Difference between revisions of "2001: A Space Odyssey"
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{{TH|Episode name}} | {{TH|Episode name}} | ||
{{TH|Reference}} | {{TH|Reference}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Lisa's Pony 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Lisa's Pony 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TRs|[[Season 3|3]]|2}} | {{TRs|[[Season 3|3]]|2}} | ||
{{TB|43}} | {{TB|43}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Lisa's Pony]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Lisa's Pony]]"}} | ||
{{TB|At the beginning of the episode, [[Homer]] dreams he is one of the apes in the "Dawn of Man" sequence. While the other apes learn to use fire and tools, Homer uses the monolith as a back-scratcher and falls asleep leaning against it.}} | {{TB|At the beginning of the episode, [[Homer]] dreams he is one of the apes in the "Dawn of Man" sequence. While the other apes learn to use fire and tools, Homer uses the monolith as a back-scratcher and falls asleep leaning against it.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Brother Can You Spare Two Dimes 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Brother Can You Spare Two Dimes 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|59}} | {{TB|59}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?]]"}} | ||
{{TB|Homer's vision when he rides the [[Spinemelter 2000]] is based on the "Star Gate" sequence.}} | {{TB|Homer's vision when he rides the [[Spinemelter 2000]] is based on the "Star Gate" sequence.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Deep Space Homer 2001 1.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Deep Space Homer 2001 1.png|250px]]<br>[[File:Deep Space Homer 2001 2.png|250px]]<br>[[File:Deep Space Homer 2001 3.png|250px]]<br>[[File:Deep Space Homer 2001 4.png|250px]]<br>}} |
{{TB|[[Season 5|5]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 5|5]]}} | ||
{{TB|96}} | {{TB|96}} | ||
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''Also Sprach Zarathustra'' plays during the episode's ending scene. Bart throwing the marker pen which turns into a satellite references the transition from the Dawn of Man sequence to the space station. The satellite hits an embryonic Homer, who appears as a Star Child in orbit about Earth.}} | ''Also Sprach Zarathustra'' plays during the episode's ending scene. Bart throwing the marker pen which turns into a satellite references the transition from the Dawn of Man sequence to the space station. The satellite hits an embryonic Homer, who appears as a Star Child in orbit about Earth.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Maximum Homerdrive 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Maximum Homerdrive 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|[[Season 10|10]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 10|10]]}} | ||
{{TB|220}} | {{TB|220}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Maximum Homerdrive]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Maximum Homerdrive]]"}} | ||
{{TB|The [[Navitron Autodrive System]] says "I'm afraid I can't let you do this, [[Red Barclay|Red]]", referencing the famous line from HAL 9000. It also uses a red light similar to HAL.}} | {{TB|The [[Navitron Autodrive System]] says "I'm afraid I can't let you do this, [[Red Barclay|Red]]", referencing the famous line from HAL 9000. It also uses a red light similar to HAL.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XII 2001 1.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XII 2001 1.png|250px]]<br>[[File:Treehouse of Horror XII 2001 2.png|250px]]<br>[[File:Treehouse of Horror XII 2001 3.png|250px]]}} |
{{TRs|[[Season 13|13]]|2}} | {{TRs|[[Season 13|13]]|2}} | ||
{{TB|270}} | {{TB|270}} | ||
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{{TB|"[[My Big Fat Geek Wedding]]"}} | {{TB|"[[My Big Fat Geek Wedding]]"}} | ||
{{TB| In one shot, when the family is at the [[Bi-Mon-Sci-Fi-Con]], a poster for the film can be seen at the top right of the screen (see image).}} | {{TB| In one shot, when the family is at the [[Bi-Mon-Sci-Fi-Con]], a poster for the film can be seen at the top right of the screen (see image).}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|[[Season 19|19]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 19|19]]}} | ||
{{TB|409}} | {{TB|409}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind]]"}} | ||
{{TB|Homer's vision of memories resembles the Star Gate.}} | {{TB|Homer's vision of memories resembles the Star Gate.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Everything Is Fake.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Everything Is Fake.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|[[Season 22|22]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 22|22]]}} | ||
{{TB|485}} | {{TB|485}} | ||
{{TB|"[[500 Keys]]"}} | {{TB|"[[500 Keys]]"}} | ||
{{TB|After [[Lisa]] finds the hidden classroom at [[Springfield Elementary School]], she notices that the things in it look real but don't really work, such as a ruler without lines and a book with pull tabs that don't do anything, similar to the hotel room (as described in the novel) where Bowman ends up after he goes through the Star Gate.}} | {{TB|After [[Lisa]] finds the hidden classroom at [[Springfield Elementary School]], she notices that the things in it look real but don't really work, such as a ruler without lines and a book with pull tabs that don't do anything, similar to the hotel room (as described in the novel) where Bowman ends up after he goes through the Star Gate.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Ships in Bottles.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Ships in Bottles.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|[[Season 23|23]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 23|23]]}} | ||
{{TB|495}} | {{TB|495}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Holidays of Future Passed]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Holidays of Future Passed]]"}} | ||
{{TB|One of the ships in bottles that [[Homer]] has built is ''Discovery'' (farthest to the left, above [[Lisa]]'s head).}} | {{TB|One of the ships in bottles that [[Homer]] has built is ''Discovery'' (farthest to the left, above [[Lisa]]'s head).}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XXV 2001 1.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XXV 2001 1.png|250px]]<br>[[File:Treehouse of Horror XXV 2001 2.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|[[Season 26|26]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 26|26]]}} | ||
{{TB|556}} | {{TB|556}} | ||
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Stanley Kubrick throws a pen in the air in the same way that one of the apes throws a bone at the end of the Dawn of Man sequence.}} | Stanley Kubrick throws a pen in the air in the same way that one of the apes throws a bone at the end of the Dawn of Man sequence.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:THOH XXVII 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:THOH XXVII 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|[[Season 28|28]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 28|28]]}} | ||
{{TB|600}} | {{TB|600}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Treehouse of Horror XXVII]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Treehouse of Horror XXVII]]"}} | ||
{{TB|[[Bill Odenkirk]] is credited as "2001: A Space Odenkirk".}} | {{TB|[[Bill Odenkirk]] is credited as "2001: A Space Odenkirk".}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Bart's Not Dead 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Bart's Not Dead 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TRs|[[Season 30|30]]|2}} | {{TRs|[[Season 30|30]]|2}} | ||
{{TB|640}} | {{TB|640}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Bart's Not Dead]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Bart's Not Dead]]"}} | ||
{{TB|The aliens seen at the beginning of the episode are in a room similar to the one seen at the end of the film.}} | {{TB|The aliens seen at the beginning of the episode are in a room similar to the one seen at the end of the film.}} | ||
− | {{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XXIX 2001.png| | + | {{TBT|[[File:Treehouse of Horror XXIX 2001.png|250px]]}} |
{{TB|643}} | {{TB|643}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Treehouse of Horror XXIX]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Treehouse of Horror XXIX]]"}} | ||
{{TB|When Lisa is absorbed by a pod, she has a vision based on the Star Gate sequence.}} | {{TB|When Lisa is absorbed by a pod, she has a vision based on the Star Gate sequence.}} | ||
+ | {{TBT|[[File:Frinkcoin 2001.png|250px]]}} | ||
+ | {{TB|[[Season 31|31]]}} | ||
+ | {{TB|375}} | ||
+ | {{TB|"[[Frinkcoin]]"}} | ||
+ | {{TB|The sun rising over the whiteboard surrounded by lights in the town square is a reference to a scene from ''2001: A Space Odyssey''.}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 16:13, February 24, 2020
2001: A Space Odyssey is a science fiction film produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick, released in 1968. The novel of the same title, by Arthur C. Clarke, was written concurrently with the development of the film and was published after the film's release. A sequel to the novel, titled 2010: Odyssey Two, appeared in 1982 and was adapted into a film in 1984. Clarke went on to write two additional sequels in the 2001 series, 2061:Odyssey Three and 3001: The Final Odyssey, neither of which has been adapted into a movie.
The film tells the story of the spaceship Discovery One, which is en route to Jupiter ostensibly on a scientific mission. The main characters are astronaut David Bowman and HAL 9000, the ship's computer. The mission's true purpose (unbeknownst to Bowman but known to HAL) is to investigate the intelligence behind a mysterious black monolith that sent a radio signal to the outer reaches of the solar system and also (as shown in the film) influenced humanity's pre-history. HAL malfunctions due to the mission's need for secrecy being incompatible with his programming, and Bowman is forced to deactivate him. Bowman reaches Jupiter, discovers another monolith in orbit about the planet, and leaves the ship in an EVA pod. When Bowman approaches the monolith, he inadvertently activates a stargate which sends him across vast distances of space. In the end, Bowman unites with the alien intelligence behind the monoliths and becomes a fetus-like Star Child which is seen floating in space near Earth in the movie's final scene.
2001: A Space Odyssey did very well at the box office and was the highest-grossing film in North America in 1968. It has since been regarded as a landmark in the sci-fi genre and one of the most influential movies of all time. Among other things, it was noted for its then ground-breaking special and visual effects, scientifically accurate depiction of space travel, and use of classical music in the score. Two of the best-known musical themes from the film are "The Blue Danube", which is the waltz heard when the "space plane" docks with the space station; and Also sprach Zarathustra, the fanfare heard during the film's opening and closing scenes. Also sprach Zarathustra has achieved iconic status in popular culture and become the de facto theme of 2001.
2001: A Space Odyssey has been referred to several times in Simpsons media.
Contents
References to 2001: A Space Odyssey in The Simpsons
Episodes
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The Simpsons Movie
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Specials
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Video games
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Other
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Common cast and crew
Cast
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External links