How Popular Science covered '2001: A Space Odyssey' in 1968

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'But by the time 2001 A.D. rolls around, things may be more fantastic than the picture shows.'

The future is here. That’s the feeling you get when you leave the theater after seeing 2001: A Space Odyssey, the most realistic science-adventure movie ever filmed. It uses an astonishing combination of camera tricks and scientific fact to give you the closest thing possible to the actual sensations of space travel.

Masters’ team designed an entire system of craft, all with unique characteristics, to provide movie space travelers with all types of transportation. “It wouldn’t do to have the wasteful kind of spacecraft that are used only once, like today’s,” says Frederick I. Ordway, a leading NASA consultant. So they created vehicles that, theoretically, could be used over and over.. It looks more like an aerospace plane than a rocket.

You can use a credit card to call earth and speak to loved ones on a Picture phone. It’s no prop; it was created with the help of Dr. John R. Pierce of Bell Labs, who designed the Telstar communications satellite. All these comforts should make waiting for connections in bases like Space Station 5 not much different than in today’s airports.

Their solution? Buy 90 tons of ordinary sand, wash and dry it, then dye it the color it should be before dumping it in the hole to form the excavation floor. Color photos from Ranger later confirmed that they had hit the color and texture right on the nose. Actually, Kubrick built a magnificent 54-foot model of Discovery, and additional sets for the command and living modules—which form a giant centrifuge that really turns. The mammoth wheel includes:

The living quarters also have four hibernaculums—chilled cabinets—where nonworking astronauts are put into hibernation. The sleeping cocoons were designed with the help of Dr. Ormond G. Mitchell, Assistant Professor of Anatomy at New York University Medical School, a specialist in the development of hibernation techniques for humans.

 

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