The opening sequence of scenes introduces the
power of an alien monolith, which appears to a group of ape-like
men. When they touch it, they are given the knowledge to metamorphous
into thinking beings who are now able to kill animals for meat,
and develop weapons to defeat other ape tribes. With a clever
transition, the audience is transported to the future, where a
second strange alien monolith is found again, this time by astronauts
on the moon.
When it emits a strange radio signal which is
directed towards Jupiter, a space mission is launched toward Jupiter
to check things out. On board, are Dave Bowman(Keir Dullea), and
other astronauts, all under the guidance of a sophisticated computer,
Hal 9000. As their space odyssey continues, Hal 9000 is suspected
of malfunctioning when mishaps happen while they travel through
space. Bowman must make some hard choices, which result in high
adventure and new discoveries.
It is worth noting that the most memorable character in the film
isn't human: the Hal 9000. Voiced by Douglas Rain, Hal's intimate,
insinuating voice is disturbing because he sounds so human. Supposedly,
Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke came up with HAL because these three
letters are the ones that come before IBM. Pretty cool, eh?
The film's script generated several popular phrases, most particularly
"Open the pod bay door, Hal." The ground breaking script
was by Sci-Fi literary great, Arthur C. Clarke, and director Kubrick.
My favorite scene is the strange, eye-popping light show that
the audience gets to see, when an astronaut enters a huge alien
artifact orbiting Jupiter. Created by FX whiz, Douglas Trumbull,
the sequence is wild, strange, and unforgettable. "2001"
won an Oscar for its Special Effects.
A sequel, "2010," debuted in 1984. As far as sequels
go, it was surprisingly good.
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