Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Kubrick and 2001: A Space Odyssey

When people ask me what my favourite film is I have a conditioned response, which is 2001. I love many films but this one has indeed affected my life the greatest, in the ways I think, what I love about art and life. After having seen the film numerous times I decided to read the novelization of the script, which was written both by Kubrick and Clarke with the novel being written only by Arthur C Clarke, one of the most amazing writers and thinkers of my generation and the one before it. The novel explained the film in a way I don't think I would have ever understood if I had watched the film many more times over without reading the book. It made the film more alive for me. It explained the monolith and its role in the film. The ending which is a mystery to most but not as much so if you read the novel.

here is a quote from Stanley Kubrick on the deeper meaning within the film:

"The God concept is at the heart of this film. It's unavoidable that it would be, once you believe that the universe is seething with advanced forms of intelligent life. Just think about it for a moment. There are a hundred billion stars in the galaxy and a hundred billion galaxies in the visible universe. Each star is a sun, like our own, probably with planets around them. The evolution of life, it is widely believed, comes as an inevitable consequence of a certain amount of time on a planet in a stable orbit which is not too hot or too cold. First comes chemical evolution -- chance rearrangements of basic matter, then biological evolution.

Think of the kind of life that may have evolved on those planets over the millennia, and think, too, what relatively giant technological strides man has made on earth in the six thousand years of his recorded civilization -- a period that is less than a single grain of sand in the cosmic hourglass. At a time when man's distant evolutionary ancestors were just crawling out of the primordial ooze, there must have been civilizations in the universe sending out their starships to explore the farthest reaches of the cosmos and conquering all the secrets of nature. Such cosmic intelligences, growing in knowledge over the aeons, would be as far removed from man as we are from the ants. They could be in instantaneous telepathic communication throughout the universe; they might have achieved total mastery over matter so that they can telekinetically transport themselves instantly across billions of light years of space; in their ultimate form they might shed the corporeal shell entirely and exist as a disembodied immortal consciousness throughout the universe.

Once you begin discussing such possibilities, you realize that the religious implications are inevitable, because all the essential attributes of such extraterrestrial intelligences are the attributes we give to God. What we're really dealing with here is, in fact, a scientific definition of God. And if these beings of pure intelligence ever did intervene in the affairs of man, so far removed would their powers be from our own understanding. How would a sentient ant view the foot that crushes his anthill -- as the action of another being on a higher evolutionary scale than itself? Or as the divinely terrible intercession of God?"

So the monolith is essentially a calling card belonging to a highly evolved species that is just checkin in on the whole universe to see what is going on everywhere. Amazing film, wonderful story. 

Stanley Kubrick. 

Enough said. 


Not really but that is all I am saying for now.


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