Moonwatcher's Memoir: A Diary of 2001: A Space Odyssey

Written by Randy Reichardt
Published November 06, 2003
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For fans of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Stanley Kubrick, this is a must read, a keeper. Film historians interested in how this famous sequence was created, produced and executed, it is required reading. As a member of the former group, I am grateful to Dan Richter for having written this book and bringing me closer to the movie that will forever be my all-time favorite cinema experience.



Addendum, added on 7 Nov 2003: I e-mailed Dan Richter, via his website, and asked him about the man-ape voices in 2001: A Space Odyssey. With his permission, I am posting his kind response:
    "We became quite good at making chimp calls and hoots. I encouraged my guys to vocalize all during training. Even though we were shooting without sound, we made sounds. It helped with the motivation and to keep the energy level up. After shooting was complete we got some of the best hooters together and recorded enough sounds for Stanley to make a sound track from."
My thanks to Dan Richter for explaining how this was done, and for letting me post it to this review. - Randy Reichardt

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Moonwatcher's Memoir: A Diary of 2001: A Space Odyssey
Published: November 06, 2003
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Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Nonfiction, Video: SF
Writer: Randy Reichardt
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#1 — November 13, 2003 @ 00:17AM — Tom Johnson [URL]

Really interesting stuff, Randy. I've been a fan of Arthur C. Clarke and especially 2001 practically as long as I could read. This is one of those movies that grows to mean more and more to you over time, I think. The first time I saw it I was fascinated because it was my favorite subject - space - and it dealt with it realistically. Now I know there's so much more to the story than I could have guessed as a kid.

Nice to know there are still some others out there who feel this story and movie are as important as ever.

#2 — November 13, 2003 @ 01:03AM — duane

I believe that the monolith in "The Dawn of Man" sequence actually plants the inspiration that led to the use of tools, which is more profound and far-reaching (and less cynical) than the mere notion of homicide. No doubt, one of the tools was the bone club, which became a vital means by which to bash the brains out of the local competing knuckledraggers, not to mention the prominent role that it would play in the evolution of courtship rituals ("Og, meet Beatrice". Pow!!). But tools also were used for hunting and, eventually, agriculture and the making of Fender Stratocasters, which led, in turn, to our modern music loving civilization. It's interesting that the second monolith, buried at the TMA-1 site, did not lead directly to a rapid leap in the evolution of human thought, but simply pointed the way to the third monolith. Ah, but all this talk of evolution is going to get me in trouble with the Intelligent Design crowd.

#3 — November 13, 2003 @ 08:30AM — Eric Olsen

The film is awe-inspiring (literally) and truly great, but I don't buy this "unique genius" "marching to his own drummer" stuff. EVERYONE is unique and interprets reality in his/her own way. Having a vision and carrying it out are two different things, and those who have the various abilities that allow them to carry out the vision don't necessarily have "better" visions than the rest of us. The "unique great man" perspective leads to autocracy and cults of personality.

Super interesting review, though. Interesting to know the lead guy running around in an ape suit was on heroin and cocaine at the time - since he's still alive I assume he got off.

#4 — November 13, 2003 @ 10:52AM — Tom Johnson [URL]

Duane: the Monolith on Earth was an instructor of sorts. The Monolith on the moon was simply an alarm clock that went off with it's discovery by humans. It alerted the creators of the Monolith that we had reached the point in our evolution where we had ventured into space, and the one found orbiting Jupiter (Saturn in the book) was present to help take mankind to the next level, to make them the overseers of sorts to another intelligent lifeform's upbringing (which is what occurs at the end of 2010.) Clarke kind of beat this to death with the following two books in the series, 2061 and 3001, but he raised some further intriguing possibilities with them as well.

Kubrick and Clarke together. What a couple of minds. It's too bad they didn't work together on anything else. It would have been interesting to see Kubrick handle something like Childhood's End or even 2010, which I think was still a decent movie and ranks a bit higher than the book for me, actually. The book was a bit of a letdown. The movie failed, in my opinion, because it didn't have the same mystic charm 2001 possessed.

#5 — November 15, 2003 @ 12:13PM — randy [URL]

Thanks to Duane, Tom and Eric for the feedback. I agree that the monolith plants the idea of using the bones as tools, yes, but the leap is made quickly to using it as a weapon. Richter does make mention of the latter in the book, that this is what the mimes and actors playing the man-apes had to work with as inspiration.

Kubrick and Childhood's End - wow, how that might have been...

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