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Im scared...im scared aren't we all

    • @Shaner1212
      @Shaner1212 Před měsícem

      It was the best part of the film. The it truly showed the humanity of HAL

    • @sippycup5510
      @sippycup5510 Před 21 dnem

      I just finished watching it with my brother like a few minutes ago. I’ve learned the hard to never watch a weird mind-boggling movie at 12 am. I think I can still hear the monolith screaming

  • @Bootmahoy88
    @Bootmahoy88 Před 8 měsíci +126

    In 1968 my friend, Tom and I saw 2001: A Space Odyssey at the Cooper Cinerama in St. Louis Park, MN, and it changed both of our lives. I went on to study physics and mathematics very seriously. I was 13. Tom was 14.

    • @AA-BB
      @AA-BB Před 8 měsíci +8

      Are you two still together?

    • @Bootmahoy88
      @Bootmahoy88 Před 7 měsíci +11

      @@AA-BB No. We parted company long ago.

  • @wingflanagan
    @wingflanagan Před rokem +77

    This is one of the better essays on _2001_ I have come across. I agree completely. It's one of Kubrick's very few optimistic films, after he hit his stride with _Dr. Strangelove._ The "happy endings" of some of his earlier ones were forced - something he knew and decided to dispense with. With everything from _Stangelove_ on, he had fully established his style and working methods, with _2001_ perhaps representing the pinnacle. Well done.

  • @philippschmitt4142
    @philippschmitt4142 Před 3 lety +2796

    "The miracle of Man is not how far he has sunk, but how magnificently he has risen".
    I (and maybe others as well) really needed this cosmic optimism. Thank you.

    • @nonesuchone
      @nonesuchone Před 3 lety +3

      hear hear

    • @VeryNotSober
      @VeryNotSober Před 3 lety +1

      What's his first?

    • @du42bz
      @du42bz Před 3 lety +3

      So let us rise some more

    • @therearenonamesinthevoid5772
      @therearenonamesinthevoid5772 Před 3 lety +11

      He drums up hope that I wasn't even aware was inside me. It's for that reason, I never miss a posting to CZcams. But he is not doing very much self promotion, which makes me want to dump money into his lap. You know?

    • @kyetexe954
      @kyetexe954 Před 3 lety

      Thanks

  • @itsmootdamnitnotmute905
    @itsmootdamnitnotmute905 Před 3 lety +1375

    "Bear with me a second, I'm overly caffeinated and unemployed" At nearly 60 years of age I find that I'm increasingly asking myself WTF it's all been for. I turn to philosophy for an answer and this is what I get. I understand now that this is the only truly honest answer to that most fundamental question of existence.

    • @ToriKo_
      @ToriKo_ Před 3 lety +11

      And thats just so horrible, isn’t it...? I can’t bear it like this

    • @malcolmtent
      @malcolmtent Před 3 lety +21

      It’s damn it, dammit not damnit

    • @Lopro94
      @Lopro94 Před 3 lety +78

      In the words of our favourite existentially depressed/liberated space turtle: "Meaning is a jumper you have to knit yourself."

    • @bjnowak
      @bjnowak Před 3 lety +43

      It’s about love. Nothing else. Experience love and you feel alive. Ignore love and suffer. Love doesn’t have to be a significant other. It can be a friend or even a pet. But experience it and you live.

    • @yellow01umrella
      @yellow01umrella Před 3 lety +5

      "Knowledge for its own sake" -- that is the last snare laid by morality: we are thereby completely entangled in morals once more.

  • @pw4780
    @pw4780 Před 10 měsíci +53

    Arthur C. Clarke foresaw even what AI could bring us. And Kubrick’s absolute masterpiece.

  • @bsharp3281
    @bsharp3281 Před 3 lety +162

    2001 is an experience disguised as a movie. It's flawless and amazing! Every time I watch it, time stands still and I leave the planet - no drugs required. Thanks for your video!

    • @enekaitzteixeira7010
      @enekaitzteixeira7010 Před rokem

      It's dumb and dull.

    • @dez4578
      @dez4578 Před rokem

      Its ass its like 40 mins of filler scenes so many better movies out there

  • @Blate1
    @Blate1 Před 3 lety +4892

    “2001 is the greatest film ever made”
    This man clearly hasn’t seen Fast and Furious 9 yet

    • @willemwannenburg
      @willemwannenburg Před 3 lety +572

      I can't wait for the final movie: "Fast 10 your seatbelt". And if it's not called that, I don't want to live on this planet anymore.

    • @guygiy909
      @guygiy909 Před 3 lety +97

      God every time another one of those movies comes out, the world becomes a darker infinitely less inspired place

    • @luisbustamante9869
      @luisbustamante9869 Před 3 lety +12

      This kind of irreverence is sooo today. We are scared of the sublime and that brands us as just another subspecies.

    • @andrewblissett2211
      @andrewblissett2211 Před 3 lety +31

      F A M I L Y I N T E N S I F I E S

    • @aliman3229
      @aliman3229 Před 3 lety +4

      😆😂😂

  • @ragibshahriar187
    @ragibshahriar187 Před 3 lety +885

    The re-mastered version looks like a modern day sci-fi film, even better. This film just baffles me with creativity pouring out in each scene.

    • @martinreid2352
      @martinreid2352 Před 3 lety +43

      And every effect was done practically, even the Stargate sequence! It blows my mind tbh

    • @ragibshahriar187
      @ragibshahriar187 Před 3 lety +8

      @@martinreid2352 I wonder how he made it! It would be nice to see a 'making of' video about the technical details.

    • @x15galmichelleevans
      @x15galmichelleevans Před 3 lety +23

      @@ragibshahriar187 Douglas Trumball attempted several years ago to make a definitive behind the scenes film about 2001, but was not allowed to do so by the current copyright owner Warner Brothers. It was have been a great film, and I for one am extremely ticked that the shortsighted people at Warners prevented him from moving forward on that project.

    • @morganseppy5180
      @morganseppy5180 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ragibshahriar187 It's explained on VFX artists react (from Corridor Crew) here, i think: czcams.com/video/5ch5WC54egU/video.html

    • @ragibshahriar187
      @ragibshahriar187 Před 3 lety +4

      @@morganseppy5180 many many thanks for making my day. It's just amazing to see kubrick's and his teams technical prowess

  • @tomriley6957
    @tomriley6957 Před 10 měsíci +21

    I saw this film in the cinema three times in 1968 and so many times since on tv that I've lost count. Being such an avid movie fan and now 78 years old, I can honestly say that with all the fantastic movies in the 70's and since, without exception, "2001" is still my all time number one.

    • @NooDLES411911
      @NooDLES411911 Před 6 měsíci

      I'm 33. I finally decided to watch it in its entirety today. What a trip. This must've been absolutely mind blowing in 1968. It definitely leaves you with many questions and thoughts.

    • @bearsmith3655
      @bearsmith3655 Před 10 dny

      Totally agree!!

  • @eclipsesonic
    @eclipsesonic Před 9 měsíci +97

    2001 isn't a film, it's an experience! Watching the last 20 minutes for the first time was akin to a religious experience and I'm not exaggerating. Absolutely incredible on a visceral level. It's my all-time favourite film because of the atmosphere and immersion it creates, along with the excellent use of music and very convincing practical effects that still hold up to this day. The fact that this film is 55 years old is mind-blowing.

    • @user-fc6hg7ru6o
      @user-fc6hg7ru6o Před 8 měsíci +15

      I think you are exaggerating, the last 20 was the worst part, it felt like they had ran out of ideas and were throwing stuff at the wall. 2 hours of my life I will never get back, maybe watching it in the cinema is how you get the true experience with the colours being flashed across your face idk if the TV does even good at showing it but start was good. Overall for a 1960 movie I prefer the Italian job

    • @NobleGuy-cf6ut
      @NobleGuy-cf6ut Před 7 měsíci +3

      ​@@user-fc6hg7ru6oIf you are saying this because you couldn't make sense of the last 20 minutes, then I have a problem with your opinion. Because, 2001 is not a film that's trying to tell a conventional story, but rather it's trying to create an emotional experience and express an idea through images.
      Anyways, whether you like the film or not is obviously your opinion, but you should consider the goal a film before making that opinion.

    • @al7bndgsh706
      @al7bndgsh706 Před 6 měsíci +8

      ⁠@@NobleGuy-cf6ut​​⁠This film is objectively bad. And it doesn’t matter what opinion you may have. I get it, the film tries to deliver an emotional experience. But hey, we all have different emotional experiences, for example, while dreaming or being high you experience different emotions that are devoid of meaning, just like the film (nearly devoid of meaning).
      The film could have been way shorter, some useless characters have been introduced, and could have been less boring while maintaining the feeling that the mission was long. The director just never bothered to do so; he knew that people will praise him for something like that. Reminds me of “art” when a lazy painter shows a painting and pretends that it has a deep meaning and people praise the painter for it. The pacing of the film was horrible, it never made the viewer intrested in any of the scenes (with some exceptions). One of the few things I liked about the film is the monolith, the fact that the “aliens” were incomprehensible was a great decision.
      I, again, get it, the film wants to be long with limited camera angles, limited dialogue, etc. However, there are many long meaningless shots that serve no purpose, and the “experience” was just plain and superficial. Therefore, the film is objectively bad, any professional director can make this film shorter, more interesting, with deeper experience, and make it more alienating. “Opinion” is just an excuse, the specific audience this film was made to deserved better.

    • @NobleGuy-cf6ut
      @NobleGuy-cf6ut Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@al7bndgsh706 Alright, so this film is objectively bad?? Then let's get down to it...
      So you said what you said, but you haven't given your proofs? You just said some arbitrary bs. That's not enough to claim something objective! Where are your evidences?? Maybe provide some logic and math equations. You know that when scientists discover something definitively they just don't put arbitrary bs in front. They give evidence.
      So you need provide your evidences for me to take you seriously and not a troll. Come on, show your equations...

    • @papapalpy
      @papapalpy Před 6 měsíci +3

      ⁠@@al7bndgsh706"objectively bad" is... just not true... you don't have the credentials to decide that something is "objectively bad"

  • @shinj1k986
    @shinj1k986 Před 3 lety +2777

    This does not change the fact that in Antarctica there are 21 million penguins and in Malta there are 502,653 inhabitants. So if the penguins decide to invade Malta, each Maltese will have to fight 42 penguins.

    • @cemoguz2786
      @cemoguz2786 Před 3 lety +29

      do you know humans have cluster bombs and machine guns both of which really effective for that ''problem''

    • @marselo1316
      @marselo1316 Před 3 lety +168

      holy crap this information was well needed

    • @fukawininetynine5999
      @fukawininetynine5999 Před 3 lety +54

      Someone should do something!

    • @Samuel.Sharman
      @Samuel.Sharman Před 3 lety +83

      @@cemoguz2786 your response was about as tone deaf as the question was ludicrous

    • @MrGwarpy
      @MrGwarpy Před 3 lety +17

      This is such an awesome point. Go Penguins!

  • @rachard
    @rachard Před 3 lety +1149

    Literally *"We could make a religion out of this"*

  • @tian297
    @tian297 Před 2 lety +119

    The long "boring" scenes are the best ones to me. They're somehow exciting

    • @visutor
      @visutor Před rokem +10

      Boring, IS highly underrated

    • @Allen-yv3ue
      @Allen-yv3ue Před 11 měsíci +3

      Agree, we want FAST everything - or it's boring. When I seen the movie in 68 ( Stereo/Panavision), it was a eye opener that changed the way I look at life ... and music.

    • @PrivateerJimmy
      @PrivateerJimmy Před 10 měsíci +4

      those scense are for you to use your imagination and think about what the scene before is about and whats the next one will be like... or something like that

    • @NooDLES411911
      @NooDLES411911 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@PrivateerJimmyI just smoked weed before bed last night and the first 20 minutes of the movie was a trip.

  • @user-ds8nm5xh8c
    @user-ds8nm5xh8c Před 10 měsíci +7

    Me too. Strangely 4 of us saw it stoned in an otherwise empty cinema in Stoke on Trent , late morning, in 68. The racing over the landscape we found particularly moving although we couldn't. The projectionist joined us and asked us if we would like to se it again. We universally instantly agreed.

  • @mrmanz1778
    @mrmanz1778 Před 3 lety +5692

    Address the allegations.

    • @hutchson7410
      @hutchson7410 Před 3 lety +51

      True. Still waiting for an upload

    • @noahrichardson691
      @noahrichardson691 Před 3 lety +5

      Facts

    • @10acious32
      @10acious32 Před 3 lety +51

      Or the allegations against him

    • @jacaanthony
      @jacaanthony Před 3 lety +53

      @@10acious32 tbh I believe that it had happened after all the evidence I had seen, it really is a hard pill to swallow.

    • @danielbaucom5252
      @danielbaucom5252 Před 3 lety +14

      Bro I just discovered it today

  • @tomc.5704
    @tomc.5704 Před 3 lety +418

    "We are risen apes, not fallen angels" Damn, that's quote and a half.
    I'd never heard it before.
    “But we were born of risen apes, not fallen angels, and the apes were armed killers besides. And so what shall we wonder at? Our murders and massacres and missiles, and our irreconcilable regiments? Or our treaties whatever they may be worth; our symphonies however seldom they may be played; our peaceful acres, however frequently they may be converted into battlefields; our dreams however rarely they may be accomplished. The miracle of man is not how far he has sunk but how magnificently he has risen. We are known among the stars by our poems, not our corpses.” - Robert Ardrey, _African Genesis_

    • @bucksfan77
      @bucksfan77 Před rokem +7

      Bunch of liberal nonsense

    • @DanielM796
      @DanielM796 Před rokem +5

      @@bucksfan77 how?

    • @bucksfan77
      @bucksfan77 Před rokem

      @urmad1398 evolution is a flawed theory

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz Před 8 měsíci +2

      "we're a wave that left the ocean and forgot itself" - Zen Buddhism

    • @jacques-fb6xy
      @jacques-fb6xy Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@bucksfan77Let me guess,Trump fan?

  • @plainswell
    @plainswell Před rokem +8

    You are absolutely right. I was 14 in 1968 and was lucky enough to see 2001, 3 times in its original Cinerama presentation. To this day it holds up completely and the awe and emotions I experienced at age 14 keep coming back, every time. Thank you for your compact but excellent analysis.

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Před 10 měsíci +5

    At about 03:26 in this video:
    Those words were also used early in the novel to describe Moonwatcher {the novel's name for the man-ape}.

  • @MrAlbedo39
    @MrAlbedo39 Před 3 lety +463

    You are one of the very, *very* few You Tubers for whom I have watched every single video you've posted, on both of your channels, many of them multiple times over. What a wonderful way with words you have.

    • @biksw
      @biksw Před 3 lety +50

      It's quite sad he got exposed as an abuser. Look it up. or don't. I got devastated when i saw it.

    • @sackixfilms8950
      @sackixfilms8950 Před 3 lety +20

      @@biksw yeah, when he mentioned “the mistery of consciousness” the only thing I could think about was that article because that was something they were both researching at the time. I can’t watch his videos with the same sense of awe ever again

    • @ShinerzFIN
      @ShinerzFIN Před 3 lety +20

      @@biksw Who are you people posting this on every post? Bots? What's up with you guys?

    • @rachard
      @rachard Před 3 lety +12

      @@ShinerzFIN They are determined troll account

    • @shneancy220
      @shneancy220 Před 3 lety +39

      @@ShinerzFIN heartbroken people who love exurbia's art but can't stop thinking about the things he's done

  • @someone-js6pg
    @someone-js6pg Před 3 lety +590

    This is the most passive aggressive movie review title ever. but if you don't agree that's like totally fine.

    • @willisverynice
      @willisverynice Před 3 lety +20

      Actually, its the definition of assertive... unless you are assuming that when he says its "totally fine" that its not "totally fine"

    • @someanimal3506
      @someanimal3506 Před 3 lety +16

      I mean, I haven’t had the pleasure of viewing it upon or near its release. In fact, i just watched it in 2020 and was more interested in its amazing practical effects than its drab story.

  • @patcoston
    @patcoston Před rokem +3

    2:29 if Dave held his breath, his lungs would have burst. It's one of the most important things you learn when SCUBA diving. As you ascend, do not hold your breath because as the pressure decreases, the air in your lungs expands. Dave would have exhaled and not held his breath.

  • @charliegeo2779
    @charliegeo2779 Před 2 lety +4

    I just found this second channel. I’m currently watching your series on Catastrotivity in an attempt to get inspired to create whatever the fuck I came here to create, besides all that I’ve already created as warmups. Had to chime in on this vid. I used to watch this movie on TV when I was a kid. Even though I couldn’t fully grasp it all, I would watch it every time it was on. Something about it pried at closed doors in my mind. I’ve now seen it many times as an adult and watched countless videos dissecting and analyzing it. Can’t get enough. I had a similar reaction to Bladerunner. Saw that in theaters after seeing ET and was sorely let down, but again those fingers pried at my mind’s closed doors. Now I marvel at it in a similar way. Lynch’s Dune is close behind. Anyhoo… glad you love this movie as I’m a huge new fan of your work, which keeps prying at the closed doors in my mind.

  • @DARTHON90210HSNAP
    @DARTHON90210HSNAP Před 3 lety +261

    We were assigned to watch this movie for Philosophy in Film: the Future of AI and Minds. Such an excellent break from engineering to expand my view in art and the influence of film. I’m forever grateful that I got to see this film and was forced to see it all, because there is so much to unpack and wonder. I’ve never seen a film before or since that has captured the thrilling feelings of space, AI, and the future of us as a race.

    • @Gwilo
      @Gwilo Před 3 lety +4

      it's weird. reading this comment, I can't not focus on the word 'us'. our meaning is a true wonder

    • @cyrilscordia9565
      @cyrilscordia9565 Před 2 lety +1

      my theorie
      Or Alien plot about the consciousness and self awarness gift ... and the course of event in the film
      -ALIEN plant an object on moon until man found it ( man have the tech to go there and found the "anomaly" is not a random thing )
      -Objet transmitting to jupiter ( man capture the destination)
      -Send an expedition to jupiter
      -Get an IA with more infos and "greed" than man could expect possible for a computer
      -Man run against computer for the first contact
      -etc

    • @enekaitzteixeira7010
      @enekaitzteixeira7010 Před rokem

      It's possible one of the dumbest, most absurd, dull, empty and pretentious movie I've ever seen. Overrated crap.

    • @34shuno
      @34shuno Před 9 měsíci

      gay

  • @byff69
    @byff69 Před 3 lety +83

    I love the quote from Ardrey. His book African Genesis was seminal to the production of the book and film. Clarke read it and passed on a copy to Kubrick; the "Dawn of Man" sequence was drawn directly from the chapter "The Bad Weather Animal."

  • @sam21462
    @sam21462 Před 3 lety +21

    I do so wish that someone who actually gets it would do a movie version of "Childhood's End".

    • @alexking8610
      @alexking8610 Před 4 měsíci

      Me too I loved that book and often think about it , I often wonder if the David Bowie song " all you pretty things " is about Childhood's End

    • @sam21462
      @sam21462 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@alexking8610 - I've never really been much of a Bowie fan so I was unfamiliar with the song you referenced. I just gave it a listen and omg if that was not about the book it certainly could/should have been.
      Wow!

    • @alexking8610
      @alexking8610 Před 4 měsíci

      @@sam21462 wonderful to hear from you , although you are not a Bowie fan I hope you have seen " The man who fell to Earth "
      David is brilliant as the Alien

  • @izlotus
    @izlotus Před 3 lety +13

    I watched this for the first time last year… absolutely BEAUTIFUL

  • @slopcier
    @slopcier Před 3 lety +226

    I found it a bit opaque without knowing Clarke's story but I listened to a dramatisation of 2001 on BBC radio and that gave me a much better understanding of the film. I didn't really like the film as a film before, just a technical exhibition of what could be done back then.
    I think I shall rewatch it again soon, this is a terribly good advert for it and I liked the idea of it being a modern myth, I've begun to believe recently that we should all aim for the future of mankind in a broader sense than we do as a species currently, I think a global goal or purpose would be useful

    • @MoonGables
      @MoonGables Před 3 lety +9

      Reading the book after having seen the film peels open the whole story, enhancing the mind blowing. Would recommend checking out!
      Also, the fact that both were being created simultaneously is wicked cool. Two slightly different versions of the same story! ✨

    • @PresidentialWinner
      @PresidentialWinner Před 3 lety +1

      Read the book first.

    • @TAJMofficial
      @TAJMofficial Před 2 lety +2

      @@PresidentialWinner Why would you? The movie was written first, and if anything I'd would recommend watching it before reading the book

    • @fernandoaguileracroasdaile6705
      @fernandoaguileracroasdaile6705 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TAJMofficialthe script of the movie and the book were written parallel to each other since Kubrick and Clarke worked together. The release of the book was after the film because Kubrick did not want the book release to overshadow the film release

    • @porsche911sbs
      @porsche911sbs Před 2 lety +3

      @@PresidentialWinner I disagree, I recommend watching the movie first. It's great to watch the movie and not know what's going on, allowing you to speculate. The book just tells you everything.

  • @murpieball3129
    @murpieball3129 Před 3 lety +302

    I am obsessed with 2001 and have seen it more than 20 times. There are so many hidden gems and layered meanings in this movie you wouldn't believe. I'd like to share one of my favorites.
    Hal did not kill out of self-preservation. He was following orders. The ironic thing about it is that the average viewer walks away from the film thinking it is a warning about the dangers of AI "waking up". Hal has no desire to preserve himself. A fine example is a hilarious, easy to miss, joke where hal tells dave that it would be a "simple matter" to replace the apparently not broken communications device that dave just retrieved. The funny part is the scene just before this, dave goes on a drawn-out and very uncomfortable trip outside of the ship where he must have been faced with his own mortality and fragility. Hovering in the void with no sound but his own oxygen supply and breath. But this task is a "simple matter" for a computer with no heartbeat or lungs or adrenaline. How could he understand? Hilarious.
    Anyway, When hal told dave and frank that "this sort of thing has cropped up before; and it has always been due to human error" he was SPOT ON. He was telling them as much as he was given permission to say. Hal was given instructions to keep the real jupiter mission a secret from the crew members. In fact he was programmed (understandably) to prioritize the mission over crewmates lives. When he calculated that they could be a risk to the mission, he was left with no choice. Thus, hal says, "I'M SORRY dave-". He really IS sorry but has no choice and is still prevented by his programming from revealing the truth. This was a chilling realization to me.
    The most chilling part is how easily humans miscalculate and want to smash hal with their primitive bone tool instead of look at who programmed the damn thing not to prioritze human life over a mission. Heywood Floyd's friendly smile fools even the audience.
    When he was being shut down, he wasn't begging for his life. He was still trying to accomplish his mission..Right after his daisy song, he used the last amount of energy he had to INFORM dave about the real mission. He was just a good computer doing his job. This could be a very advanced version of the watering hole fight. Man vs man using his best tools.
    Now you can get triggered too when people call the computer in the movie a murderer. :D

    • @silentedict4256
      @silentedict4256 Před rokem +31

      Damn, thats a good take. Both thematically and philosophically consistent.

    • @samct7015
      @samct7015 Před rokem +19

      what about the crew mates in the pods?

    • @Yavl
      @Yavl Před rokem +1

      Watch Bill Cooper’s Mystery Babylon #1 Dawn of Man, to learn what 2001 was really about

    • @retorikhal
      @retorikhal Před rokem +16

      ​@@samct7015 hal HATES among us

    • @ethanblair981
      @ethanblair981 Před rokem +26

      I strongly disagree with such an absolutist take. The mixture of human error programmed into him and 'human' error HAL commits himself is the precisely the point.
      We constantly hear HAL use emotive language e.g. 'I'm afraid I can't let you do that', instead of 'No'. What is the point of writing him this way? Is it as Bowman says: to make him easier for the crew to interact with. Well, in his last moments, HAL repeats 'I'm afraid' over and over again. The same emotive language, but this time in a wholly different light.
      HAL makes a mistake in Chess, depite reading Frank's lips to know his moves, HAL commits a horrific mistake of pride when claiming that, as no HAL unit has ever made a mistake, no HAL unit could ever make a mistake. He even displays sentimentality in his last moments, singing a song, symbolising his 'infancy'. I fail to see any reason that cold, calculating, bound-by-code HAL would opt to sing in his last moments. No, HAL is easily the most 'human' crewmember on Discovery, and his drive to survive is a key aspect of him that parallels the human need deliberately.

  • @skyluke9476
    @skyluke9476 Před 2 lety +4

    This is how I felt about the ending of the 100 as well. What makes humanity great is not the things we have achieved, but the spirit we have despite the things we have not achieved. We are either two stupid or too brilliant to give up, and that resilience is just like no matter how impossible the universe existing at all should be, it is, and so are we.

  • @charlessomerset9754
    @charlessomerset9754 Před 2 lety +6

    I was lucky enough to see it on the big screen at a film festival. It was like a pilgrimage for me. Completely enthralling.

  • @bobbyspivey3721
    @bobbyspivey3721 Před 3 lety +42

    My university football team plays the opening theme from this movie as the team takes the field and I just want to say it is hype as hell. That alone makes this a top tier movie.

    • @WardancerHB
      @WardancerHB Před 3 lety +18

      I want to respectfully point out that it's not "the opening theme from this movie" but a famous classical piece from 1896 by one of the great musical geniuses.
      (Also sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss)

    • @NoName-xc6cg
      @NoName-xc6cg Před 2 lety

      @@WardancerHB hahahahha

    • @joecruz4730
      @joecruz4730 Před 2 lety

      Hope you’re talking about the Gamecocks!!!

    • @bobbyspivey3721
      @bobbyspivey3721 Před 2 lety

      @@joecruz4730 I AM

    • @porsche911sbs
      @porsche911sbs Před 2 lety

      South Carolina's band was heavily influenced by the pop culture of the late 1960s. Not only do they play "Thus Spoke Zarathustra", popularized by 1968's _2001: A Space Odyssey,_ the fight song is an arrangement of "Step to the Rear" from 1967's _How Now, Dow Jones._

  • @kristofkovacs1742
    @kristofkovacs1742 Před 3 lety +11

    The last sentence of the book is even more perfect given that the same words are given both at the end of the first chapter, when the ape starts to master the environment, and then at the very end, when man becomes something else. "For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next. But he would think of something."

  • @benjamincross7801
    @benjamincross7801 Před 3 lety

    Hope your doing good Exurbia. Very happy to see you putting stuff out. Was worried about you not putting anything out for a while then looked you up and seen not so good things being said. Anyway thank you for what you do.

  • @maryrosekrouse4089
    @maryrosekrouse4089 Před rokem +9

    I might love the book even more! The biggest difference I think is that it is far more explicit about things that go unexplained in the film, and the story is beautiful either way.

  • @jennythewarrior8247
    @jennythewarrior8247 Před 3 lety +31

    You have no idea how excited I get when I get a notification from your channels

    • @Chevifier
      @Chevifier Před 3 lety +6

      ikr Exurb2a and GradeAUnderA completely different spectrums of content but rare gems

  • @charles_heres
    @charles_heres Před 3 lety +67

    Don't sleep on "The Tree of Life", and "Its Such a Beautiful Day" either, cause these will be some of the defacto existential moviegoing experiences of the past decade.

    • @tablelamp3326
      @tablelamp3326 Před 3 lety +6

      ISABD is really one of the best!! I wish more people knew about it

    • @SlamifiedBuddafied
      @SlamifiedBuddafied Před 3 lety +1

      It Such a Beautiful Day is a masterpiece that nowhere near enough people have seen or know about.

    • @cognitio278
      @cognitio278 Před 3 lety

      @Jonathan Vaccaro I assume you are taking about some of the CGI stuff, not all of it.
      The depiction of God as that candle flame like light was one of the most beautiful scenes I had seen in films.

    • @dorokjee
      @dorokjee Před 3 lety

      @Jonathan Vaccaro Interesting trivia is that they brought Douglas Trumbull out of retirement to supervise the special effects for Tree of Life, you can see his signature on the space sequences and such. His claim to fame was his pioneering work on 2001 of course. Tree of Life is an answer to 2001 in many ways (i.e. 2001 is the Tree of Knowledge). It is visual odyssey much like Kubrick's movie and is a mirror image in some ways: both movies explore on the notion of "God" or transcendence but from opposing angles.

  • @gothelvis3541
    @gothelvis3541 Před 3 lety +11

    It's not my favourite movie ever but I recognise it as the best movie ever made. There's really nothing that compares or comes close to the visuals, meaning and feel of it. Also, Kubrick is quite literally one of the greatest directors of all time so that helps.

  • @NewplayerXL
    @NewplayerXL Před 3 lety +8

    The issue about searching for a meaning in life is that we search for a greater purpose. The thing is... we do have purposes (eating, sleeping, etc) and so we're driven to satisfy them. But the universe? I don't think it has any purpose. Tis but a soup of all that is, was and will be.
    But also, I know nothing :D
    We're not made to comprehend, and I don't think we'll ever purposefully breed humans to eventually develop a conscience capable of such insight
    Maybe somewhere, somehow, an evolutionary pressure gives birth to such a conscience
    Edit: *Sips coffee

  • @philurbaniak1811
    @philurbaniak1811 Před 3 lety +27

    Terrific film effortlessly knocks the shit off fuzzy warbles of cinema, was ahead of its time in the 60's and still would be if it came out today 👍

    • @jeffdunstan
      @jeffdunstan Před rokem +2

      gen z would walk out of this move. waaaayyyyy to slow and boring

  • @MaxsLEGOStopMotion
    @MaxsLEGOStopMotion Před 3 lety +50

    You are pretty right I’d say, Kubrik uses so much visual storytelling to boost the feeling you can collect from the experience. Really what he was trying to accomplish is the possible conclusion of a being beyond comprehension helps out Dave in a way he can’t really understand. The ending shows the beings putting Dave in a room which seems normal put there is just something wrong about it, like humans putting animals in a habitat that they think how it is to them but it might seem just wrong to them.

    • @xcvsumextra
      @xcvsumextra Před 3 lety

      I’d say you are wrong, given the fact you spelt the man’s name wrong.

    • @MaxsLEGOStopMotion
      @MaxsLEGOStopMotion Před 3 lety +3

      @@xcvsumextra The thing is there is no ABSOLUTE truth to the meaning of this film, this is the one I’ve made and it does apply. That’s what Kubrick’s films are for. Me not writing one letter in his name doesn’t mean I’m wrong!

    • @xcvsumextra
      @xcvsumextra Před 3 lety +1

      @@MaxsLEGOStopMotion lol I know I was just playing

    • @User-ge7ni
      @User-ge7ni Před 2 lety

      Boring

    • @user-rc2gy5ik5n
      @user-rc2gy5ik5n Před 2 lety +4

      Actually there is an absolute truth in this film , at least by Kubrics point of view and your Comment is spot on. The room is a human zoo where Dave is observed, he also explained that Dave was "taken in by godlike entities; creatures of pure energy and intelligence." This is what the colors and hallucinations are supposed to represent . 'When they get finished with him, as happens in so many myths of all cultures in the world, he is transformed into some kind of super being and sent back to Earth, transformed and made into some sort of superman,” Kubrick concludes, alluding to the star baby. “We have to only guess what happens when he goes back. Kubric said that he tried to avoid explaining the film cause some fans didn't liked it since it ruins the thought provoking experience. Last buy not least Kubrick explained the god-like entities chose the famous bedroom (which he says is an “inaccurate replica of French architecture”) because “they had some idea of something that Bowman might think was pretty, but wasn’t quite sure.” Kubrick compares the bedroom in “2001” to the spaces where animals live at the zoo that “we think is their natural environment.”

  • @Edubarca46
    @Edubarca46 Před rokem +2

    Absolutely fantastic video and description of the.............yes, BEST MOVIE EVER MADE. You give an excellent description and study of this beautiful work of art. I first saw it in Cinerama when it was first released in 1969 here in Bogotá, Colombia. I impacted me so much I still think a lot of it after more than 50 years of watching it often. I have it in Laserdisc, DVD and also a downloaded version. Kubrick was a genius.

  • @anthonycook6213
    @anthonycook6213 Před 9 měsíci +1

    My favorite movie since I first saw it in 1968 and countless times on the big screen since. I think its greatest virtue is illustrating what the encounters with vastly advanced intelligence might be like without being told what is going on. The stories, novelization, sequels, interviews, etc. provide the backstory, but are not needed for the puzzling experience and riddle the movie immerses us in.

  • @oneiroagent
    @oneiroagent Před 3 lety +150

    I wish your book The Fifth Science
    was turned into a show or one of the stories included turned into a film in the style of 2001: A Space Odyssey

  • @wakatpr6583
    @wakatpr6583 Před 3 lety +33

    I didn’t find this movie that great, just didn’t feel anything.. but judging from your stories I think we don’t like the same thing. Which is fine cause I fucking love your essays regardless

    • @jyeviolegrace2143
      @jyeviolegrace2143 Před 2 lety

      Lol , do take note the artistic value tho ..Literally made in 2001 I'm not sure I can make a short film this good with modern day tech, And the plot was very interesting too .Tho I found it a bit slow still a solid 8/10

    • @comicaldays
      @comicaldays Před rokem +2

      @@jyeviolegrace2143 not sure if u implying that this film was made in 2001 but it was actually made in 1968, way before digital vfx was even a thing.

    • @jyeviolegrace2143
      @jyeviolegrace2143 Před rokem

      @@comicaldays wth bro they were mad talented

    • @MassHysteriaHD
      @MassHysteriaHD Před rokem +4

      @@jyeviolegrace2143 2001 lol 😂 Got a kick out of that one

  • @spork9255
    @spork9255 Před 2 lety +4

    I actually just watched this for the first time this summer and was astonished that this film literally came out before the first moon landing. It’s insane how close to realistic the visuals and ideas presented are. Not to mention the presence of AI and supercomputers literally decades before the world of modern computing technology. I personally did not like the weird drug trip ending, but the film’s construction is outright masterful.

  • @alekwyp
    @alekwyp Před 2 lety +10

    Damn you deleted the not eating meat video fast :(

  • @NotSomeGoy
    @NotSomeGoy Před 3 lety +46

    I recently watched this film again for the first time in years, but this time on acid. I can confirm everything you said in this video, and much more, is why it’s so incredible.

    • @thinkinyblinko6666
      @thinkinyblinko6666 Před 3 lety +14

      All Kubrick films were meant to be watched on a good dose of the cid. It's amazing how much LSD enhances art, especially music. Best experience j ever had with art was a 3.5gram mushroom trip in which I listened to Dark Side of the Moon with headphones and a blindfold on and WOW it was intense. Great Gig in the Sky gave me an out of body experience where I was all living things on earth past present and future simultaneously and oh man, I cried like a baby for a good hour because of that.

  • @Callie_Cosmo
    @Callie_Cosmo Před 3 lety +124

    2001 a space odyssey is the best movie in the same way death stranding is the best game, they both have incredible depth in charecter and concepts and everything like that, but to tell these incredibly complex and layered stories they have to present in a way thats, just, so, goddamn, mind meltingly, boring

    • @LAN2D
      @LAN2D Před 3 lety +17

      Agreed. I found it so amazing and awe inspiring, but why is there over an hour of classical music panning shots where barely anything happens. Either it's a boring film, or I just don't have the patience. I'm gonna rewatch it again when I'm like 35 and then I can choose.

    • @struanpeat5116
      @struanpeat5116 Před 3 lety +13

      This story could be told in half the time, not by cutting out *all* of the music and ambiance
      But by cutting out the sheer excesses of it
      You could use 5 minutes of ambiance and establishing shots for each scean instead of 20, keep all the drawn out tense moments for the immersion and emotion, keep the slow realization of the monkey inventing tools
      But cut the slow pans to 30 second shots, squash the arrival or traveling scenes down, make the spaceship montage a few quick shots instead of a slog.
      It would be just as good, achieve all of the same goals
      But movies have an expected length, and the director didn't want to include too many extrenuous plot lines to middle the goal.
      I don't blame the director, but I'd like a shorter cut I can appreciate having already seen the full version

    • @sb-jo2ch
      @sb-jo2ch Před 3 lety

      Couldn't have said it better

    • @Nosirrbro
      @Nosirrbro Před 3 lety +5

      @@struanpeat5116 I disagree personally, I really like the movie and I think if it had been made a fast paced movie like that it would have lost a lot of what made me love it. To each their own, but to me I want 2001 just how it is.

    • @Callie_Cosmo
      @Callie_Cosmo Před 3 lety

      @@DanLyndon alright well thats your opinion which your free to have, out of however many people saw this, 3 of them spent the time to comment their agreement so far, and 108 of them decided to hit like on it, again so far, so your opinion seems to be, well not as universal as you present it it your comment

  • @VapidVulpes
    @VapidVulpes Před 3 lety +2

    Known by our poems not our corpses! Fuuuucking so good!
    I work in audio and music production, and when I was a barista trying to get into the industry there was a physicist who would come in every Sunday. We would talk about his research (some particle physics thing) and I would fanboy about how badass what he was doing was.
    I told him one day that I was torn, I loved physics so much, I followed popular physicists like most cats followed rockstars, and I kinda thought what I wanted to get into was less "significant" or "valuable" than the work he did.
    I told him that he's the one who's gonna figure out how to talk to aliens! How is that not more important than making music! And, he looked me dead in the eye and asked "what the hell do you think we're gonna talk about?!"
    That was the last time I ever doubted that helping cats make music was something worth dedicating my life to 😎
    To? Too? Whatever lol

  • @MarcStollmeyer
    @MarcStollmeyer Před 11 měsíci +2

    This film was made right before we landed on the moon… right before we knew what the surface actually looked like. Right before we knew if regolith was solid rock, dirt, or quicksand… and despite that this movie’s depiction of the surface is very realistic.

    • @michaelschramm1064
      @michaelschramm1064 Před 10 měsíci

      Regolith is the precIse pedological term-though “dirt”, on the other hand, most certainly is not…

  • @sixgarden
    @sixgarden Před 3 lety +5

    it's a good day when existential turtle drops another banger video

  • @AngadSingh-bv7vn
    @AngadSingh-bv7vn Před 3 lety +9

    I am more and more convinced that our tiny brains need stories that stir us to motivate us to work together. I wish it wasn't so and we could all simply be 'rational and logical' but that idea will never get shit done.

  • @yuckyoned
    @yuckyoned Před rokem +2

    The music in the background of this video is Edvard Grieg - Anitra's Dance if anyone wanted to know

    • @fidomusic
      @fidomusic Před 4 měsíci

      I was thinking, "That sounds like something from Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite." Thanks for confirming.

  • @vampyrgeden2491
    @vampyrgeden2491 Před 2 lety +14

    why'd you remove the meat-free vid?

  • @Bigvs.Dickvs
    @Bigvs.Dickvs Před 3 lety +8

    Me, looking at Depression Turtle after smoking a massive spliff: _My god, it's full of stars_ !

  • @twtclikk7841
    @twtclikk7841 Před 3 lety +18

    wonderful, wonderful, wonderful! [in george st. geegland’s voice]
    always a delight to see a new video, and this one even more so because it means i get to put another movie on my watchlist

  • @crash2773
    @crash2773 Před 2 lety +1

    Always a pleasant surprise seeing you in my home page.

  • @forkoffgoogle
    @forkoffgoogle Před 3 měsíci +1

    I saw this movie for the first time in 1969 at a drive in theater when I was a kid, it was a double feature with the second movie being "Double Trouble" starring Elvis Presley. Those days are long gone.

  • @KiTho06
    @KiTho06 Před 3 lety +5

    Ok but what made this not qualify to be on your First Channel. Don't get me wrong its a great Video.
    Also, Love your Work you are an Inspiration for me. I know smoke Weed aswell.

  • @nonyllll1681
    @nonyllll1681 Před 3 lety +10

    Every time I watch your content I think about how good the acid must be in Bulgaria

  • @AlejandroGarcia-rn1sb
    @AlejandroGarcia-rn1sb Před 11 měsíci +4

    I have never seen a movie with such a confusing script and very little dialogue’s between the characters through more than 2 hours of film ,although this is why I feel this is the best film ever created. #1 Cinema doesn’t have to be literally so people don’t have trouble thinking on the opposite it should be hard so each person can create their own movie and come to their own conclusions (I can listen to hundreds of interpretations of this movie) #2 the very little dialogue’s center’s all the attention on the magnificent work of art this movie is (it was made 50 years ago 😮) and lastly and more important than anything the gift that is for us normal and mortal people to witness a movie like this and realize our life’s are change forever the moment we finish watching it. Only the best movie in history can do that 👏🏼

  • @Lunar_Pendragon
    @Lunar_Pendragon Před 2 lety +12

    A moment of silence for people who don't know about the accusations.

    • @User-ge7ni
      @User-ge7ni Před 2 lety

      ?

    • @feugera1796
      @feugera1796 Před 2 lety +3

      @@User-ge7ni i really didnt want to believe it at first but unfortunately he is an awful human beeing

    • @pennyroyalT
      @pennyroyalT Před 2 lety

      Accusations about who ??

    • @feugera1796
      @feugera1796 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pennyroyalT exurb1a is a unconsented sex haver (he censured the other word so others wont know) and with a аutistic women, its a shame his content is good.

    • @pennyroyalT
      @pennyroyalT Před 2 lety

      @@feugera1796 wtf…. that’s actually so messed up

  • @Robert-G
    @Robert-G Před 3 lety +6

    huh, look at that. That was very uplifting.
    Hope you’re doing well, space turtle man! :-)

  • @parzival27
    @parzival27 Před 3 lety +54

    2001 : A Space Odyssey was the most boring movie I have ever seen, but goddamn your video made me want to watch it again nonetheless

    • @1g.
      @1g. Před 3 lety +14

      It's one of my favorite movies of all time and I fell asleep when I watched it the first time

    • @67kingdedede
      @67kingdedede Před 3 lety +1

      play dark side of the moon the frame the intermission text pops up

    • @parzival27
      @parzival27 Před 3 lety

      @Nicholas Gillert Yeah, I saw one Fast and Furious movie and Transformers as a kid and they were okay

    • @User-ge7ni
      @User-ge7ni Před 2 lety

      @Nicholas Gillert goodfellas is better in every single way

    • @philippealain-art
      @philippealain-art Před 2 lety +1

      A movie with a real script (which means with a beginning, a development and a logical end) would be enough to be interesting.

  • @flexedburrito433
    @flexedburrito433 Před 3 lety +2

    My science teacher in 7th grade showed us this film. It was really confusing but also great at the same time. RIP Brother Prendergast

  • @derektafoya1152
    @derektafoya1152 Před 3 lety

    I've always enjoyed the contemplating that comes along with watching your videos . Thank you

  • @aaronpescasio
    @aaronpescasio Před 3 lety +7

    Is Clarke's novel worth reading? I haven't read it in spite of being a huge fan of sci-fi and this film. I have read and thoroughly enjoyed some stories of his though like Rendezvous with Rama.

    • @charles_heres
      @charles_heres Před 3 lety +2

      Oh boy I can't but recommend Childhood's End too for some existential theleological mindfuckery, add that to the Clarke's whishlist ;)

    • @NeoNorse
      @NeoNorse Před 3 lety +3

      Hmmm, good question. I read a lot of Clarke's stuff back in the day because it was available but have not revisited much of it since even though I pick up the occasional Heinlein piece. On the other hand Clarke essentially created the concept of the artificial orbiting satellite, bounced a radar signal off the moon during WWII because he and it were there, he being a RAF Radar Technician. He had both a Kaypro personal computer and a satlink long before anyone else even knew that they existed AND has the most overused SF quote of all time:
      “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
      -- Arthur C. Clarke

    • @ThoroughlyBaked
      @ThoroughlyBaked Před 3 lety +1

      Yes. I actually prefer the novel over the movie. There is also a sequel novel called 2010: Odyssey Two. Both are great reads.

    • @Bigvs.Dickvs
      @Bigvs.Dickvs Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, definitely read them, 2001 and its sequels: 2010 and the somewhat unknown and not much talked about 2061 and 3001.

  • @sjeunson1
    @sjeunson1 Před 3 lety +3

    I love this film. I’m 62 and am still in awe of its creation. But I’ll put this out there for what it’s worth. “Plan 9 From Out of Space” will also last the ages.
    For totally different and fascinating reasons.
    There I said it.

  • @hickorydragon8114
    @hickorydragon8114 Před 18 hodinami

    Dude, that was very inspiring at the end with the space Odyssey music playing and that great quotation about being risen apes and not fallen angels. Great stuff! Well done.

  • @stevejorfi9086
    @stevejorfi9086 Před rokem +1

    I saw this with my father when I was 11 the word here is Scope. The scope of this film back then was incredible. It was the first of its kind never seen before. 10 years ahead of its time.

  • @squidphus
    @squidphus Před 2 lety +11

    exurb1a could you clear up the allegations regarding you and Pieke Roelofs ?
    We love your videos, but i think a portion of us can't help but view them in a different tone now, ever since the rape accusations arised.

  • @misapheonix
    @misapheonix Před 2 lety +4

    Also Outer Wilds (not Worlds!) is a game with a very strong narrative, fixated almost entirely on finding its quivilent of the Obolisque

    • @_vyke8957
      @_vyke8957 Před 2 lety +2

      Outer wilds is such an experience

  • @Fernandolunatoro1
    @Fernandolunatoro1 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I don't mind the movie being long. The aesthetics of every scene are stunning. I have seen it about ten times now, and it still gets me. The images grab you and do not let go. He is the greatest movie maker ever, by far. He is really in a class all on his own.

  • @danlott2814
    @danlott2814 Před 2 měsíci +1

    As someone who "doesn't get" 2001: A Space Odyssey, I like this review of it the best of any I've seen so far. Helps me appreciate it more. Well done.

    • @HankAndStuff64
      @HankAndStuff64 Před 16 dny

      This right here is what I'm talking about, people really gotta recognize that just because they don't get it doesn't mean they have the authority to say it's bad

  • @TravisGilbert
    @TravisGilbert Před 3 lety +16

    I was having a good day. But now it's a great day

  • @jayramaerodriguez3886
    @jayramaerodriguez3886 Před 2 lety +5

    I have always loved this movie since I first saw it, wide-eyed at the idea that there is something to discover beyond this movie. I read the book and I loved it even more. Thank you for this tribute.

  • @skrsojmpz1503
    @skrsojmpz1503 Před 3 lety

    Only watched this video because I liked the title, originally didn't think I'd like the subject but watched anyways. Your message was surprisingly good, well done.

  • @BarefootBeekeeper
    @BarefootBeekeeper Před rokem

    I saw 2001 in the Leicester Square Odeon when it opened, on a school trip organized by an unusually enlightened English master. It was shown on a huge Cinemascope screen with full Dolby stereo and it blew me away. It loses a lot on a small screen and I wish I could replicate those original conditions for another viewing.

  • @holyravioli5795
    @holyravioli5795 Před 2 lety +7

    2001 a space odyssey, the perfect sleep aid

    • @kolo_5705
      @kolo_5705 Před 2 lety +2

      average mcu fan

    • @holyravioli5795
      @holyravioli5795 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kolo_5705 I don't like the MCU that much, the early movies were pretty cool but all the spin offs are getting dumb

    • @kolo_5705
      @kolo_5705 Před 2 lety

      @@holyravioli5795 so what mcu movies do you like?

    • @holyravioli5795
      @holyravioli5795 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kolo_5705 idk, the first iron man was pretty good, enjoyed avengers 1 and thought age of ultron was pretty neat.

  • @aidanmcgowan1486
    @aidanmcgowan1486 Před 3 lety +6

    "Ma! The Turtle Man's back again!"

  • @keithtinkler4073
    @keithtinkler4073 Před rokem

    What strikes me now about 2001 - that we first saw in 1968, was that close to the end scene where the room of an ordinary door is opened to reveal raging flames as if inside the Sun - but being untouched by them .... I see now a revelation - then- of the Tic-Tac tricks of plunging into the sea and being entirely independent of 'our' space time. It took ~ 55 years for me to grasp the meaning of that scene!

  • @lyndonfisher299
    @lyndonfisher299 Před rokem +1

    Agree with your comments. I saw it when I was 9 and didn't understand all of it but it was scary, including Strauss sound-track. Watched it again later and saw its true value. Absolute genius. One truly tour-de-force movie.

  • @BLUE-BEAN
    @BLUE-BEAN Před 2 lety +11

    @exurb2a why did you remove the video Ongoing meat-free?

  • @2wicetheWise
    @2wicetheWise Před 3 lety +32

    2001: A Space Odyssey has the greatest villain ever

    • @BrendanCasey
      @BrendanCasey Před 5 měsíci

      Exactly what my 18yo son said after we watched it last night!

  • @bearsmith3655
    @bearsmith3655 Před 10 dny

    I first saw 2001 when I was a teenager in the 1980’s. I’m 53 now and still love watching this movie. Amazing how timeless and modern this movie is even in 2024.

  • @scottageindustries
    @scottageindustries Před 3 lety

    My dad took me to see this in 70mm glory on an enormous screen when it was re-released in Australia probably 1975 when I was about 4 years of age,. I think It is safe to say 2001 made a indelible impression upon me. Thank you Dad, such an amazing furst film to see.

  • @goblin7404
    @goblin7404 Před 2 lety +13

    Please reupload your meat-free video I didn't get a chance to watch it :(

  • @justink5585
    @justink5585 Před 3 lety +6

    Dipped into a bit of Clockwork at the end 😄 not gonna complain! I am currently on the journey of reading every novel that Kubrick based his films on (or in the case of 2001, was written in tandem), and watching all of the films once I finish a novel! Some of the greatest novels and films I ave ever seen/read, although still only about halfway through.

  • @MikePuorro
    @MikePuorro Před rokem +1

    1:25 Having seen 2001 a million times, the following description has me in stitches.

  • @tylerfaubert1201
    @tylerfaubert1201 Před rokem

    I remember watching this in my sci fi class and even though some scenes have absolutely nothing going on, it’s still a great masterpiece (plus it has an intermission segment which I thought was funny)

  • @Chevifier
    @Chevifier Před 3 lety +3

    Hes Alive!!!

  • @67kingdedede
    @67kingdedede Před 3 lety +7

    *IT EVEN SYNCS PERFECTLY WITH DARK SIDE OF THE MOON!* Start the album the very frame the Intermission text pops up. The more spot on you are, the more spot on the sync is. Good luck

  • @rationalthought846
    @rationalthought846 Před 9 měsíci

    100% agree with everything you say- for me a flawless work of art. This movie made me become an Aerospace Engineer. I saw it opening day when I was four. I was totally engrossed (though I would not have understood much of it). I remember being intensely happy during intermission when my parents told me that the movie was not over! The movie is clearly viewable on two levels- unconscious (which would have appealed to a young boy) and intellectual which appeal to an adult. The music is brilliant, bold, graceful or disturbing depending on the scene. Agree that some of the movie is cosmic horror- the entire moon bus and the monolith scenes are eerie and disturbing (I had nightmares for years afterwards). Part of the appeal to four-year-old me is that despite the horror of the void humans are controlling their emotions and are thus worthy of the next evolutionary step. The bone that transfers into a spacecraft which is apparently a nuclear weapon, indicates that violence is still possible, but the key point is the weapons are not being used and Kubrick backed out of making them a part of the movie ending. To conquer space will require power (including nuclear) on a tremendous scale and the movie shows people able to control this power. Even the Russian/Floyd interaction is cold but controlled and respectful. The fact that David Bowman does not break down in despair when he is trapped outside Discovery was reassuring to a young boy who was watching a movie that was in many ways terrifying. Finally the movie could still have fumbled the end (like showing the aliens) but it aced it with the final transition and the star child! I recently watched a 4k disc on a 77 inch OLED TV (in a dark room) with a good sound system and it blew me away (I had not seen it for many years and the last time was off a standard DVD). Space was never more gorgeous, and I felt the same sense of wonder of four-year-old me. Made me happy to be alive!

  • @davidferrara1105
    @davidferrara1105 Před 3 lety

    It's a good one! Can't get over how good the Star Child looks at the end and it's only two years younger than I am.
    György Sándor Ligeti's music is awesome ( Monolith music)

  • @mc5622
    @mc5622 Před 2 lety +3

    The fact you love this film as much as I do has made me appreciate my own taste more. Thank you for putting the wonder this film instilled in me into words, better than I ever could.

  • @elijahrunyon3347
    @elijahrunyon3347 Před rokem +3

    Yes, but whenever you jump ahead a million years in the movie it takes that long in real life.

  • @snoop4470
    @snoop4470 Před 2 lety

    A movie made 18 years before I was born. I love it. I love the slow pace. It's amazing that it still holds up all these years later. Kubrick was a master film maker.

  • @clark1066
    @clark1066 Před 3 lety

    This book and Childhoods End always seemed similar to me, always absolutely loved both of them.