
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
..
Kubrick's "2001" (2000), Leonard F.
Wheat |
|
In the beginning Stanley Kubrick said, 'Let there be light,'
and there was light...
Kubrick
called his light 2001: A Space Odyssey, and
the comparison to an omnipotent creator would be presumptuous if it werent so apt. 2001 is a work whose pieces are so meticulously
fitted together that it feels less like a movie than a self-contained environment, a
cinematic biosphere to be visited and explored. The product of a celestial alignment of
man, medium, and material, its a visionary fantasy made by a director whos
eager to draw viewers into his world. Seen today, its easy to understand why its
1968 release cast an instant shadow over the cultural landscape, and how it eclipsed
filmgoers understanding of just what a movie can be.
2001 is structured as a four-act precis of the
human experience, from the first spark of intelligence in our ape-like ancestors to an
Everymans metamorphosis into a life-form poised between the human and the divine.
The films movement is continually outward, away from ourselves, jumping from a
prehistoric scrum over a muddy pool of water to a ship bound for the moon, from a massive
rocket headed for Jupiter to an expedition through another dimension. The transitions are
accompanied by abrupt tonal shifts (the lunar visit in particular ends with a knife-like
twist), leaving the segments to be unified by the recurring appearance of an otherworldly
sculpture that beckons mankind to its destiny. 2001s
diorama spans the history of evolution, and climaxes with the transcendence of human
consciousness.
And
yet the movie is more complicated than its broadly optimistic trajectory. H.G. Wells once
said that you can see in the eyes of modern man the red-hot look of a caveman glaring out
at you, and Kubrick exposes positivisms soft underbelly with a skeptical vision of
humanity that keeps 2001 from lapsing into New
Age metaphysics or a cosmological Marxism. The homo
sapiens inhabiting it are guarded, emotionally absent creatures, separated from their
weapon-bearing ancestors by a crust of begrudging civility. Their scientific advances are
a misleading measure of their development; mostly their technology has given them an
inflated view of their own importance, making them prone to fits of pride and apathy.
Its a flawed race that may be unworthy of the gifts held out to it.
By the time of Dr. Strangeloves
opening titles, Kubrick had become attuned to the sexual byplay between man and his
machines, the natural result of our tendency to create things in our image. 2001 further conflates the organic and the
artificial, and when an ape-man recognizes a murder weapon in the form of a discarded
bone, technology replaces sex as the nature of our Original Sin. The movies
centerpiece is a deadly battle of wits waged between astronaut Dave Bowman (Keir Dullea)
and the computer HAL 9000. HAL is a unique creation, in equal parts a younger sibling,
scorned lover, and Jewish mother. (I really think Im entitled to an answer to
that question, he nags the astronauts at one point, with a fey lilt in his voice
supplied by Douglas Rain.) The cast of his red and yellow Cycloptic eye
changes with each situation, moving from the look of an eager helpmate to that of a malign
and watchful presence. Obsequious, capable of both embarrassment and cunning, and like any
corporate cog anxious to cover his own butt, HAL is the most overtly human presence aboard
the Discovery. When Bowman disables his memory
bank and sends HALs intelligence into a tailspin of regression, it rakes up every
fear we have about the extinction of our own consciousness.
Kubrick had a singular genius for extracting tension from stillness: in
The Shining
hed create a race-against-time between the length of a Shelley Duvall monologue and
the ash growing on her cigarette. In 2001, after
HAL has murdered his co-pilot, Dave Bowman parks his space pod nose-to-nose with the
mother ship, and the two aircraft hang in space glowering at each other in one of the angriest still images ever captured on film. And
this spirit of minimalism infects the movies actors. Dulleas performance
verges on the immobile, leaving him to express concern and then outrage through minute
readjustments of his cheekbones and the insertion of revealing hitches in his diction.
Given its restraints, his performance is surprisingly effective, good enough to make us
bristle along with Bowman when HAL condescendingly refers to human error.
2001s reputation is baffling if one focuses
too much on its story. The films coda, in which Dave Bowman completes an accelerated
version of his life-cycle and is transformed into the Star Child, is a meandering letdown
that plainly taxed Kubricks imagination. After the taut confrontation with HAL and
the light-show that carries Bowman into his new existence, one wants something more than
slippery symbolism, a room dressed like a Versailles bedchamber, and the art-film flourish
of a man emptily contemplating a broken wine-glass.
But like The Birth of a Nation
and Citizen Kane, 2001s seminal position in film history
doesnt stem from its content. Its not important for what it says, but for what
it is: a one-of-a-kind experience. New 70-mm. prints of 2001 will be touring a few American cities this
winter, and viewing the film in this optimal form drives home the point that seeing it in
degraded 35-mm. prints or on television is tantamount to seeing a Bengal tiger confined in
a zooits not seeing it at all. Its designed as a large experience, and in widescreen projection it
becomes a wall of sensation that absorbs our attention. The new prints also feature a
digitally remastered soundtrack that allows us to hear in pristine form the movies
famous scorecourtesy of the Strausses and Ligeti, among othersand its array of
imaginative sound effects, such as the percussive blasts of an astronauts breaths
during a long space-walk.
Some critics and movie buffs (including this one) would criticize
Kubricks subsequent films for their sacrifice of human to formal concerns. With its
deliberate pacing and chilly tableaux, 2001
looks like as if it belongs with Barry Lyndon, A Clockwork Orange,
and Full Metal Jacket,
as another heartless objet in Kubricks ice
museum. But its lab-controlled atmosphere is humanized by weightlessness gags and a scene
of wry toilet humor, by the sequence in which a scientists subordinates kiss up to
him over a shrink-wrapped chicken sandwich, and by such spectacularly unnecessary
curlicues as the Blue Danube docking sequence. Its an offhandedly
prescient movie, foretelling the eagerness of corporate multinationals to secure a toehold
in space and, as if it were a matter of small concern in the late 1960s, the end of the
Cold War. Above all there are the majestic collages of space and the heavenly bodies, of
natures grandeur in its largest conceivable form.
Kubrick carefully separated the chaos of the 60s from his movie,
so that his work seems to have dropped from the sky, untouched by the events that produced
Bonnie and Clyde or Weekend. In look if
nothing else, 2001 has influenced nearly every
sci-fi movie that came after it, especially in the starkly lit, infinitely detailed
spacecraft models gliding across a velvety black frame. But nearly all of its descendants,
with their smorgasbord of special effects and one-dimensional villainy, shrivel to nothing
when their creators imaginations are weighed against Kubricks. None of them
would see in the stars what he saw in them: a
mysterious yet benign extension of the same natural forces that animate the cottonwood and
the tapir. In an extraordinary outburst of heaven-sent clarity, Stanley Kubrick was
allowed to see past himself and the rest of us, and to cavort with the gods of the
universe.
- Tom Block