MmmSkyscraper
Diamond Member
- Jul 6, 2004
- 9,472
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- 76
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
it's because you didn't even take the time to spell it right
ROFL, QFT :beer:
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
it's because you didn't even take the time to spell it right
Originally posted by: NuclearNed
One of the best films ever. Its subtle brilliance is on a different magnitude than that of most films.
However, for ATOT to like it, it needs more 'splosions, boobies, and homoerotic Spartans.
Originally posted by: lozina
"getting" 2001 and enjoying it is a good gauge of a person's intelligence.![]()
you are over analyzing it.Originally posted by: BrownTown
Well, the ways I've understood it was that it was a representation of the transition from animal to superman according to the philosophy of Nietzsche. At first you have the animals, and then they evolve into man, and then man creates god in his image (HAL 9000), but eventually man must kill god (deactivating HAL 9000) in order to become a superman who will approach the earth like a child. Anyways, if you have read Thus Spake Zarathustra (on which the score of the movie is also based), or Beyond Good and Evil the comparisons are VERY readily made. However I have also seen it interpreted as man creates technology and then has to overcome is (as opposed to man creates God and then overcomes him). Certainly in the movie technology is used, but you have to determine whether you think that is ALL that is meant or whether it is a metaphor. But from my understanding the actual book has it meant just as its seen and not so much the metaphor as some would suggest.
So explain what you think the BOOK actually wants us to think, and then if you think the movie also means that or goes a slightly different route.
