Zitat des Tages von Douglas Trumbull:
When I worked on 2001 - which was my first feature film - I was deeply and permanently affected by the notion that a movie could be like a first-person experience.
But as far as the concept of HAL, who HAL was, his character - I had no role in creating him.
I visited a scientist who had a helmet with magnetic fields controlled by computer sequences that could profoundly affect your mood and your perceptions.
Clearly, if we'd had the kind of computer graphics capability then that we have now, the Star Gate sequence would be much more complex than flat planes of light and color.
We're not that far from being able to plant images, memories, and emotional states directly into the brain.
IBM was the original contractor for much of the computer interface design on the film.
There were IBM logos designed for the film, and there were IBM design consultants working with Kubrick on the layout of the controls and computer screens.
I honestly believe that the next big leap in immersive technology will be very much like Brainstorm.
My first job on 2001 was to make all of the HAL readouts: the 16 screens that surround HAL's eyes.
It was the point where things became much more abstract and less literal than in the bulk of the film, which was hardcore rockets and space and planets - all a fairly straightforward evolution from what I had been doing before.