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Author Topic: American Icons: ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’
Ed Gordon
Film Handler

Posts: 31
From: Mountlake Terrace, WA, USA
Registered: May 2019


 - posted 06-12-2019 11:07 AM      Profile for Ed Gordon   Email Ed Gordon   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
“My distrust of technology comes entirely from that movie.”

In May of 2019, Kurt Andersen, the host of Studio 360 did a two part retrospective on 2001: A Space Odyssey. Below is Kurt's introduction. Links to the podcasts can also be found below the introduction.

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quote:
A half-century after it was released, “2001: A Space Odyssey” is still supplying light amid the darkness. It’s considered not just a great film but an important and influential work of modern art. An astonishing marriage of sound and image, man and machine, there’s nothing simple or obvious — nothing monolithic — about it.
With no help from cinematic CGI, its vision of the 21st century and beyond seems uncannily prescient and profound. Before we’d even landed on the moon, “2001” showed us how privately operated spacecraft would one day take us there.
Life’s biggest mystery — our place in the universe — would be an empty question were it not for director Stanley Kubrick and author Arthur C. Clarke’s vision of what comes next. There is no “Star Wars” without the Star Gate, no “Close Encounters” or “Contact” without the monolith. HAL was a perfect preview/early warning of Siri and Alexa and our AI-dominated near future.
In Part One we look at the film’s origins in 1960s New York when Kubrick and Clarke first met. We visit Kubrick’s former penthouse apartment, where the two believed they saw a UFO, and then recall their trip to the 1964 World’s Fair. We explore the unorthodox production and try to discover how “2001” went from opening night bomb to counterculture icon. We’ll hear from effects wizard Doug Trumbull, actor Keir Dullea, film critic Carrie Rickey, "2001" scholars Michael Benson ("Space Odyssey"), Piers Bizony ("The Making of Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey'") and Jarice Hanson, as well as superfan Tom Hanks, who has seen the movie more than 200 times.

Links:
American Icons: ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ — Part One and Part Two
https://www.pri.org/programs/studio-360/american-icons-2001-space-odyssey

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