Conceived as Planetfall, Dark
Star (1974) is the first film of director John Carpenter and writer Dan
O’Bannon. The film began as a student
project at U.S.C. in 1970, with principal photography occurring early in 1971.
The film underwent re-shoots in 1972 to extend the fifty-minute production to eighty-minutes, and to make it viable for a theatrical release. The film was then purchased by Jack H. Harris (The Blob [1958]), who demanded additional re-shoots. The film finally premiered in 1975, and met with positive reviews, but relatively little audience appreciation.
The film underwent re-shoots in 1972 to extend the fifty-minute production to eighty-minutes, and to make it viable for a theatrical release. The film was then purchased by Jack H. Harris (The Blob [1958]), who demanded additional re-shoots. The film finally premiered in 1975, and met with positive reviews, but relatively little audience appreciation.
Regardless of its origin as a
student film, Dark Star is today considered a cult-classic. Its low-budget nature does not take away significantly
from the film’s success in part because it is clear the filmmakers had both a
creative strategy, and an example to follow.
In short, Dark Star is the anti-2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). As a work of (caustic) 1970s art, it knowingly draws all the opposite conclusions about space travel, mankind, and man’s place or role in the universe. In so cleverly over-turning the 2001 apple cart, Dark Star not only lives up to its title, it remains one of the funniest science fiction films made in the 1970s.
In short, Dark Star is the anti-2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). As a work of (caustic) 1970s art, it knowingly draws all the opposite conclusions about space travel, mankind, and man’s place or role in the universe. In so cleverly over-turning the 2001 apple cart, Dark Star not only lives up to its title, it remains one of the funniest science fiction films made in the 1970s.
“Don’t
give me any of that intelligent life crap. Just give me something I can blow
up.”
Eighteen
parsecs from Earth in Sector EB-90, the spaceship Dark Star continues its apparently
un-ending mission: to destroy unstable planets in order to pave the way for
human colonization.
Unfortunately,
the ship has grappled with some severe damage recently, and the newly promoted
captain, Doolittle (Narelle) is ill-prepared when one of the ship’s
thermonuclear bombs prepares to detonate while still attached to the underbelly
of the ship. Dark Star’s computer
suggests teaching the bomb the study of Phenomenology.
While
Doolittle grapples with this existential crisis, Sergeant Pinback (Dan O’Bannon)
battles a mischievous alien pet that has escaped from captivity and Lt. Talby
(Dre Pahich) dreams of seeing the mysterious Phoenix Asteroids with his own
eyes…
“Are
you willing to entertain a few concepts?”
Dark
Star is an
outer space comedy that succeeds brilliantly on the basis of a very good,
well-told joke. Visually, thematically, and in terms of philosophy, the film cleverly
operates as the antithesis of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey
(1968).
Being
the “Anti-2001” may sound like a relatively simple or juvenile thing, but
actually the opposite is true considering how consistently Carpenter and O’Bannon’s
film develops its world-view. By
creating a world so clearly and deliberately the inverse of Kubrick’s vision, Dark
Star’s creators have fashioned an intelligent and challenging response
to that beloved science fiction film, one that meaningfully re-evaluates
mankind’s nature and his place in the universe.
In
brief, 2001: A Space Odyssey is a majestic,
stately picture that establishes the mysteries of the universe in the form of
the monolith, but which also suggests that man’s progress over time possesses a
shape and a purpose; moving from ape-like primitive to evolved star child.
By
contrast, Dark Star suggests the absolute absurdity and pointlessness of
the human existence, and therefore of the universe itself. Right down the line, element-to-element Dark
Star mirrors and parodies 2001’s sense of “cosmic purpose”
with its own sense of man’s irrelevance in the scheme of things, as well as his
general pettiness.
In
Kubrick’s 2001, the space age is beautiful, stately, wondrous and because
of man’s intended destiny, even ordered. The spaceship and space station interiors are
depicted as roomy and minimalist, and the incredible visuals of space vessels
in flight -- docking and landing --
are sometimes accompanied by instances of classical music such as the Blue Danube
Waltz, a composition that suggests the formal, dance-like nature of objects in
space, and in motion.
2001’s “theme song” as it might even be
considered is “Thus Spake Zarathustra,”
a formal composition by Richard Strauss (1864 – 1949) which again, primarily denotes
order. As Kenneth Von Gunden and Stuart H. Stock wrote
in in Twenty All-Time Great Science
Fiction Films (Crown; 1982, page
190), the composition:
“…opens with an ascending phrase of three
notes…which represent Nietzcshe’s view of the evolutionary rise of man…These three
notes serve note that the number three is essential to the film: from the
perfect alignment of the three spheres of Earth, Moon, and sun at the beginning
to the appearance of things in threes.”
Dark
Star’s first
anti-2001
conceit is to adopt country music
-- the vernacular of personal stories and human emotions -- as its theme
song. The country music genre is not
generally symbolic in nature, but literal in its storytelling of failed love
affairs or a relationship now lost. So
where Kubrick utilizes his music to suggest the transcendent and ordered nature
of space travel, Dark Star’s theme, “Benson,
Arizona” by Bill Taylor evokes nothing of grandeur or cosmic importance.
The
lyrics of “Benson, Arizona” explicitly involve the long separation between an
astronaut and his Earthbound love, a love that connects that astronaut not to the
future (and evolution), but the traditional past.
This
connection is like a tether, dragging
him back to earthbound concerns and therefore precluding the chance for growth
or transcendence. Dan O’Bannon noted
this context when he said in an interview that the astronauts’ days aboard Dark
Star were sad and ridiculous.
The
specific comparison between 2001 and Dark Star involves the
nature of life on a ship traveling in space.
In A Space Odyssey, the crewmen fly the roomy Discovery towards a
rendezvous with destiny near Jupiter. In
Dark
Star, the unkempt astronauts fly their ship, the Dark Star on an
endless quest across the galaxy to destroy unstable planets. One
journey is, in keeping with the name of the ship, about “discovery.” The other is about death and destruction…about
“blowing things up.”
In
the course of these journeys, both men are contacted by home, and again, Dark
Star makes a point of inverting the themes featured in Kubrick’s
film. In 2001, a news anchor for
BBC-12’s “The World Tonight” interviews astronauts Dave Bowman (Keir Dullea)
and Frank Poole (Gary Lockwood) about life on ship. There is a time lag of approximately seven
minutes because Discovery is 80 million miles away. But meaningful conversation about life in
space is still possible…just delayed.
Dark
Star opens
with a message from McMurdo Base on Earth as a military officer contacts the
crew and notes that there is a ten year time
lag in conversation because Dark Star is 18 parsecs distant from Earth, a gap
that makes any meaningful conversation impossible. In 2001, the “entire world” joins the BBC interviewer in wishing Dave and
Frank a “safe and successful journey”
to the stars. Dark Star’s communique to
Earth, by contrasts gets play in “prime
time” and “good reviews in the trade,”
but the actual content of the message
from home is negative. Earth will
not be sending replacement radiation shields to the damaged ship, because of
budget cuts and the vast distance separating the ship and the home world.
Both
2001:
A Space Odyssey and Dark Star also comment on “intelligent”
devices and their relationship with mankind.
In the former film, the mellifluous-voiced HAL 9000 becomes murderous on
the journey to Jupiter, and must be de-activated. Under Dave’s auspices, man re-asserts his
rightful control over the machine (thus symbolically conquering technology; the
latest in the line of tools since the ape-man through that bone into the sky in
the film’s prologue…) and then heads off to evolve via the stargate/monolith “trip.”
Once
more, Dark Star inverts that very premise.
Here,
the crewmen of the Dark Star must interact with a talking bomb, one who is
convinced that it must detonate (following an accident aboard ship which
activates it) and thus kill everyone.
The ship’s acting captain, the appropriately-named Doolittle (Narrelle),
-- who all-things considered would rather be surfing – must teach the bomb Phenomenology
in order to prevent it from self-actuating and detonating. After the bomb learns Phenomenology -- the study of consciousness, essentially --
it becomes an ego-maniac, convinced that it is the only sentient being in the
universe. The bomb decides that it is
God and before detonating declares “Let There
Be Light.”
In
other words, in Dark Star, man does not conquer his technology. Instead, he is eclipsed and destroyed by it.
Technology supersedes man, and man does not evolve…he is destroyed. Dark Star even re-parses the transcendental
stargate sequence of 2001 to its own ends. It is notable too that the bomb
adopts the self-image of man: as destroyer.
The ship’s mission was to blow up planets, and now the bomb will blow up
man, a variation of that mission.
In
Kubrick’s film, Bowman endures a “cosmic
trip,” and the aging process, and then is re-born as the evolved “star
child. There’s a cosmic trip” in Dark
Star too, but it is not transcendental in nature. A crewman named Talby (Pahich) joins the
glowing, colorful “Phoenix Asteroids” and becomes indistinguishable from
them. The message is hence that man is
not unique and special -- he is not a
delicate snow-flake -- but rather part and parcel of a vast, meaningless
universe, and in some ways just another grain of sand inhabiting it.
Doolittle,
meanwhile also meets his distinctly not
transcendental end. He surfs into the atmosphere of a planet…and burns up. His
point of greatest self-actuation is reliving his favorite form of leisure…a
hobby.
Up
and down, Dark Star functions so colorfully and so amusingly because it
undercuts and reverses the premises of the grand Kubrick film again and again. In 2001: A Space Odyssey, the Discovery
is a perfectly-ordered technological paradise featuring very few signs of human
character or individuality. The Dark
Star’s living quarters, by contrast, look like a messy dorm room. The Discovery is so spacious that Frank Poole
can jog alone through a vast circular track.
The Dark Star, by contrast, is so small that its crew literally possesses
no elbow room on the bridge.
The
men of Dark Star are also not the brave, resourceful astronauts we have come to
expect from efforts like 2001 or Star Trek. Talby sits alone on the observation deck, isolated
from the crew. Pinback can’t be bothered
to feed his alien pet. Doolittle would
rather dream about surfing in Malibu than handle the ship’s problems. Even the
injured captain, Powell -- who is kept stored barely alive in some kind of
cryogenic freeze unit -- is more interested in his hobby (baseball in general,
and the Dodgers specifically) than in helping the ship survive a crisis. The evolution of man does not seem like much
of a possibility with these characters as the spearhead for the future age,
does it?
Even
visually, Dark Star plays knowingly as a mirror reflection of 2001:
A Space Odyssey. In Stanley
Kubrick’s film, the Discovery first passes on the screen from left to right, a
visual short-hand for a journey outward. In John Carpenter’s Dark Star, the ship passes from right to left,
thus implying a journey back rather
than forward. Since the film concerns
man’s inability to transcend petty concerns and specific incidents (reflected
in the use of country music as well as the crew’s petty demeanor), the idea
transmitted is that mankind is forever journeying, but not really heading
anywhere of import.
There’s an old truism about movie-making that goes: the best way to criticize a film is to make another
film yourself. In some crucial and
cerebral fashion, Dark Star epitomizes that notion, and note-for-note, it overturns
the premises and ideas of the grand 2001: A Space Odyssey.
If the 1970s is truly the wake-up from the hippie dream, as my friend and mentor, Johnny Byrne used to insist, then Dark Star is pointedly the wake-up from the 2001 dream; an acknowledgment of the absurd and pointless nature of man’s existence…even in the Space Age.
If the 1970s is truly the wake-up from the hippie dream, as my friend and mentor, Johnny Byrne used to insist, then Dark Star is pointedly the wake-up from the 2001 dream; an acknowledgment of the absurd and pointless nature of man’s existence…even in the Space Age.
I saw 2001 on the big screen as a re-release in 1976. Prior to that, my idea of science fiction was largely "space opera." 2001 made me realize that science fiction could be much broader in scope. In 1978, I saw Dark Star at a science fiction convention and it turned my head around once again. The bright, shiny, earnest worlds that I envisioned as our future were put under a microscope and shown lacking. I laughed with exhilaration. It was cathartic. I walked out of the convention hall with the same sense of excitement that I had leaving the movie theater two years earlier, but for entirely different reasons. It's amazing how well both movies hold up after all these years.
ReplyDeleteJohn interesting review of this "mirror,mirror" film to 2001.
ReplyDeleteSGB