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Revision as of 23:31, 10 February 2008 by Groupthink (talk | contribs) (wp:v says that I can remove invalid/unreliable ref'd material any time I want to)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Since its premiere in 1968, 2001: A Space Odyssey has been analyzed and interpreted by multitudes of people ranging from professional movie critics to amateur writers and science fiction fans. The director of the film, Stanley Kubrick, wanted to leave the film open to philosophical and allegorical interpretation, purposely presenting the final sequences of the film without the underlying thread being apparent.
Openness to interpretation
Kubrick encouraged people to explore their own interpretations of the film, and refused to offer an explanation of "what really happened" in the movie, preferring instead to let audiences embrace their own ideas and theories. In a 1968 interview with Playboy magazine, Kubrick stated:
- "You're free to speculate as you wish about the philosophical and allegorical meaning of the film—and such speculation is one indication that it has succeeded in gripping the audience at a deep level—but I don't want to spell out a verbal road map for 2001 that every viewer will feel obligated to pursue or else fear he's missed the point."
However, neither of the two creators equated openness to interpretation with meaninglessness or incomprehensibility, even though Arthur C. Clarke implied as much when said, shortly after the film's release, "If anyone understands it on the first viewing, we've failed in our intention". When told of the comment, Kubrick said "I believe he made it facetiously. The very nature of the visual experience in 2001 is to give the viewer an instantaneous, visceral reaction that does not – and should not – require further amplification." When told that Kubrick had called his comment 'facetious', Clarke responded
- "I still stand by this remark, which does not mean one can't enjoy the movie completely the first time around. What I meant was, of course, that because we were dealing with the mystery of the universe, and with powers and forces greater than man's comprehension, then by definition they could not be totally understandable. Yet there is at least one logical structure – and sometimes more than one – behind everything that happens on the screen in "2001", and the ending does not consist of random enigmas, some simpleminded critics to the contrary."
Clarke's novel as explanation
Arthur C. Clarke's novel, published after the film's release, but begun in May 1964 and substantially completed by December 1965 when the film was in production, seems to explain the ending of the film more clearly. Clarke's novel explicitly identifies the monolith as a tool created by an alien race that has been through many stages of evolution, moving from organic forms, through biomechanics, and finally has achieved a state of pure energy. These aliens travel the cosmos assisting lesser species to take evolutionary steps. The novel explains the hotel room sequence as a kind of alien zoo -- fabricated from information derived from intercepted television transmisions from earth -- in which Dave Bowman is studied by the invisible alien entities. Kubrick's film leaves all this unstated.
Physicist Freeman Dyson urged those baffled by the film to read Clarke's novel:
- "After seeing Space Odyssey, I read Arthur Clarke's book. I found the book gripping and intellectually satisfying, full of the tension and clarity which the movie lacks. All the parts of the movie that are vague and unintelligible, especially the beginning and the end, become clear and convincing in the book. So I recommend to my middle-aged friends who find the movie bewildering that they should read the book; their teenage kids don't need to."
Clarke himself used to recommend reading the book, saying "I always used to tell people, 'Read the book, see the film, and repeat the dose as often as necessary'", although, as his biographer Neil McAleer points out, he was promoting sales of his book at the time. Elsewhere he said, "You will find my interpretation in the novel; it is not necessarily Kubrick's. Nor is his necessarily the 'right' one – whatever that means."
Purists are quick to point out that the novel differs in many key respects from the film, and therefore should not be regarded as the skeleton key to unlock it.
Religious interpretations
In an interview for Rolling Stone magazine, Stanley Kubrick stated, "On the deepest psychological level the film's plot symbolizes the search for God, and it finally postulates what is little less than a scientific definition of God The film revolves around this metaphysical conception and the realistic hardware and the documentary feelings about everything were necessary in order to undermine your built-in resistance to the poetical concept."
Allegorical interpretations
An allegory is a form of art in which one thing represents something else. 2001 has been seen by many people not only as a literal story about evolution and space adventures, but as an allegorical representation of aspects of philosophical, religious or literary concepts.
Nietzsche allegory
Friedrich Nietzsche's philosophical tract Thus Spake Zarathustra, about the potential of mankind, is directly referenced by the use of Richard Strauss's musical piece of the same name. Nietzsche writes that "man is a bridge between the apes and the Supermen; a laughing stock". In an article in the New York Times, Kubrick gave credence to interpretations of 2001 based on Zarathustra when he said: "Man is the missing link between primitive apes and civilised human beings. Man is really in a very unstable condition." The other indication of a Nietzsche connection is the choice.
Conception allegory
Some writers describe 2001 as an allegory of human conception, birth and death.
New Zealand journalist Scott MacLeod who sees parallels between the spaceship's journey and the physical act of conception. Thus we have the long, bulb-headed spaceship as a sperm, and the destination planet Jupiter (or the monolith floating near it) as the egg, and the meeting of the two as the trigger for the growth of a new race of man (the "star child"). The lengthy pyrotechnic light show witnessed by David Bowman, which has puzzled many reviewers, is seen by MacLeod as Kubrick's attempt at visually depicting the moment of conception, when the "star child" comes into being.
Taking the allegory further, McLeod argues that the final scenes in which Bowman appears to see a rapidly aging version of himself through a "time warp" is actually Bowman witnessing the withering and death of his own species. The old race of man is about to be replaced by the "star child", which was conceived by the meeting of the spaceship and Jupiter. MacLeod also sees irony in man as a creator (of Hal) on the brink of being usurped by his own creation. Thus, by destroying Hal, man symbolically rejects his role as creator and steps back from the brink of his own destruction.
Similarly, in his book, The Making Of Kubrick's 2001, author Jerome Agel puts forward the interpretation that Discovery One represents both a body (with vertebrae) and a sperm cell, with Bowman being the "life" in the cell which is passed on. In this interpretation, Jupiter represents both a female and an ovum.
Wheat's triple allegory
An extremely complex three-level allegory is seen by Leonard F. Wheat in his book, Kubrick's 2001: A Triple Allegory. Wheat states that, "Most... misconceptions (of the film) can be traced to a failure to recognize that 2001 is an allegory - a surface story whose characters, events, and other elements symbolically tell a hidden story... In 2001's case, the surface story actually does something unprecedented in film or literature: it embodies three allegories." According to Wheat, the three allegories are:
- Friedrich Nietzsche's philosophical tract, Thus Spoke Zarathustra, which is signaled by the use of Richard Strauss's music of the same name. Wheat notes the passage in Zarathustra describing mankind as a rope dancer balanced between an ape and the ubermensch, and argues that the film as a whole enacts an allegory of that image.
- Homer's epic poem The Odyssey, which is signaled in the film's title. Wheat notes, for example, that the name "Bowman" may refer to Odysseus, whose story ends with a demonstration of his prowess as an archer. He also follows earlier scholars in connecting the one-eyed HAL with the Cyclops, and notes that Bowman kills HAL by inserting a small key, just as Odyssey blinds the Cyclops with a stake. Wheat argues that the entire film contains references to almost everything that happens to Odysseus on his travels; for example, he interprets the four spacecraft seen orbiting the Earth immediately after the ape sequence as representing Hera, Athena, Aphrodite and Paris, the protagonists of the Judgment of Paris, which begins the events of Homer's Odyssey.
- Arthur C. Clarke's theory of the future symbiosis of man and machine, expanded by Kubrick into what Wheat calls "a spoofy three-evolutionary leaps scenario": ape to man, an abortive leap from man to machine, and a final, successful leap from man to 'Star Child'.
Wheat often uses anagrams as evidence to support his theories. For example, of the name Heywood R. Floyd, he writes "He suggests Helen - Helen of Troy. Wood suggests wooden horse - the Trojan Horse. And oy suggests Troy." Of the remaining letters, he suggests "Y is Spanish for and. R, F, and L, in turn, are in ReFLect." Finally, noting that D can stand for downfall, Wheat concludes that Floyd's name has a hidden meaning: "Helen and Wooden Horse Reflect Troy's Downfall".
The Monolith
As with many elements of the film, the iconic Monolith has been subject to countless interpretations, including religious, historical, and evolutionary. To some extent, the very way in which it appears and is presented allows the viewer to project onto it all manner of ideas relating to the film. The Monolith in the movie seems to represent and even trigger epic transitions in the history of human evolution, evolution of man from ape-like beings to beyond infinity, hence the odyssey of mankind.
In the most literal narrative sense, as found in the concurrently written novel, the Monolith is a tool, an artifact of an alien civilization. It comes in many sizes and appears in many places, always in the purpose of advancing intelligent life. Arthur C. Clarke has refered to it as "the alien Swiss Army Knife"; or as Heywood Floyd speculates in 2010, "an emissary for an intelligence beyond ours. A shape of some kind for something that has no shape."
The fact that the first tool used by the protohumans is a weapon to commit murder is only one of the challenging evolutionary and philosophic questions posed by the film. The tool's link to the present day is made by the famous graphic match from the bone/tool flying into the air, to a satellite containing nuclear weapons orbiting the earth. At the time of the movie's making, the space race was in full swing, and the use of space and technology for war and destruction was seen as a great challenge of the future.
According to Michael Hollister in his book "Hollyworld", the path beyond the infinite is introduced by the vertical alignment of planets and moons with a perpendicular monolith forming a cross, as if the astronaut is about to become a new savior. Bowman lives out his years alone in a brightly lit neoclassical room that evokes the Age of Enlightenment, decorated with classical art.
As Bowman passes through his life in this neoclassical room, the monolith makes its final appearance: standing at the end of his bed as he approaches death. he raises a finger toward the monolith, a gesture that alludes to the Michelangelo painting of The Creation of Adam, with the monolith representing God.
References
- Norden, Eric. Interview: Stanley Kubrick. Playboy (September 1968). Reprinted in: Phillips, Gene D. (Editor). Stanley Kubrick: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi, 2001. ISBN 1-57806-297-7 pp. 47-48
- ^ McAleer, Neil (1993-12-01). Arthur C. Clarke: The Authorized Biography. Contemporary Books. ISBN 978-0809237203.
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(help) - Arthur C. Clarke, The Lost Worlds of 2001. London: Sidgwick and Jackson, 1972
- DeMet, George. "Authorship of 2001". Palantir.net. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- Houston, Penelope (1971-04-01). Sight and Sound International Film Quarterly, Volume 40 No. 2, Spring 1971. London: British Film Institute.
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(help) - ^ The Kubrick FAQ (pt. 2)
- ^ Wheat, Leonard (2000-06-21). 'Kubrick's 2001: A Triple Allegory'. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0810837966.
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(help) - Agel, Jerome (1970-04-01). The Making of Kubrick's 2001. Signet. ISBN 978-0451071392.
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(help) - Collins, Paul (2006-06-23). The Ascendancy of the Scientific Dictatorship: An Examination of Epistemic Autocracy, From the 19th to the 21st Century. BookSurge Publishing. ISBN 978-1419639326.
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suggested) (help) - LoBrutto, Vincent (1999-04-09). Stanley Kubrick: A Biography. Da Capo. ISBN 978-0306809064.
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(help) - Castle, Robert. "The Interpretative Odyssey of 2001". Bright Lights Film Journal. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
- Hollister, Michael (2006-07-25). Hollyworld. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1425946579.
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(help) - Hollister, Michael. "2001: A Space Odyssey". Retrieved 2008-02-04.
External links
- Kubrick's 2001: A Triple Allegory by Leonard F. Wheat
- Arthur Clarke's 2001 Diary
- Three Perspectives of a Film
- 2001 and the Motif of The Voyage
- There's Something About Kubrick
- Mysterious monolith marks 2001
- The Odyssey Continues: Relevance of 2001 Resounds in 2001
- scifi.com
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
- Kubrick on the Web
- The Kubrick Site
- 2001: A Space Odyssey Internet Resource Archive
- The Ascendancy of the Scientific Dictatorship: An Examination of Epistemic
- Alchemical Kubrick 2001: The great work on film
- Alchemical Kubrick 2001: The great work on film (second source)
- 2001: A Space Odyssey
- Beyond the Infinite: Part Two
- Film review excerpt from novel Hollyworld
- On 2001: A Space Odyssey
- The meaning of the monolith
- 2001: A Space Odyssey (Review)
- 2001 and All the Years After: Reviews