Showing posts with label 2001 : A Space Odyssey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2001 : A Space Odyssey. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 September 2022

Fat Old Sun












"Kirby could throw away in one single panel a high concept that would keep others busy for years : Crippled Vietnam War veteran Willie Walker became the vessel for The New God of Death — a black man in full armor hurtling through walls and space on skis. The Black Racer was a twist on Kirby’s original idea for the Silver Surfer, here as an angel of Death, not Life. The Mother Box, a living, emotionally nurturing, personal computer was the fusion of soul and machine carried by all the inhabitants of New Genesis. Metron the amoral science god with his dimension-traveling Mobius chair. The Source was for Kirby the ultimate ground of being, like the Ain Soph Aur of Judaic mysticism, beyond gods, beyond all divisions and definitions. Genetic manipulation, media control, the roots of Fascism — Kirby was on fire and had something new to say about everything under the sun.

  The Fourth World cycle was to be a great interlocking mechanism of books combining to form a complete modern myth, while, as an afterthought, re-creating the very idea of the superhero from the ground up and infusing it with Divinity. It might have run for five more years.

  But then The Fourth World spun off its axis. Carmine Infantino, promoted to DC’s vice president, allegedly looked at sales figures and canceled the books, which were doing well enough but not as well as had been hoped based on Kirby’s name. The King was hit hard, and The World lost the conclusion to a Great Work. He went on to create more titles, of course. Hundreds more original, quirky stories burst from that relentless mind, but the great mythographer had been thwarted in the midst of his masterpiece, brought down by dark forces and jealous gods. Kirby’s personal vision, his avalanche of novelty and energy, was too new for a culture in retreat, looking back to the fifties, dreaming of sock hops and ponytails, in the happy days before ’Nam and Richard Nixon.

  When Kirby returned in 1985, older and more wary, to complete his story, he was given only sixty pages to wrap up a saga that warranted thousands more. Imagine God halfway through Exodus having to hurry it up. The Hunger Dogs showed the passage of time and the footprints left by the relentless march of cynicism. Still The King delivered. As a dreadful elegy for the hopes of the baby boomers and the stark truth of their lives—growing older, facing Reagan and Thatcher — The Hunger Dogs, Kirby’s completion of The Story, was bleak, unforgettable, and in many ways the only perfect end to The Fourth World saga.

  But by the time it was released, Kirby’s hand-to-eye coordination had deteriorated significantly, making some pages appear ugly and rough-hewn. A more generous approach might imagine the artist embracing a new primitivism, a shorthand in which scale and perspective played second fiddle to the immediate expression of the ideas. But too many of the drawings were doodles that told the story with the barest minimum of effort. And his audience had flown. Fashion had passed him by. He was “Jack the Hack” now, an old man mocked and derided by the same people who had hailed his genius twenty years earlier and would again ten years later.

  The Epic had stalled and, like the great Aquarian youth revolution that had inspired so much of it, unraveled into world-weary cynicism. The Forever People had all grown up, gone bald, got jobs, and given up the struggle for a future among the stars. But Kirby had one final trick, one last visionary warning to leave his readers : A new superhero saga that would jump so far into The Future that it’s still reverberating and is more relevant today than it was when it was published to little acclaim in 1974...."

Saturday, 13 November 2021

UnLike The Book







“Cinema is a Machine for 
Building Empathy.

— Roger Ebert.
 
 







“I'm Not Saying 
‘We Didn't Go to The Moon’. 

I'm just Saying that 
‘What We Saw was Faked.’ 
and that 
‘It was Faked 
by Stanley Kubrick.’

And I've had Hollywood special effects people from the '60s and '70s 
who were front-screen projection experts tell me that I absolutely have nailed the Apollo footage as being the result of front-screen projection.

Just go to any Apollo site 
and Look, and You'll See that 
They have to hide 
The Bottom of The Screen. 

And you can always see the set/screen separation line 
in every Apollo footage, every Apollo image, 
and the video footage that has a background. 

And Richard Hoagland, the researcher, 
has looked into the Apollo imagery. 

And he has found all sorts of problems with it because in the sky around the astronauts, he's found reflecting lights and refracting things and... kind of a junk and geometry of things that are in the sky. 

And he concluded, wrongly, 
that there are gigantic alien cities 
made out of glass. 

What he's really seeing 
is the reflections of light of the tiny beads on the scotch light screen which is being used in the front-screen projection process. 

And so, once I nailed the front-screen projection process inside the Apollo footage, 
then I became interested in seeing if Kubrick left any clues in the rest of his career to his possible involvement in faking the Apollo moon footage. 

And I was overjoyed about two years ago when I received my Blu-Ray copy of The Shining. 

And I put it in my Blu-Ray machine 
and sat down one night to watch it. 

And I realised that all of the things that one could imagine that Stanley Kubrick would have had to go through to fake the Apollo moon footage... 
and there in the movie,
 every time that Stanley deviated from the Stephen King novel, 
he deviated into those exact questions. 

You know, what was it like to 
Make a Deal with The U.S. Government? 

What was it like to 
accidentally tell someone 
what you were doing 
and to watch them 
possibly have to suffer the consequences 
of your lack of integrity
 
What was it like to 
Lie to Your Wife 
and tell her that you were 
Doing One Thing 
when you were 
Doing Another
 
What was it like when 
Your Wife found out 
What You were really Doing? 
 
These are the questions that I had long before I had seen The Shining again after a maybe an eight... or nine-year absence. 

And I didn't... wasn't sure I was right for the first hour. 
I wasn't sure that I had actually... 
you know, I wasn't sure if I was 
blurring the line between 
What I wanted to see 
and what I was seeing. 

And then at about 58 minutes in the film 
is the famous scene where Danny's playing with his trucks, and he stands up and he's wearing the Apollo 11 sweater with the rocket taking off. 

Then I knew I'd nabbed it. 

And then I started watching the film with an intensity that I don't think I'd ever watched a movie before, 
and every line began ringing true. You know, 
"Wendy, that is just so typical of you. 
"Don't you... Don't you know 
I have obligations to My Employers?"
"Do you have any idea what a contract is?"
Do you know what an agreement is?" 
 
Jack Nicholson's whole tirade 
against His Wife... that's Stanley
 
That's Stanley telling His Wife that 
after she discovered what he was doing, 
which was the Apollo footage
 
No, that's actually Not True. 
If you call the Mount Hood Resort 
and you ask for room 217 you will find 
there is no such room
 
So that's just Not True. 
That statement's Not True
And so what... 
 
Stanley was Lying
Its not The Reason that he changed 
the room number from 217 to 237
 
The Reason that he changed it from 217 to 237 was because the room, room 237 in the film is... 
represents the Moon Landing Stage where he worked. 
 
And The Moon, the standard science textbook said... 
and they still say... but now with lasers, 
we've gotten a little better reading. But... 
Is that the mean distance of The Moon from The Earth
is exactly 237,000 miles
 
So he changed that so that 
you would understand 
that this was The Moon Room. 
 
So Danny stands up. He's got the Apollo 11 sweater on. 
He begins walking down the hallway towards Room 237. 
And there's A Key in The Lock
And on The Key are... 
is the words "ROOM" and then the word "N-o," 
which is an old acronym for "Number." 
 
So "Room Number 237," except that 
the only capital letters on The Key 
are R-O-O-M and then the "N" from the acronym n-o. 
 
And if there's only two words that 
you can come up with that have 
those letters in 'em. 
 
And that's "MOON" and "ROOM." 
And so on The Key, The Tag, it says "MOON ROOM." 

And that is the moon room. 

This is where Everything Happens, and NONE of it's Real. And it ALL has to be lied about. 

And he can't let anyone know what's really going on in room 237. And there's many, many other deviations from the book to the movie. 

It isn't real. 

The deviations drove Stephen King out of his mind. He just ranted and ranted for years how much he hated The Shining. And he hated it because he'd given Kubrick all this great source material and Kubrick threw it out. And the whole idea of this is best exemplified by the scene where Dick Hallorann is driving up the highway, trying to get to the Overlook during a winter storm and he passes a wreck. 
 
And in the wreck, a semi has crashed 
and crushed a red Volkswagen. 
 
And this is a direct message 
from Kubrick to King, because in the novel, 
Jack Torrance's car is a red Volkswagen. 
 
But in the movie, it's a yellow Volkswagen. 
 
And what Kubrick is saying in that scene 
is a big "F you" to Stephen King. 
 
He's saying, 
"This is My Vehicle."
 
"I have wrecked Your Vehicle. 
And everybody in The World can see it.' 
 
And this drove King crazy
And it should have. 
 
But what was really going on 
and what is just much more deliciously fascinating 
about all of this is that, in fact, 
Kubrick was faking the making 
of the Stephen King novel 
in order to reveal the idea of 
what he went through 
to do The Apollo Moon Footage. "

My Argument, as far as Kubrick goes, is that 
He was a preternaturally observant child. 
He read omnivorously
He went to Movies all the time.