Friday, April 6, 2018

'Dr. Strangelove In Space': Explaining Stanley Kubrick's Inexplicable '2001: A Space Odyssey'

"Look at the similarities: the Cold War secrecy between the US and Russia, the boardrooms packed with middle-aged men in suits, the supposedly infallible machine which is intent on slaughtering the people who built it. ... And look at the convictions which underpin both works: that humans are intrinsically, self-destructively violent, and that anyone who believes himself to be 100% right is probably a dangerous maniac. It may be going too far to call 2001 a cynical political comedy, but if Kubrick hadn't wanted us to laugh, ... he wouldn't have had a chapter entitled The Dawn of Man, in which man, having dawned, bashes another man's brains out with a club."



Article source here:Arts Journal

No comments:

Post a Comment

Academy Decides Not To Bar Streaming Movies From Oscars

The board of governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences “left intact Rule Two, the one that established that a film” — in...