A large metal monolith discovered in a remote area of the Utah Desert is believed to be an art installation.
Turns out the new Bill and Ted movie included references to a science fiction classic.
Films usually do not have “answers” when it comes to interpreting them. We can give our opinions and make arguments for certain things, but there’s no finite, definitive answer, and if there were, films would be boring. Even stories that are allegorical and have 1-to-1 analogues still have life and room for interpretation. [caption id="attachment_774929" align="alignright" width="360"] Image via MGM[/caption] So just because Stanley Kubrick is possibly on record giving his thoughts on the ending of 2001: A Space Odyssey, it doesn’t mean the film has been definitively answered and concluded. ScreenCrush …
Stanley Kubrick's 1968 classic, 2001: A Space Odyssey, remains the best and most influential sci-fi movie of all time. Here's why.
There's plenty in the film humanity has yet to achieve, but there's just enough to make one wonder if Kubrick was a fortune teller.