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How Stanley Kubrick’s Vision of the Future in ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Predicted the Way We Consume News Today

“Envisioning 2001” is the title of the Museum of the Moving Image’s new exhibition about Stanley Kubrick’s classic 1968 sci-fi opus. The name has a double meaning: The show is about how the director and his team envisioned the film ; but it is also—and this may be an even more fun aspect of the exhibition—a show about how they envisioned the year 2001: what they got right, and what they got wrong.

Of the many, many wondrous enigmas of Kubrick’s  narrative, the show does not actually reveal too much. And believe me, I could talk your ear off about and its strange, three-act structure, which moves from consciousness discovering tools (the ape finding a bone club), to consciousness overcome by tools (the astronauts doing battle with AI), to some higher plane of consciousness beyond tools altogether (the “star child”)…

But that’s a digression. What “Envisioning 2001”  give you is all the props, the costumes, the set designs, and so on to affirm just how meticulously crafted and deeply imagined  was. And that careful attention to detail included some earnest future-casting efforts to conjure up a credible near-future, giving viewers of this show a picture of the hopes and fears that the mid-1960s invested in the turn of the millennium. (There’s actually a cottage industry assessing the accuracy of ‘s projections, from the book  to the short film .)

"Envisioning 2001: Stanley Kubrick's Space Odyssey," on view at Museum of the Moving Image. A model of the Discovery One space ship hangs above a gallery. To the left is a model of the Discovery centrifuge set, designed by Harry Lange. Credit: Photo: Thanassi Karageorgiou / Museum of the Moving Image.

“Envisioning 2001: Stanley Kubrick’s Space Odyssey,” on view at Museum of the Moving Image. A model of the Discovery One space ship hangs above a gallery. To the left is a model of the Discovery centrifuge set, designed by Harry Lange. Credit: Photo: Thanassi Karageorgiou / Museum of the Moving Image.

Some of the movie’s futurology went well beyond the scope of what you ever see onscreen, leading to  deep lore: A document called “Makeup and Hair Fashions of 2001” by the makeup firm Coty, for instance, imagines “glowing ‘hair pins’ that, when inserted in the hair will color various areas” and a “spray applicator” that allows the user to “press a button and her full make-up will spray forth, each cosmetic adhering only to the proper portion of the face.” (Such high-tech accessories were more easily imaginable, from the film’s mid-’60s point of view, than female astronauts.)

Some of the production documents show Kubrick’s team having fun, even with such a serious film. Notes proposing magazines that could be featured in the film’s future suggest , , , and , but also invented turn-of-the-millennium titles such as , , , and .

Some of the props were really prophetic, most notably the iPad-like “NewsPad” tablet computers that the astronauts read on in the film. These gadgets are amazingly prescient given that, famously, today’s average Apple device has thousands of times the processing power of all the computers aboard the Apollo 11 mission—and that didn’t even happen until 1969, the year after came out!

You could call the prediction of tablet computers uncanny, but the truth is that the film probably just inspired future designs. (Indeed, the “EVA Pod” spacecrafts shown in  directly inspired the name for the “iPod”—so Kubrick’s influence is felt every time you listen to a podcast.)

Documents listing proposed headlines for the New York Times Electronic Edition in 2001. Image: Ben Davis.

Documents listing proposed headlines for the Electronic Edition.” Image: Ben Davis.

My favorite detail in “Envisioning 2001,” though, is the list of 36 proposed headlines for the (then-theoretical) “Electronic Edition,” which would be read by the film’s astronauts on their NewsPads.

On the whole, they seem to picture a pretty placid future. While they hint at then-percolating environmental concerns (grizzly bears going extinct), they mainly suggest a vision of the world where government is robust (“Who Will Get the Civil Service Vote?”) and concerns itself mostly with pretty benign issues (traffic, pigeons, infrastructure).

Mainly you notice how ambitious the technological visions for the future are (ESP! Universal translation! Gravity control!) versus the very cautious cultural predictions (14 new Westerns on TV? A “most enthusiastic” symphony audience? Picasso as “painting’s most incredible success story”?) That’s an iron law of futurology: it’s much easier to make real sounding predictions about technology than about culture. That’s why the default fashion of the future is always minimal: the best bet is simply to remove anything that could look too specific.

In any case, if you’ve ever found yourself wondering what was going on in the universe back on earth while HAL and the gang were out hunting that monolith, read on for a list of headlines dreamed up by the filmmakers. (Oh, and—of course—the fake future has a reference to the  plot itself—see headline number 6.)

1) 1000TH BABY BORN AT THE SOUTH POLE

2) LAST WORLD WAR I VETERAN DIES IN LONDON

3) AIRLINER FEARED LOST OVER ATLANTIC: 2304 ON BOARD

4) WORLD POPULATION PASSES 6 BILLION MARK: EVEN SPLIT NORTH AND SOUTH OF EQUATOR.

5) LAST GRIZZLY BEAR DIES IN CINCINNATI ZOO: SPECIES NOW EXTINCT—TENTH THIS YEAR

6) DEEP-SPACE SURVEY ENROUTE: FLIGHT REPORTED NORMAL IN ALL RESPECTS

7) AQUANAUT RECORD NOW HELD BY BRAZIL: SUBMARINE SURVEY TEAM DOWN FOUR YEARS

8) FUNCTIONING EARTH SATELLITES NOW NUMBER 3700: MAJORITY LINK WEATHER AND COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS.

10) GARZANTI DIES IN ROME: FAMOUS DETECTIVE CREDITED WITH FINAL DESTRUCTION OF MAFIA IN 1971

11) DAWN OF MAN PUSHED BACK TO 5,000,000 YEAR MARK

12) GRAND CANYON BRIDGE OPENED BY PRESIDENT: LAST LINK IN ARGENTINA-ALASKA ELECTRONIC HIGHWAY SYSTEM

13) LANGUAGE BARRIER NOW NIL FOR 75% OF EARTH’S PEOPLES

14) FOURTEEN WESTERNS FOR NEXT TV LINE-UP

15) RESEARCH EXPENDITURES GREATER THAN PRODUCTION COSTS FOR SIX KEY INDUSTRIES

16) TRIPLE ALLOCATION ANTICIPATION FOR GRAVITY-CONTROL PROJECT AT USC

17) MAJOR BREAKTHROUGH IN ESP RESEARCH AT DUKE. PLANS FOR PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS LIKELY TO BE IMPLEMENTED WITHIN DECADE

18) BOOK REVIEW: “THE TWENTIETH CENTURY: RISE AND FALL OF A DRAGON” BY KEITH ROGERS

19) ART: PABLO PICASSO, PAINTING’S MOST INCREDIBLE SUCCESS STORY

20) THEATRE: THE BARRYMORES, FORGOTTEN LEGEND

21) MEDICINE: HOW MUCH FURTHER THE AGE LIMIT? ARE 125 YEARS ENOUGH?

22) GARDENING: WATCH THE PH FACTOR. ACIDITY MORE CRITICAL IN HYDROPONICS THAN IN SOIL

23) NEW TRAFFIC COMMISSIONER FOR NEW YORK CITY. MAYOR PROMISES RESULTS. CITIZENS’ COMMITTEE REPORTEDLY PESSIMISTIC

24) FINANCIAL: BUYING POWER OF DOLLAR UP. FIRST IMPROVEMENT IN SEVENTEEN MONTHS. EASING ON CREDIT SEEN

25) SPORTS: AUSTRALIANS LIKELY VICTORS TENNIS TOURNEY IN ADDIS ABABA NEXT MONTH

26) HALL OF PRESIDENTS PROPOSED FOR ELLIS ISLAND. GOVERNMENT TO FINANCE, STATE TO ADMINISTER

27) NEW MOON ATLAS PLANNED. WILL INCLUDE MAGNETIC FIELDS

28) TREMORS ALONG SAN ANDRES FAULT. SAN FRANCISCO EFFECTED

29) WHO HAS THE CIVIL SERVICE VOTE?

30) TWO-DAY WEEK PROPOSED SOLUTION FOR MANY INDUSTRIES

31) NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC SEASON OFF TO BRILLIANT START. AUDIENCE MOST ENTHUSIASTIC IN YEARS

32) NEW CARGO SUBMARINE LARGER THAN BATTLESHIPS OF LAST CENTURY

33) 1939 WORLDS FAIR TIME CAPSULE FOUND; SEARCH BEGAN AFTER EARTHQUAKE OF 1987

34) ENGLISH-FRENCH TALKS BREAK-UP; NEW DELAY FOR DOVER-CALAIS TUNNEL LIKELY

35) INDIAN GOVERNMENT PLANS ENCOURAGEMENT FOR PARENTS: ECONOMICS GROWTH HINDERED BY LOW BIRTHRATE

36) PIGEON COMMITTEE NAMED IN NEW YORK: ELIMINATION OF BIRD FROM CITY DEEMED UNLIKELY. DEFENSE GROUP MEETS…


Source: Exhibition - news.artnet.com


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