Other Titles • 2001: A Space Odyssey • How the Solar System Was Won (2002) • Journey Beyond the Stars (1967) • Two Thousand and One: A Space Odyssey (1968) • 2001: Odyssee im Weltraum (1968)
Release Date: Jun 12, 2001 Region: 1 Runtime: 148 mins Studio: Creative Design Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
Video:
Widescreen 2.20:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: [None] Packaging: Custom Case Rating: G Features:
Trailer Music Soundtrack Collective Senitypes: 70mm Limited Edition Film Frame Commemorative Booklet - featuring stories behind the film, the music plus over 20 photos.
Region: 1 Runtime: 139 mins Studio: MGM / UA Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC] FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono
Video:
Widescreen 2.20:1 Color
Subtitles: English, Spanish, French Packaging: Keep Case Rating: G Features:
Interactive Menus Scene Access 21 Minute Press Conference 8-Page Booklet with Trivia, Production Notes, and a Look Behind-the-Scenes Theatrical Trailer for 2001 and 2010
Confirming that art and commerce can co-exist, 2001: A Space Odyssey was the biggest box-office hit of 1968, remains the greatest science fiction film yet made and is among the most revolutionary, challenging and debated work of the 20th century. It begins within a pre-historic age. A black monolith uplifts the intelligence of a group of apes on the African plains. The most famous edit in cinema introduces the 21st century, and after a second monolith is found on the moon a mission is launched to Jupiter. On the spacecraft are Bowman (Keir Dullea) and Poole (Gary Lockwood), along with the most famous computer in fiction, HAL. Their adventure will be, as per the original title, a "journey beyond the stars". Written by science fiction visionary Arthur C Clarke and Stanley Kubrick, 2001 elevated the SF film to entirely new levels, being rigorously constructed with a story on the most epic of scales. Four years in the making and filmed in 70 mm, the attention to detail is staggering and four decades later barely any aspect of the film looks dated, the visual richness and elegant pacing creating the sense of actually being in space more convincingly than any other film. A sequel, 2010: Odyssey Two (1984) followed, while Solaris (1972), Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), The Abyss (1989) and A.I. (2001) are all indebted to this absolute classic which towers monolithically over them all.
On the DVD: There is nothing but the original trailer which, given the status of the film and the existence of an excellent making-of documentary shown on Channel 4 in 2001, is particularly disappointing. Shortly before he died Kubrick supervised the restoration of the film and the production of new 70 mm prints for theatrical release in 2001. Fortunately the DVD has been taken from this material and transferred at the 70 mm ratio of 2.21-1. There is some slight cropping noticeable, but both anamorphically enhanced image and Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack (the film was originally released with a six-channel magnetic sound) are excellent, making this transfer infinitely preferable to previous video incarnations. --Gary S Dalkin
A daring experiment in unconventional narrative inspired by Arthur C Clarke's short story "The Sentinel", 2001: A Space Odyssey is a visual tone poem (barely 40 minutes of dialogue in a 139-minute film) that charts a phenomenal history of human evolution. When Stanley Kubrick recruited Clarke to collaborate on "the proverbial intelligent science fiction film", it's a safe bet neither the maverick auteur nor the great science fiction writer knew they would virtually redefine the parameters of the cinema experience with the result. From the dawn-of-man discovery of crude but deadly tools in the film's opening sequence to the journey of the spaceship Discovery and metaphysical birth of the "star child" at film's end, Kubrick's vision is meticulous and precise. In keeping with the director's underlying theme of dehumanisation by technology, the notorious, seemingly omniscient, computer HAL 9000 has more warmth and personality than the human astronauts it is supposedly serving. (The director also leaves the meaning of the black, rectangular alien monoliths open for discussion.) This theme, in part, is what makes 2001 a film like no other, though dated now that its post-millennial space exploration has proven optimistic compared to reality. Still, the film is timelessly provocative in its pioneering exploration of inner and outer-space consciousness. With spectacular, painstakingly authentic special effects that have stood the test of time, Kubrick's film is nothing less than a cinematic milestone--puzzling, provocative and perfect. --Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com
Release Date: Jun 11, 2001 Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles: Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Swedish