reproduction
There is no route out of the maze. The maze shifts as you move through it, because it is alive.
reproduction
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cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
cinephilearchive:

A few days ago, I received out-of-print gem The Making of Kubrick’s 2001 (edited wonderfully by Jerome Agel, 1970). I’m still over the moon.

It is such a shame that this book is out-of-print. It is filled with everything you ever wanted to know about 2001. It leads off with Arthur C. Clarke’s short story “The Sentinel” and closes with a complete reprint of Stanley Kubrick’s interview with Playboy magazine. In between are profiles, interviews with technical advisors, effects secrets revealed, letters to Stanley from the moviegoing public, as well as reviews of the film, both good and bad. A fascinating snapshot of a moment in history when the world was caught off guard by a motion picture. Search your local used book stores, like I did. If you’re a Kubrick fan, it’s worth the effort.


Now you can join me, I’ll fly you to the moon!
The Making of Kubrick’s 2001
With endless thanks to Matt Degennaro
ZoomInfo
SYD MEAD “It is going to be a swell ride, folks!”
 “Computer flop cycles will duplicate and exceed that of the human brain within seven to ten years. At that point the question is, will the artificial intelligence entity possess ‘spirit?; the proverbial ‘soul?; the essence of personality? I believe so, and in that process we will discover that the ancient suspicions, the superstitions and the appreciation of the MAGICAL aspects of being ‘human’ will be eliminated and we will finally realize that we, as human animals, possess a fantastic, evolutionary product of endless evolution and adaptation to environment, to procreative existence and physical survival.”

 “We will unravel the electro-chemical cascade of reactions that actually produce our intelligence as an organic process. In that realization we will then be able to alter our own reality because we will create parallel processes with the ‘silicon’ intelligence to analyze and correct our organic flaws. (This also threatens to produce the whole repugnant control of populations for political agenda. This has always been the case with technological advancement. Remember, a knife can be used to elegantly bone a duck or stab someone to death. The tool demands intelligent use. Tools are utility neutral.)”