Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘2001’ and 1969: Lunar landing had an impact on filmmakers

- By Jake Coyle The Associated Press

NEW YORK — In 1964, on the recommenda­tion of science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke, Stanley Kubrick bought a telescope.

“He got this Questar, and he attached one of his cameras to it,” remembers Katharina Kubrick, the filmmaker’s stepdaught­er. “On a night where there was a lunar eclipse, he dragged us all out onto the balcony, and we were able to see the moon like a big rubber ball. I don’t think I’ve seen it as clearly since. He loved that thing. He looked at it all the time.”

Space exploratio­n was an exciting possibilit­y at that time, but one far from realizatio­n.

That July, NASA’S Ranger 7 sent back high-resolution photograph­s from the moon’s surface. Kubrick and Clarke, convinced the moon was only the start, began to toil on a script together. It would be five years before astronauts landed on the moon, on July 20, 1969. Kubrick took flight sooner. “2001: A Space Odyssey” opened in theaters April 3, 1968.

The space race was always going to be won by filmmakers and science fiction writers.

Jules Verne penned “From the Earth to the Moon” in 1865, prophesyin­g three U.S. astronauts rocketing from Florida to the moon. George Melies’ 1902 silent classic “A Trip to the Moon” had a rocket ship landing in the eye of the man in the moon.

The movie “Destinatio­n Moon,” based on Robert Heinlein’s tale, got there in 1950 and won an Oscar for special effects. Three years before Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the lunar surface, “Star Trek” began airing.

It’s no wonder the moon landing seemed like the stuff of movies. Some conspiracy theorists claimed it was one — another Kubrick production. But the truth of the landing was intertwine­d with cinema.

Audio recordings from Mission Control during Apollo 11 capture flight controller­s talking about “2001.” The day of the landing, Heinlein and Clarke were on air with Walter Cronkite. Heinlein called it “New Year’s Day of the Year One.”

The landing was a giant leap, not just for mankind, but also for filmmaking.

The Apollo 11 astronauts carried multiple film cameras with them, including two 16mm cameras and several 70mm Hasselblad 500s. Some cameras were affixed to the lunar module and the astronauts’ suits. They carried others on the journey.

Their training was rudimentar­y, but they were filmmakers. Armstrong, Aldrin and Michael Collins were all later made honorary members of the American Society of Cinematogr­aphers.

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