As we're obviously never going to have a consensus regarding genre nomenclature or chronologies, I see no point in continuing this discussion.What?? Rock was already a genre when The Weavers were performing. When--exactly--do you think rock started?
I really like this analysis. So HAL is, in effect, the Moon-Watcher of his own emerging species. This works very well with my own theory that the Monolith didn't directly communicate with Moon-Watcher, but sparked an epiphany with its very presence. If HAL did know the reason for the mission, perhaps it sparked a similar epiphany in him.Considering the film 2001 by itself, I don't think it's of the utmost importance, in technical computer science terms, why HAL malfunctioned.
What's far more significant is how HAL reacts. His malfunction, as it were, leads HAL to murder, which parallels the act of the protohuman tribe that was contacted by the Monolith against the neighboring tribe at the critical resource of the waterhole. In my view, this does not imply that HAL was directly influenced by the Monolith or by a Monolith or by whatever creatures might be behind the Monoliths, as I know that some have speculated. Rather, its significance is that HAL's murder of almost the whole crew duplicates, in the terms of the film, perhaps the most essential action responsible for mankind's survival and success. In stark terms, the choice is to eliminate the competing variables by brute force and leave oneself in control. This is reflected in the dilemma expressed by HAL, when he says that the mission is too important to allow the astronauts to jeopardize it, and it parallels position of the apes at the waterhole. What makes HAL's choice a malfunction is that HAL is obviously not functioning at all as intended. But aside from that, in a kind of irony in its coincidence as malfunction, HAL represents a perfect and perfected reflection of human nature.
The resemblance of the Discovery exterior to a human skeleton is well-known, but I'd suggest that symbolically HAL's actions might well be intended to represent the full legacy of the discovery of weapons in the prehistoric boneyard; murder is a pivotal event in the story of the film, and the ultimate technical achievement is literally shown to be something that threatens people with perhaps even greater effectiveness than people threaten each other (cf HAL creaming Frank in the game of chess).
In my view, the literal explanation, that 2010 so to speak can't seem to help itself from providing, undermines this wonderful metaphor.
The movie has just grown a little more for me.

That doesn't really explain the need for the last subtitle, though, "Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite". While there was a bit of a time jump, the subtitle wasn't strictly necessary to convey anything. We were still with the Jupiter Mission, and we could plainly see that the ship had arrived at Jupiter.The two time captions they did use were understandably necessary to set the scenes and avoid confusion. All that wordless footage of a bunch of ape-men gadding about would've been confusing to the audience without some sort of explanation; without the caption, some people might've thought it was supposed to be an alien planet or something. And I think the "Eighteen Months Later" caption for the Discovery part is useful to show that the mission is a consequence of the TMA-1 discovery at Clavius, rather than something that's happening simultaneously.
After all, Kubrick's whole approach to the movie was to explain as little as possible. Maybe he would've left those two captions out given his druthers, but he might've compromised to studio notes and put them in for the sake of clarity.
Which makes no damn sense when Taylor's ship was supposed to be on a long-term sublight mission in the range of 2000-3000 years. Assuming that they didn't have FTL communications, Earth could expect to hear increasingly less from the ship even if it sent regular status reports along the way. Why would they muster another ship to look for Taylor's ship so soon after it left? And what sort of update could they expect to hear from the second ship, if it did find Taylor in a few thousand years?As we would see in Beneath the Planet of the Apes, a ship of the same capabilities already existed, and (we assume) was put into service earlier than expected when contact was lost with Taylor's crew.
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