"It's a piece of art."
Welcome back to the Content Maw! Once a month, Cast Iron Brains peers into the endless, gaping mouth of available consumable content and picks a piece to talk about. This month, it’s Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 masterpiece, 2001: A Space Odyssey. Or, maybe it’s Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 pretentious ego-trip, 2001: A Space Odyssey. Enjoy our friendly bickering below, or on the preferred podcast-catching service of your inner Star Child’s wildest imagination.
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Not much to the show note this week. It’s possible I’ll blog about this movie more in the future, in which case I’ll add that to this. This is a movie that asks a great deal of the viewer. I think it’s up to the viewer to decide how much they want to extract from it.
As of today, you can stream 2001: A Space Odyssey on HBO MAX, or rent it from any of a number of other services, or probably find it at your local library. And when the pandemic is over, you can usually find it playing at a decent artsy-fartsy theater once a year or so.
Here’s the Atlantic article from a few years back we mentioned in the show. “Why Earth’s History Appears So Miraculous.”
Here’s a rundown from a couple years back on the impact the film has had on the last 50 years of popular culture. https://www.vulture.com/2018/04/how-2001-a-space-odyssey-has-influenced-pop-culture.html
And here’s a very short video of Stanley Kubrick giving an interview to a Japanese media outlet, trying to very briefly explain human transcendence through art, both in the specific and the general—never a good idea.