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How was TMP received at the time?

I've never seen it in Cinerama, but I have seen in in 70mm and digital projection. Even a 50 foot wide screen will do if you're not way up in the cheap seats.
 
I first saw 2001 on widescreen when I was a kid (for my birthday). It was so overwhelming I remember virtually nothing of the experience. Relevant to the thread topic because TMP is often described as "like 2001", I think 2001 is a better film than TMP and more profound. OTOH, TMP has better characters. It actually has characters, anyway ;)
 
The characters don't matter in 2001. Heck, the dialog doesn't matter. It's really all about the images.
 
I was wondering how people regarded TMP at the time it was released. It seems weird to me now that it was the first Trek movie, with the really '70s uniforms and slooooow pacing. Today it seems like it has a pretty "love it or hate it" reaction from a lot of people; I was wondering how reactions were different back then.
Some reactions at the time:
http://fanlore.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_The_Motion_Picture

Lots and lots of comments from Interstat, the TrekBBS of it's day:
http://fanlore.org/wiki/Interstat/Issues_021-030
http://fanlore.org/wiki/Interstat/Issues_031-040
 
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I think HAL falls under the character of "technology". IMHO, the film has three characters: humanity, the machines they create, and the unseen aliens with the individual humans or technologies being facets of those.
 
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The characters don't matter in 2001. Heck, the dialog doesn't matter. It's really all about the images.
I'm not sure that I would go as far as to assert that the characters and dialog in 2001 don't matter at all. There are parts of the film when the characters matter a great deal.

One example is the triangle of Frank, Dave, and HAL. Frank and Dave have different relationships with HAL. Frank treats HAL like a machine, whereas Dave treats him with greater respect. That distinction is conveyed entirely by dialog. The distinction matters to the plot, because it is Frank who suggests shutting down HAL, and it is Frank who HAL goes after first. After Frank is killed, Dave still trusts HAL enough to leave the ship. Would that have been true the other way around, if it had been Dave who HAL had killed first in that way, or would Frank have gone after HAL right away?

And, perhaps most significantly, HAL's nature as a character is conveyed almost entirely via dialog. Most of the time his physicality is represented solely by the inert eye sensors. His taking over of Frank's pod is one of the few times when HAL performs pure action on the physical plane.

But yes, there are of course large swaths of the film where the visual spectacle is what's happening. But I would argue there that the musical soundtrack is also extremely important in these parts too. Classical music plays when we are flying in human-built spaceships, and it reassures us with familiar tunes and structures that all is normal. In contrast, some of Ligeti's micropolyphonic masterpieces assure us that we have indeed left the normal universe during the Star Gate sequence, and that the monolith is indeed something very much out of the ordinary.

Another significant use of music is that Richard Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra explicitly establishes a parallel between the discovery of tools and the birth of the Star-Child.

Despite its ambitions, TMP's nonverbal passages aren't operating on 2001's level.
 
Except Kubrick himself said:
"I tried to work things out so that nothing important was said in dialogue, and that anything important in the film be translated in terms of action."
Agel, Jerome, ed. The Making of Kubrick's 2001.
New York: New American Library, 1970, p. 292
Make of that what you will. :)
 
Well for me, if I just want to be entertained by music and visuals alone, I'd watch Fantasia.
 
I've spoken at great length on here about how TMP was the first movie I saw at the cinema as a five year old, suffice to say that in the years that have passed I've gone from it being the reason I got into Trek in the first place, through me seeing it as 'the boring one' as a young adult, through to a new found respect for it in the last decade or so.

A recent re-watch of the DE (back to back with TWOK on a 42" LCD with a banging surround sound system) the other week really highlighted the amazing sets - engineering never looked better than in this movie, even though they were re-used in the sequel. It looks so hi-tech even today, and that alone is a great achievement. There was also a lot of other big sets that looked excellent too - the place where the crew watch the Epsilon station getting consumed by vger for example, and even the corridors, all looked expensive and gave the Enterprise a great feel.

The DE with the extra effects fit in very nicely and don't jar (unlike the SW special editions), but I would love to see them remastered on blu-ray for the 50th. Most of the original effects still look very good - especially the spacedock sequences, again, the Enterprise never looked better that what it did in this movie.

We've all discussed the score on here at length, and it deserves all the accolades you can throw at it - simply outstanding work from Goldsmith and right up there as among my favorite movie scores of all time.

In many ways, I now see it as the very best Trek movie, it has sense of scale and scope that has remained unmatched in the movie franchise to date in my view. TWOK may be more outwardly entertaining, but TMP has an old school, classic, timeless quality to it, the type you don't get in movies any more. If it just had a bit more of the character interaction of some of the later instalments I think it would absolutely cement itself into the top spot. Special movie.
 
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Speaking of 2001 does anyone think Decker was modelled on Bowman? (a blonde bowman) watched 2001 again recently and Bowmans look, mannerisms, even the way he talked had me thinking of Decker. Wonder if that was intentional (I know its very awkward talking about SCollins now but its in relation to Decker)
 
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A recent re-watch of the DE (back to back with TWOK on a 42" LCD with a banging surround sound system) the other week really highlighted the amazing sets....

Well with my 60" LCD and BluRay discs I'll be getting, I'm sure I'll be more impressed than the VHS version I watched on my old college 24" CRT :cool:
 
I was disappointed, no question about it. TMP was not the Star Trek movie I wanted. It wasn't fully baked, that was obvious on first viewing. TWOK was a much more complete film, that also significantly restored the excitement of TOS.

As time has passed, the strengths of TMP stand out, in contrast to its faults, perhaps in part because from TWOK onward a different vision of the future was adopted. The world-building for TMP was always extremely impressive, but it was never enough to carry the film.

On balance, TWOK and TMP are my top favorite Trek films, #1 and #2 respectively...

Agree on all thoughts. :vulcan: Albeit I was a boy on Friday December 7th 1979, so the big screen awe of the 1701-refit Enterprise and the reunited cast was extremely pleasing to me. :)
 
As for what I thought personally, I had gotten all excited - having been a Star Trek fan since seeing most of the third season (including the premiere "Spock's Brain") on NBC, caught up on the better-written episodes in reruns, went to a convention (New York City, January 1975), and finally read the Inquirer's worshipful Sunday magazine cover story about Roddenberry, with color photos from the not-yet-released movie interspersed. But when I finally went to see TMP I was underwhelmed. Much of the dialogue was no better than that in, say, "The Empath" (e.g., "Compassion for another is becoming part of her functioning life-system"). The rhythm was just off. The actors didn't seem comfortable at all. "Wasn't fully baked," as CorporalCaptain wrote, is how it felt - which turned out to be exactly what happened behind the scenes.

I was a freshman in college and very psyched for the movie. I'd hit the magazine stand every time a new Starlog came out to see if there was anything about the movie in it (largely, Susan Sackett's reports). I remember buying the August issue with Mike Minor's new Enterprise on the cover like it was yesterday.

The rythmn of the movie was off for me, too. It took itself far too seriously, and the actors didn't seem fully in character, as if they were trying to rediscover how to be their characters or were deliberately portraying toned-down versions of them instead of the larger than life people we enjoyed in TOS. When I read "Kirk's" preface to Roddenberry's novelization, I understood why they may have played them that way. Still, I didn't enjoy it. As much as I wanted to like it, I was sorely disappointed. Over time, especially after finding out all that was going on behind the scenes, I've softened my opinion about the movie and appreciate what they tried to do.
 
2001 Space Odyssey.... I did try and sit down to watch that back in the late 90's / early 2000's when I was in college. I do believe I watched it through, but my geez.... did it ever drag on. It dragged on so much that after a while I forgot what the plot/point of the movie was, if there even was one.

Hell, that was also during my "Recreational" days and no amount of "Recreational Things" helped me keep interested in that movie.

I think the second thing may explain the first thing. You should watch 2001 straight at least once.

Or just read the book. Doing that helped me "get" the story just fine, and made future viewings of the movie easier to understand.
 
2001 Space Odyssey.... I did try and sit down to watch that back in the late 90's / early 2000's when I was in college. I do believe I watched it through, but my geez.... did it ever drag on. It dragged on so much that after a while I forgot what the plot/point of the movie was, if there even was one.

Hell, that was also during my "Recreational" days and no amount of "Recreational Things" helped me keep interested in that movie.

I think the second thing may explain the first thing. You should watch 2001 straight at least once.

Or just read the book. Doing that helped me "get" the story just fine, and made future viewings of the movie easier to understand.

I disagree. I think Clarke's work, especially his sequel books, demonstrate that he only grokked the surface level of what Kubrick was doing. Clarke's much too literal.
 
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Except Kubrick himself said:
"I tried to work things out so that nothing important was said in dialogue, and that anything important in the film be translated in terms of action."
Agel, Jerome, ed. The Making of Kubrick's 2001.
New York: New American Library, 1970, p. 292
Make of that what you will. :)

He tried. And there's a distinction between things that are important and things that don't matter at all.
 
I remember I bought it on video because it was never showed on TV. II, IV and V were always shown but I and III I never saw until I bought them on video.
It looked so different to the other films, more like a musical in some ways. I was kinda glad the film series didn't go in this direction. Very pretty though.
 
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