Originally posted by Leo Enticknap
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2001: A Space Odyssey -- should I watch it?
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Maybe it's hypocritical, maybe it's hypocritical the other way around, but I try to somewhat isolate the artist from his or her work, just to avoid all those moral dilemmas, because otherwise, I could never listen to any Michael Jackson song again. I couldn't watch any movie in which Harvey Weinstein was somehow involved, I couldn't watch any movie featuring Kevin Spacey. I couldn't look at any works of Leonardo da Vinci, knowing that he most likely had child sex slaves living with him (which, back then, was actually more or less considered normal...). The list goes on and on. Even the dirty work the Nazis did back then, did eventually have some medical merits. Should we discard this knowledge because of the source? I would say no, but I'm by no means sure about that answer.Last edited by Marcel Birgelen; 04-05-2022, 01:55 AM.
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I wouldn't watch it unless it IS in 70mm.. Seeing it in any other format IS a complete waste of time... The film format is at least half the show. Ya read me Dave?.Last edited by Mark Gulbrandsen; 04-05-2022, 10:49 AM.
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Be sure to check out the pictures in the warehouse on this site from when I worked with a group in chicago to run it outdoors in Lincoln Park, in 70mm, on a 70 foot wide screen. Five - 4675's behind the screen, about 20 JBL surrounds on portable stands and ten Intersonics servo drive subwoovers. The low frequency was so loud it rattled the windows in a high rise almost a block away. NASA still uses groups of these subs to levitate test objects in wind tunnels. We did three nights of films and the turn outs were great. Did I mention we used a DP- 70? We also ran Ran, but in 35mm on my Simplex XL with the high speed intermittent... we also ran one of the surviving 70mm prints of Days Of Heaven.
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That is where I first saw it as well. It does not look like the Cinerama will reopen. I wonder what will happen to that new 70mm print of Battle of the Bulge that Paul Allen bought.Originally posted by Brian D. Whitish View PostIts my favorite movie of all time. Thankfully got to see it many times in 70mm at Seattle's Cinerama. So awesome on that big screen.
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2001 is very long and there are some extended boring parts but I'd say watch it. Reel 9, the psychedelic stuff, really doesn't add much and the effects didn't age well. The ending makes zero sense. But worth seeing once for sure. As a teenager I saw it (glorious 70mm in a former Cinerama house) with an older (30s?) woman friend of the family. I was amazed, she did not like it at all.
Science wasn't ignored - I think the weightless scenes were well done and the movie doesn't use the nonsensical "artificial gravity" copout seen so commonly in SF movies and TV shows. And HAL singing is great.
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Absolutely watch it at least once! It would have even greater meaning today if you had seen it in the early release years and the memories return. I've been involved with 70mm showings in Detroit and see something new in it and have lasting impressions each time.
Paul Finn
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Have to agree with this. It's one of my favourite films, but I find it a complete snooze-fest in anything other than 70mm.Originally posted by Mark Gulbrandsen View PostI wouldn't watch it unless it IS in 70mm.. Seeing it in any other format IS a complete waste of time... The film format is at least half the show. Ya read me Dave?.
Yeah, that was quite an experience. I flew out to Seattle to catch it during one of their Cinerama festivals. I went along to a matinée showing alone while the disinterested missus went shopping, then managed to persuade her to join me for a late night showing the same day. Thankfully she loved it.Originally posted by Brian D. Whitish View PostIts my favorite movie of all time. Thankfully got to see it many times in 70mm at Seattle's Cinerama. So awesome on that big screen.
I've heard the claim that Nolan used the "original 1968 audio" before, but it definitely isn't the same. I've seen original 1968 prints a few times, including a couple of screenings of a fairly battered print at the Bradford Cinerama theatre where the cannisters were marked "MGM Studio Copy". The original six-track sound had much more aggressive use of the surround track: the ape noises when the camera was positioned between the two warring groups of apes, the "blue ladies cashmere sweater has been found" line only coming from the rear and most notably the voice of HAL booming out from all of the speakers. I read somewhere that Nolan might have mistakenly used an inferior remix that was done in the '80s.Originally posted by Jim Cassedy View PostI notice that that the DCP version currently circulating contains two versions with different sound tracks.
1) A "Digitally Restored" Audio Version,
2) "Original 1968 Audio" Version, For the 2018 restoration, supervised by Christopher Nolan.
- A friend who is running the DCP version of "MMI" next week sez he's been instructed to run the
"1968" audio version
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There is a cemetery along one of the back roads that I frequently travel and there is a plain, rectangular gravestone visible from the road as you drive by.
It says, "Bowman," and nothing else.
Many times, when I drive by, I say, "My God! It's full of stars!"
I often wonder whether the family of the deceased did that on purpose.
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So, film fans, here's a question for you: What, exactly IS the aspect ratio on the 35mm 2001 prints?
I ran a show this morning ("Scope") and I had at least a foot of black space between each side of the
picture and my masking. It's been at least 7 years or more since I ran this in 35mm, but I don't recall
the scope image being undersized. Whatsupwiththat?Last edited by Jim Cassedy; 04-09-2022, 05:25 PM.
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