The
POFF 9000
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A
Midget in the Footsteps of Giants. by
Jon Dunmore © 9 Apr 2006. No
one said it would be easy. Following in the mythic footsteps of Stanley Kubrick
and equally legendary Arthur C. Clarke. Maybe it was this inimitable pedigree
that gave lowly Peter Hyams the impetus to craft such a reasonably watchable film.
2010: Odyssey Two is a one-step-forward, one-step-sideways kind of movie.
Considering
Mr. Hyams is the writer-director behind two films that boast "scientific"
backdrops, yet lay claim to the most scientifically-bereft storylines of the technological
age (Capricorn One and Outland),
2010 surprisingly retains much hard science in its telling and is consequently
a more enjoyable experience for it. Due in full, we must presume, solely to the
dogging of author Arthur C. Clarke, who was in constant communication with Hyams
through the production process. (Clarke's book of the same name was more or less
plundered for initial momentum, rather than adhered to devoutly.) To
state the obvious, the story picks up 9 years after Kubrick and Clarke's pioneering
and inimitable 2001: A Space Odyssey,
where a joint Soviet-American mission, headed by American scientist Heywood Floyd
(Roy Scheider) and Soviet Commander Kirbuk (Helen Mirren), is sent to Jupiter
to retrieve the abandoned hulk, USS Discovery (found silently spinning
in orbit about Io, one of Jupiter's moons), to gather knowledge on the "failure"
of the HAL 9000 computer and to maybe make sense of Dave Bowman's last intriguing
transmission regarding the Monolith, "My God! It's full of stars!" As
economically unsound as this venture may seem, plausible reasons are given for
the mission, but - like they say - you'd have to be a rocket scientist
Amid
growing political tensions on Earth, the Soviet ship Leonov arrives at
Jupiter with its mixed crew, Hyams performing a controlled set of vignettes to
bring about tension between the crews (initially distrustful of each other), then
building the tension around the giant Monolith orbiting Jupiter, which unites
the crews for their lives' sake.
Though
it retains none of the breathtaking poetry and grandiose vision of 2001,
Hyams' lesser vision was aided by spectacular views of Jupiter and Io, thanks
to Voyager 1's groundbreaking flybys of the planet in 1979. Mattes of these
images are put to excellent use during a suspenseful spacewalk by astronauts Max
and Curnow (Elya Baskin and John Lithgow), as they approach the dead Discovery.
Though
science is bowed to more often than in his previous efforts, Hyams doesn't quite
shake off his trademarks of outrageous conceptual anomalies and immutable physics
laws treated like arbitrary physics suggestions. (With the Earth and its Moon
in the same screen shot, Hyams makes the same sophomoric mistake that most non-credible
space movies make when depicting these two celestial bodies which are on average
240,000 miles apart - if they were as close as depicted onscreen, not only would
tides be generating tsumanis daily, both celestial bodies would have torn themselves
apart eons ago or smashed together due to gravitational attraction.) After
the Monolith mysteriously goes about its business of doing nothing on a monolithic
scale, puny humans pondering its purpose, and after HAL is revived and jovially
goes about his business of being unnervingly menacing, Dave Bowman (model mannequin
Keir Dullea) appears to Floyd, in the form of a constantly-morphing old man/astronaut/elder,
and tells him "something wonderful" is going to happen. Only
Arthur C. Clarke would have the temerity to blow up Jupiter. Crumbling under the
confluence of millions of Mini-Monoliths, Jupiter goes nova and becomes a sun,
whilst the Leonov makes a narrow escape. HAL, through the intercession
of Dr. Chandra (an ascetic Bob Balaban, perfectly congruent with his typecasting
from Close Encounters and Altered States, who is somehow able to
bring that same character to his future comedic roles with Christopher Guest),
becomes sympathetic enough to weep for, when he is destroyed along with Discovery. The
last scenes of Earth and its twin suns illustrate Hyams' kindergarten comprehension
of planetary orbits: we are shown a constant two-sun sky everywhere on the Earth,
yet in becoming our newest star, Jupiter (which is renamed Lucifer) has not changed
its orbit, nor will it ever. Its orbit will appear exactly as it did when
Jupiter was merely a planet - that is, it will continually "cross the sky"
at a different rate than the actual Sun, thereby causing two suns to be in the
sky at ever-changing positions, or sometimes merely one Sun in the sky,
sometimes only Lucifer, sometimes no suns. After this silly sequence, we are immediately
jumpcut across the solar system - in an uncharacteristic grandiose sequence -
to Europa, the moon of Jupiter that the Monolith, in a final message to Earth,
forbad any landings on. And
lo, the last frame sets up sequelae ad infinitum, as The Monolith makes
a cameo on Europa, and the harbinger-like strains of Strauss' Also Sprach Zarathustra
crouches and then leaps at us, banging its head on Hyams' lowered ceiling. After
all, for midgets, the ceiling can afford to be that low. END |
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