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The Ships of 2001: A Space Odyssey
2001: A Space Odyssey took audiences
into outer space, to enjoy a trip to the
moon a year before the first actual moon landing occurred.
Remembered as much for its meticulous portrayal of hardware as its
characters or storyline, the Stanley Kubrick film created the template
against which films would be measured for the next decade. No
longer were spacecraft shown as briefly glimpsed, blurred saucers or
cigar-shaped missiles.
They became highly detailed, realistic machines that fascinated viewers
worldwide.The ships of 2001 were based on real-world
technology and innovations already in development in the mid-1960s.
Author Arthur C. Clarke and filmmaker Kubrick were determined to make
the ships and hardware as realistic and believable as possible, taking
into account the weightlessness and long periods of inactivity and
boredom that would and will be real factors in the exploration of our
solar system. Each ship was designed not with special effects in
mind, but rather with sound science and achievable technologies. The idea was to show the audience how reasonably
familiar technology will bring the reality of space travel from the
realm of the fantastic into everyday life, where a trip into orbit will
be no more unusual than a jet flight to grandma's house.
Kubrick then commissioned the construction of large,
highly detailed models to bring that vision to life. As a result,
2001: A Space Odyssey set a new, higher standard for filmmakers
to follow.
- written by John Pickard |