Sunday, September 18, 2011

A Long-Delayed Reaction to 2001: A Space Odyssey

Stirling,

Because you're such a big movie buff, I always assume that if I see a classic movie, you've seen it before as well. I'm particularly hoping that that's the case with respect to 2001: A Space Odyssey, which Katy and I watched this afternoon for the first time. I'm hoping you can give me some guidance as to what I should be thinking about this film. I came to the movie shockingly unspoilt—other than knowing that there would be monkeys, monoliths, and a computer saying, "I'm sorry, Dave—I'm afraid I can't do that," I had no preconceptions. Here's what I got out of it.

The movie is divided into four essentially self-contained episodes. First, we see prehistoric apes discovering a monolith, which does something—it's not clear what—after which they discover tools, weapons, and warfare. Second, we see a sequence in which we learn that modern, space-faring humans have discovered a similar monolith on the moon, which does something—it's not clear what. Third is the most pop-culturally familiar sequence, in which an astronaut named Dave, in the midst of a mission to Jupiter, faces off against a homicidal artificial intelligence, HAL9000, his ship's onboard computer. Fourth and finally comes a sequence, by turns psychedelic and then just avant-garde, in which Dave reaches Jupiter, discovers another monolith in its orbit, hallucinates (?) for a while, and then finds himself in what appears to be Versailles, except with fluorescent lights for floors, for—I'm guessing here—basically eternity, after which, another monolith does something—it's not clear what—involving Dave being reincarnated as a galactic fetus.

The plot is sort of hazy to me, as you can probably tell. Luckily, I get the feeling that the plot isn't really at the center of the film. The points of connection, in terms of plot, between any of the four episodes are pretty limited. There's no plot point in common between the ape-episode and any of the later ones, unless you count the bare fact that monoliths figure heavily in all of them. The moon- and Jupiter-episodes are connected, we learn fairly late, by the fact that Dave's mission to Jupiter was motivated by the discovery of the moon-monolith. And the only plot connection between the psychedelic episode and the rest of the film is that Dave is present. To put it simply, these aren't chapters in a book—they're short stories in an anthology. Rather than being plot-driven, the important connections between episodes are thematic—themes of humanity, intelligence, and technology are present throughout, as are those pesky monoliths.

But even as I get this, I have to admit that I don't have a clue what's being said about humanity and intelligence and technology and monoliths. Worse yet, I'm not even sure I've identified the relevant questions that I'm intended to take away. In the end, the plot is so loose, and the symbology so underspecified, that I feel I'm just flailing around in the dark. Still, I have to pose the following questions:
  1. Are the monoliths alien artifacts, as most of the characters seem to suppose? Or are they naturally occurring objects, somehow (spiritually? metaphysically?) connected to the origin of the universe (and its rebirth)?
  2. What are the monoliths doing? What exactly happens to the apes who come into contact with the monolith, that wouldn't have happened to them otherwise? (I mean, is it completely clear that tool-use and warfare are direct effects of the monolith? Are the tool-using apes even the same apes who encountered the monolith, or are they their distant descendants?) What happens to the folks on the moon as they gather around the monolith for a photograph? We're never told. What is happening to Dave when he encounters the monolith in Jupiter's orbit? (This question could be answered either literally or figuratively—it just needs to be answered). What is happening to Dave when he encounters the monolith on his deathdbed? (Ditto).
  3. Is HAL malfunctioning? I find it somewhat more terrifying to imagine that he's in perfect working order.
  4. If HAL is malfunctioning, what is the cause of his malfunction? "Human error," HAL's own diagnosis, seems too trite an answer for this film. All of the other episodes, besides the one in which HAL appears, deal with matters of cosmic significance. To me, there's something absurd about allowing the HAL-episode—the film's indisputable (right?) centerpice—to be contingent upon a programming error by some unknown codemonkey back on earth. Could the malfunction be monolith-related? I ask this in part because the HAL-episode is the only episode in which no monolith appears. That is, the monoliths are conspicuous by their absence from the HAL-episode. But, from a plot standpoint, how would it be possible for a monolith to cause the malfunction?
  5. Is HAL a conscious being? Does he have real emotions? Even though the movie explicitly poses these questions, they're never answered, nor, upon reflection, do they seem particularly important thematically. Is the whole issue a total red herring?
  6. How literally is the final episode supposed to be taken? Completely literal? Are some parts of it just Dave's hallucinations, and if so, which parts? Or, by the final scene, are we being presented with something that is not the literal experience of any conscious being? For me, I suspected that by the end, we'd traveled even farther beyond the confines of plot than we were before, such that I was no longer even being told a story. Instead, it seemed to me that the movie was just saying things with images. But I don't know what it was saying.
That final sequence, in luminescent, green Versailles, was at the very least a striking bit of film-making. There's something terrifying about it. I remember, beside me on the couch, Katy saying at one point, "Oh, God, he's turning around. He's gonna see Dave. Wait. Where's Dave? Oh no, that's Dave, isn't it?" The mindfuckery of it is off the charts.

And the long minutes without dialogue. For ten, twenty, thirty minutes at a time, you'll hear nothing but apes caterwauling, or classical music as space vessels spin, or an astronaut's deep breathing as he's out for a spacewalk, or unintelligible human voices rising to a crescendo, in what seems for a long time to be hell, and still, at the end of the film, might be. There's emotional intensity to go around.

And then there's just the technological aspects. The fact that Stanley Kubrick, in the late 1960's, built a bunch of giant hamster-wheels so that he could give the audience a realistic look at how weightlessness and artificial gravity would look. Impressive stuff.

But here's what really got me in the end. To me, it seems that if this movie had been made ten years ago, we wouldn't be talking about it today—it would have been forgotten by now. It wouldn't be a sci-fi classic, remembered fondly by the former adolescents of the 60's and 70's—instead it would have been ghetto-ised as an art house film, so that most people would never have seen it or even heard of it. You'd never be able to assume it as a part of the pop cultural vernacular. What strikes me as most hopeful is that there was ever a time when a large number of Americans would have wanted to be as intellectually and aesthetically challenged by a film as they must have wanted to be in 1968, to have made 2001 such a cultural touchstone.

11 comments:

  1. Goddamn this movie, Ryan. Damn this movie back to the psychedelic technicolor dreamcoat from whence it came!

    I actually saw the sequel to this movie first. Yes, there's a sequel. Caught it last year on AMC. It's simply called "2010". I liked it. I then checked out "2001". I HATED it.

    2010 is more of an actual movie. It factors in the black monoliths and focuses on 2001's 3rd chapter, the HAL & Dave, and trying to find out just what the hell happened out there.

    2001 is....I just don't know. It feels more like a 2 and a half hour long [dated] tech reel. Back in 1968, I'm sure it blew minds. But, in 2010 (the year, not the movie), I'm wondering why I'm staring at a slooowly moving spacecraft docking with a space station for 10 minutes.

    And that fourth chapter. With Dave and...wherever the fuck he was. I'm sure there was a clear reason for it. Like Dave being stuck inside some sort of alien purgatory. But it was presented via cliched 60's freakouts and a drug-fueled director.

    I wanted to like this movie. A sort of detective movie in space. To discover the meaning behind the black monoliths. It's just all that extra stuff thrown in that really drags it down.

    Your questions, many can be answered by the sequel, "2010". 2010 doesn't leave much in the air and is pretty clear cut, up to a certain point that is, in providing answers. That being the multiple black monoliths, Jupiter, Dave, and HAL.

    So do you want me to start busting knowledge (as such I would re-familairize myself with 2010 first) or would you prefer to check out the sequel for yourself and we go from there?

    (I'm gonna get some sleep and see if I can't post a more "helpful" comment tomorrow)

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  2. Don't spoil me. I'll check out the sequel and then we'll continue.

    I'm actually surprised you disliked it so much. Though on that note, I was skimming the Wikpedia page as I wrote last night, where it was mentioned that modern audiences seem to have a bigger problem with the slow pacing than did the people of 1968.

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  3. I had suuuuuch a problem with the slow pacing (Then again, I was on day 3 of a sinus headache, so....).

    I think I agree with all of Ryan's questions, and we will have to check out the sequel. I don't know if I necessarily felt that the questions needed answering so much as I just sort of wondered how the first section and the fourth section were part of the narrative as all. (Perhaps my mistake is assuming that there even WAS a narrative.)

    I actually enjoyed the parts with HAL and Dave and Frank, although watching spaceships dock to The Blue Danube or whatever-the-hell was actually quite frustrating. I found the computer to be genuinely frightening. The idea that HAL had killed Frank and the other three scientists/astronauts, so the only human left alive was Dave and HAL was doing his best to destroy him for the good of the mission, was creepy as all hell to me. The continuing close-up shots of HAL's "eye" with nothing else happening gave me the chills. It shouldn't have freaked me out, but it did. As we've learned from me before, I'm a sucker for the 'loneliness' horror trope. (Dawn of the Dead remake, anyone?) That really worked for me, to be honest. And even the end, after the hour-long "timewarp" sequence, with Dave in Disco!Versailles sort of worked for me. It was creepy and I didn't know what was happening and I didn't know why it was happening.

    I don't know. Parts of it I thought were genuinely cool. Parts of it I thought were genuinely insane. Some of those parts were the same. I am going to add the sequel to my netflix queue now (assuming I can) and maybe come back with something else more intelligent/interesting to say.

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  4. I believe my problem with 2001 is my own expectations and assumptions towards the movie due to the "culteral touchstone" that is 2001 as well as having watched 2010 first.

    2010 deals with the aftermath of the events of 2001 and continues the journey started 9 years ago. I liked what I saw and went into 2001 expecting more of the same. I didn't get that. What I expected (HAL/Dave conflict) was only a small part of a much larger film that meanders around with seemingly no focus and little direction.

    2001 creates questions but forgets to supply some, if any, answers. That said, I don't necessarily NEED a movie to do all the work for me and throw the answers in my face. 2001, though, doesn't offer much information either. The movie gains my interest in the black monoliths, but fails to offer me information, or even clues, of where I should be heading.

    The HAL/Dave portion was certainly the high point of the movie. I found it to be every bit what Katy described above. It was creepy. Unnerving. Tense. And all within the confines of cold, infinite space.

    I actually got in a mini-argument with an ex sorta-GF (complicated!) of Tommy's about HAL and his actions/intentions back in Feb. But my memory's fuzzy on the details as I try to think back on it.

    Some advice for you both, don't make the same mistake going into 2010 that I made going into 2001. 2010 is a less polarizing film, so you got it easier in that sense. But try not to, beforehand, over-imagine 2010's answers to 2001's broad questions.

    Let me know when you guys are close to watching 2010. I'll give it a rewatch as well along with sections of 2001.

    "My God, it's full of stars!"

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  5. I caught 2001 on TV a few years ago, and I was pretty impressed. On the other hand, I only remember HAL and Dave, and don't remember any of that other crap you guys are talking about. Perhaps they edited out the suck for TV?

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  6. I don't think it's quite fair to talk about editing the "suck" from the movie. I don't think the movie sucked at all really. It was weird and frustrating, and it was slow and bloated by any modern standard, but it wasn't a bad movie, I didn't think.

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  7. I actually really liked the slow pacing most of the time. Fast-paced movies are ironically kind of boring.

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  8. Sean,

    Question: could you identify a movie that was boring because it was too fast-paced? Preferably something you were excited to see, but left the theatre disappointed, and wishing it had been slower. I believe that such films exist, but I'm not coming up with any. I'm curious which ones you have in mind.

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  9. I cannot think of any in particular, because none of them made much of an impression on me, but they're all fast-paced action movies, most with at least one car chase. Can't think of any that I was that excited to see, because those aren't usually my favorite kind of movie. I'm tempted to say the latest Die Hard movie and maybe one or more of the Bourne movies might have qualified, but I can't really remember.

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  10. Weirdly, Sean, after I posted my question, I thought of the Bourne films as a possible answer. Lots and lots of action, but in a week or so, I could barely remember that I'd been to see it.

    On a different note, if anybody was doubting the continuing pop cultural significance of 2001, a viewing of last night's Community premier ought to fix that for you.

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