I don't care how revolutionary it was. If you're putting your audience to sleep, then it is bad film making. Period.
It wasn't putting its audience to sleep. It was inspiring them to make the next 30 years of science fiction films. (Including Lucas) It's putting you to sleep. Maybe that says more about you than it does about the filmI don't care how revolutionary it was. If you're putting your audience to sleep, then it is bad film making. Period.
There is no scale by which these things are measured.
But isn't the mark of a great film how it stands the test of time?
It's not a movie. It's an art film,
Based on what? That it bored you & some people you know, who prefer watching Men In Black? You seem to have skipped over the part where I wrote art film, which is to be differentiated from pop mediaIt's not a movie. It's an art film,
Fine. Then it's a terrible film.
2001 has a lot of spectacle, but its so lifeless and clinical, and I realise that may have been the point, but it just turned me off. To be honest I think it's less a problem with the era of the film than it is with Kubrick, like Soderburgh he's just a director I don't get.
When talking about film, or any other art, objectivity is impossible. There is no scale by which these things are measured. It comes down to preference. I know I'm in the minority on this film, but I know I'm not alone.
You bring up an interesting point though. When looked at from the perspective of its time, yes you can see the appeal of 2001. But isn't the mark or a great film how it stands the test of time?
Take Casablance, for instance. It's a film decades older than 2001, yet it remains universally loved. It's themes are timeless, it's humor still funny all these years later.
My point was that saying you have to look at a film from the perspective of when it was made is a bogus argument. If it cannot hold up from the perspective of any time, then it's not fit to be a great film.
A western by John Ford is just as stylistically and thematically sophisticated as one by Sergio Leone or Sam Peckinpah, but the latter are more fashionable to the tastes of today's audiences. But how could Ford have done anything about that? Directors make the movies they make for the audiences of their day.
Usually when very stoned or drunk, otherwise it really isn't as deep as such pseudo-intellectual masturbation has pretense to.Ever have one of those nights when all the idle chitchat is over and you begin to ponder the simple things like your place in the universe, or how breathing is a strange way to keep yourself alive.. or any otehr ponderous topic? It's that kind of state in whcih 2001 can be best enjoyed, when you give yourself the space to ponder things without the need to move to something with exactness in its meaning.
Or it was just a dry as dirt and largely irrelevant script that took all of half a day to write then was filmed around to create visuals of a story that was supposed to be of great meaning but could have been a better half hour from Rod Serling.It's almost as if humanity was being observed with some detatchment, and we are the observers when we wathc the movie. We are separated clinically from what happens. In conventional films this would be a no-no, but the producers of the film wanted this detatchment. When Floyd speaks with hsi baby daughter on the telephone, it's only cute in the most generic sense, but the conversation is so simplistic and generic that we are kept (purposefully) from being emotionally involved. They wanted us to observe humans as if they ere in a zoo, and we aren't supposed to really become emotionally attached.
It gave one time to run to the bar across the street from the cinema at college, since there really wasn't anything to miss.And notice all the time - the endless slow scenes of space travel. Normally these are the deathknell for any tight narrative. However, here, the producers are giving us mankind's greatest adversary: space itself. In real life, it would take a lot of time to cross any expance of space.. Kubric is making us consider this time as one thing mankind must overcome to move to the next level. These scenes force the viewer to ponder the time, the distance, and man's place in all of it, and this would not be accomplished by quick cutting or spoon feeding.
My point was that saying you have to look at a film from the perspective of when it was made is a bogus argument. If it cannot hold up from the perspective of any time, then it's not fit to be a great film.
I know that so many love 2001. They're entitled to. I hate it. I'm entitled to.
Directors make films to suit their audience, but that still provides room for variation. Compare the Westerns of Howard Hawks with those directed by John Ford, for example.
(And, of course, John Ford directed Westerns for several decades; there's marked differences between his approach to Stagecoach and his approach to The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, even though both are black and white Westerns that starred John Wayne. Indeed, Ford made films for so long that for a few years he and Peckinpah were directing films at the same time.)
Of course; I could have used Hawks instead of Ford as an example. My point being, I see a lot of discs of A Fistfull of Dollars and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in the local department store, not Red River or She Wore a Yellow Ribbon. And I've much more often heard expressions of appreciation for Leone by "mainstream" viewers than for Ford, Hawks or Anthony Mann. No recent sitcom episodes styled after their films, either. Does this mean the Leone films are of higher quality? I would say no, they just appeal more to modern sensibilities.
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