Trebor, you disagree? I was great at pong…sherlock, in the ending of 2001, what’s with the guy in the room slowly dying alone. What’s with the fetus that’s larger than the world? Neither of those have anything anything to do with the rest of the movie….
Pacejv almost 15 years ago
GPS’s name is Hal.
AddADadaAdDad almost 15 years ago
HAL 9000!
Edcole1961 almost 15 years ago
Hal actually says, “I’m sorry Dave, I’m afraid I can’t do that.” I used to use it as my Windows error message sound.
ejcapulet almost 15 years ago
EEEEEEEK!!! 2001 totally freaked me out!
Pacejv almost 15 years ago
EEEEK…A space oddity.
watcha almost 15 years ago
I am afraid Dave(aka Cliff) is not going to like how this ends!
Plods with ...™ almost 15 years ago
EEK a GEEK
zero almost 15 years ago
@ejcapulet 2000 through 2009 inclusive freaked ME out -repeatedly. Nineties were up & down…[jk jk mostly]
Varnes almost 15 years ago
2001 a great movie, with a ending that has no meaning at all as far as anybody can tell. The sequel made absolutely no sense.
Dkram almost 15 years ago
RUN CLIFF, RUN LIKE YOU’VE NEVER RUN BEFORE.
\\//_
Rakkav almost 15 years ago
Advice to all technically advanced species: never allow your electronic devices to become smarter than you.
Varnes almost 15 years ago
Johanan. Too late….
Ray_C almost 15 years ago
My microwave is smarter than I am, but I can whip my garage door opener in chess six games out of ten.
Varnes almost 15 years ago
I used to be pretty good at pong…..
mcdev8367 almost 15 years ago
Dave’s not here!
frankburger24 almost 15 years ago
Nobody else caught the reference to the Jerrods jewelry christmas commercial?
gordrogb Premium Member almost 15 years ago
Wait - before you turn it off, make it sing “Daisy” for us. I love how it drags out that ending. SWEET!
lewisbower almost 15 years ago
I only saw 2001 three times. Could someone explain it to me?
ChiehHsia almost 15 years ago
PiriReis - it’s “Dave’s not here, man!”
(as long as we’re correcting famous quotations…)
pearlandpeach almost 15 years ago
Y’all need to read the books - then it will all make sense.
The movies are eye candy of the first water…absolutely fabulous. If you had in mind how it would look, the movies took it one more notch.
Turing stick to space station was beyond wonder - the music made it.
luvcmx almost 15 years ago
Amazing. I just watched 2001 last night for the first time in over 30 years. And I still have no idea of what it was about.
Takiniteasy almost 15 years ago
@edcole1961: ’ Hal actually says, “I’m sorry Dave, I’m afraid I can’t do that.” I used to use it as my Windows error message sound. ’
When I had a Mac my error message was Dorothy’s voice (from Wizard of Oz) saying “What would you do if you had a brain?”
GoodQuestion Premium Member almost 15 years ago
That’s what Cliff gets for buying the GPS unit from Goodwill in 2001.
Nighthawks Premium Member almost 15 years ago
Dave, this conversation can serve no purpose anymore. Goodbye.
Sherlock Watson almost 15 years ago
dkram: That shouldn’t be too hard; Cliff’s never run before.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As for the questions re. what the movie 2001 was about:
Serious answer – evolution, guided by an extraterrestrial intelligence.
Silly answer – about three hours.
slhansen07 almost 15 years ago
I miss Pam.
Davepostmp almost 15 years ago
Pearlandpeach - I’m not sure many people read books anymore - their loss and ours.
cwreenactor almost 15 years ago
“Daisy. Da-ai-sy…”
HARVIN almost 15 years ago
“Too bad about Frank,isn’t it?” HAL 9000
Trebor39 almost 15 years ago
Dracip, I disagree.
Varnes almost 15 years ago
Trebor, you disagree? I was great at pong…sherlock, in the ending of 2001, what’s with the guy in the room slowly dying alone. What’s with the fetus that’s larger than the world? Neither of those have anything anything to do with the rest of the movie….
Charles Weir almost 15 years ago
And don’t forget that the basis for 2001 was “The Sentine,” which is a very short story by Clark.
Michael McKown Premium Member almost 15 years ago
Oh that’s funny.
pbarnrob almost 15 years ago
Worth capturing, Arthur C. Clarke’s The Sentinel from 1951; right-click and ‘save link as’, it’s a six-page story in PDF (with a few OCR typos).