Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Connecting "2001" With Its "2010" Sequel


Last year, I shared someone's post on Facebook featuring a segment from an interview conducted with Stanley Kubrick in 1980, but not released until after his death, in which Kubrick explained his intended meaning of the confounding scene at the end of "2001: A Space Odyssey":

The idea was supposed to be that he is taken in by godlike entities, creatures of pure energy and intelligence with no shape or form. They put him in what I suppose you could describe as a human zoo to study him, and his whole life passes from that point on in that room. And he has no sense of time. ... [W]hen they get finished with him, as happens in so many myths of all cultures in the world, he is transformed into some kind of super being and sent back to Earth, transformed and made some kind of superman. We have to only guess what happens when he goes back. It is the pattern of a great deal of mythology, and that is what we were trying to suggest.

Most artists, including movie directors, seem to want not to disclose their intended meaning of a work, but I'm such an irremediably literal-minded person who struggles and usually fails to arrive at any coherent interpretation of artistic or literary metaphors that I'm grateful to have stumbled onto Kubrick's explanation. More or less.

For there's just one problem. How does Kubrick's explanation logically connect with the movie's sequel "2010: The Year We Make Contact"? In "2010," astronauts journey to the site near Jupiter where astronaut Dave Bowman disappeared in "2001" to find out what happened to him and more about the godlike aliens implicated in his disappearance. But the problem is that Kubrick's explanation of the concluding scene in "2001" suggests that Bowman returned to Earth years before as a fetal cosmic superbeing poised to effect some kind of massive transformation of the Earth and/or its human inhabitants. Yet, "2010" exhibits no evidence of said transformation nor any mention of Bowman's prior return. 

Well, I suppose one could theorize that when Bowman returned at the end of 2001 as a "Starchild," his celestial presence was unobserved by and, hence, unknown to people on Earth, and so was his carrying out his purpose. Perhaps he was sent merely to observe or monitor Earth activities, or perhaps to effect imperceptibly subtle but important changes facilitating the aliens' later plans which actualize in "2010."

So, if I look at it that way, I guess there's no real "problem" after all. The two movies can be readily reconciled, and all is well. They say writing about something can help you arrive at understandings you might not have had as soon or ever if you hadn't written about what you were trying to figure out. This little blogging exercise is proof positive of that.

Monday, January 22, 2024

Mom's Stroke and the Likely Challenges to Come



My mother fell and broke her hip recently at home. I had to persuade her over the phone to call her stepdaughter Karen to come check on her. Karen came and, with the help of the local fire department, got her in the car and drove her to the hospital where it was promptly determined that she had, indeed, fractured her hip.

Soon after that, she had hip replacement surgery, and then, soon after that, she had a stroke. It was her second over the past several months, and it seemed to have a similar effect as her previous one, affecting chiefly the left side of her body, mostly above the waist. But whereas the previous stroke was mild enough that she was able to largely regain most of the functions she initially lost, it seems that the effects of this one may be permanent. She seems to have largely lost the ability to use her left hand, and that may not change. This and other physical deficits resulting from her strokes may not allow her to continue living at home even semi-independently. And this, of course, raises momentous questions about her long-term residence and care that she, Karen, and I are now contemplating.

I think major changes lie ahead not only for Mom but also for me. So I'd best prepare myself for them to the fullest extent possible so I can be the best son, husband, and all-around person I can be throughout the likely challenges to come.