Just found this video … “”2001: A Space Odyssey” directed by George Lucas?”, from January 27, 2023 … at poak woods‘ YouTube channel.
I think it’s clever and funny, and worthy of sharing.
Enjoy!
Images and Thoughts to Inspire Your Intellect and Infuse Your Imagination!
Just found this video … “”2001: A Space Odyssey” directed by George Lucas?”, from January 27, 2023 … at poak woods‘ YouTube channel.
I think it’s clever and funny, and worthy of sharing.
Enjoy!
There’s a well-known adage that pertains to many aspects of life: “Less is more.” This is so in the field of advertising, where relegating the name or image of a corporation, product, or service to the “background” – sometimes humorously; sometimes ironically; sometimes idealistically – can ignite a flame of curiosity and interest that would otherwise lay fallow.
A superbly done example of this approach (who’s the person who dreamed this one up?!) appeared in The New York Times on December 27, 1942, in the form of an advertisement for the Nash-Kelvinator corporation, a manufacturer of automobiles and household appliances. The ad consists of a painting – though in a newspaper obviously printed by the half-tone process – of the bombardier of a B-17 Flying Fortress bomber in the nose of his aircraft during a mission over Europe, followed by his thoughts as expressed in stream-of-consciousness internal monologue. Only at the very “bottom” of the advertisement – placed after the bombardier’s message – appear symbols for Nash-Kelvinator (a car and kitchen refrigerator). This is followed by a statement about the company’s mission: To manufacture weapons and material in support of the war effort, with the ultimate goal of ensuring that life in the United States will continue once victory is achieved and servicemen return. There is absolutely no mention – in this age before the primacy of shareholder value, and, America’s deindustrialization only three short decades later – of any of Nash-Kelvinator’s products. The ad, published only a year and nearly a month after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, is simply a message of patriotic solidarity, cautious optimism, and, hope.
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Here’s the ad in its entirety:
The text of the ad is striking in – through very few words – encompassing several aspects of the war in general, and America’s air war, in particular.
First – this stands out! – the B-17 is shown and described as being on a night-time mission, rather than a daylight sortie. This probably reflects currents of news about the 8th Air Force prevailing in 1942 (assuming such information was available to the public?!) in terms of discussions concerning whether the 8th would switch to night operations and participate with Royal Air Force Bomber Command in wide-area bombing. Of course, this never came about. As described by John T. Correll at Air & Space Forces Magazine in “The Allied Rift on Strategic Bombing“, “Churchill had President Franklin D. Roosevelt almost convinced that the B-17s should join Bomber Command in operating at night. Before that happened, Churchill met with Eaker during the Allied conference at Casablanca, Morocco, in January 1943, and Eaker talked him out of the idea. His key point was the value of keeping the Germans under attack both day and night.”
Caliban Rising addresses the issue of the RAF’s advocacy of night bombing for the 8th Air Force, versus the American intention of bombing by day, in his video “Shocking Comments About RAF Bomber Command vs 8th Air Force,” commencing at 4:55.
Then, we learn that the bombardier signed up because of the adventure involved in combat flying, but only upon reaching England and encountering the reality of war, and, the nature of the Third Reich, did he begin to appreciate the true gravity (accidental pun, there) of his decision.
This takes the form of symbolic encounters with symbolic representatives of two of the nations which have have been conquered by Germany: A Czech civilian refugee in London, and, a fallen Polish fighter pilot who sacrificed his life to destroy an Me-109. A third encounter is of a very different sort, and expressed in a very different way. A fellow American aviator’s offer a a cigarette to a captured German flyer is refused with sheer fury, the aviator being “Izzy Jacobs”, obviously and clearly by the “sound” of his name a Jew. A sign of the times (and the Times?) the word “Jew” is absent from the ad, unlike “Czech” and “Polish”. Well, that this point was even made in a mainstream advertisement by a major American corporation in 1942 is itself remarkable.
Then follow the bombardier’s thoughts about past, present, and future. His central hope is that the country he returns to – for he expects to return – will be much the same as the country he left, with the hope that the reader – the American public, will, “Keep it for the way I remember it, just the way I see it now – until I come back.”
Whoever he was, I hope he made it back.
“UNTIL I COME BACK”…
We’re over 20,000 feet now (the coffee’s frozen in the thermos) and that’s the Zuyder Zee below. We must be halfway across Holland.
Funny thing what happens to a fellow…
Those are the same old stars and the same old moon that the girl and I were looking at last Christmas.
And here I am – flying 300 miles an hour in a bubble of glass, with ten tons of T.N.T.
Somehow – this isn’t the way I imagined it at all, the day I enlisted. Don’t get me wrong – sure I was sore at the Japs and the Nazis – but mostly, it was the thrill of the Great Adventure.
Well, I know now – the real reasons – why I’m up here paying my first call on Hitler.
It’s only when you get away from the U.S.A. that you find out what the shootin’s really about and what you’re fighting for.
I learned from the Czech chap in London. The refugee, the nice old fellow who reminded me of Dad except for the maimed hands. I was dumb enough to ask about it. “I got that,” he said, “for writing a book the Nazis didn’t like…”
Then there was the captured German pilot who screamed and spit when Izzy Jacobs offered him a cigarette…how do fellows get that way?
And that crazy Polish pilot – the fellow who rammed the Messerschmitt. After the funeral I learned what was eating him. Seems as how he had a sister in Warsaw who had been sent to a German Officers Club…
I hope to hell Hitler’s home tonight…light and wind are perfect.
Yes, sir, I’ve met ‘em by the dozens over here – guys warped by hate – guys who have had ambition beaten out of them – guys who look at you as if you were crazy when you tell ‘em what America is like.
They say America will be a lot different after this war.
Well, maybe so.
But, as for me, I know the score…you learn fast over here. I know how there’s only one decent way to live in the world – the way my folks lived and the way I want to live.
When you find a thing that works as good as that – brother, be careful with that monkey-wrench.
And there’s one little spot – well, if they do as much as change the smell of the corner drug store – I will murder the guy.
I want my girl back, just as she is, and that bungalow on Maple Avenue…
I want that old roll-top desk of mine at the electric company, with a chance to move upstairs, or quit if I want to.
I want to see that old school of mine, and our church, just as they are – because I want my kids to go there.
That’s my home town…
Keep it for the way I remember it, just the way I see it now – until I come back.
NASH KELVINATOR
NASH-KELVINATOR CORPORATION, DETROIT, MICHIGAN
Published in the belief that here at Nash-Kelvinator we carry a double responsibility – not only to build the weapons for victory but also to build toward the kind of a future, an American future, our boys will want when they come back.
Reprints of this Nash-Kelvinator advertisement will gladly be sent you on request.
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Here’s a close-up of the ad’s single illustration, showing our pensive bombardier in the nose of his aircraft.
(By way of explanation, the image above was scanned from a paper photocopy made by a 35mm microfilm viewer (I think manufactured by Minolta … it’s been a few decades since I made this!) which I used to review this issue of the Times … as 35mm microfilm … rather than from a digitized image “copied & pasted” from the Internet such as from the “Times Machine”. The ubiquity and ease of access of digitized images from newspapers, though fantastic for accessing text, is typically a step far down in terms of the quality of the images that accompany such news items. In other words, technological convenience is often an unrecognized and unanticipated step far, far backwards in terms of preserving the past.)
Intentionally or not, the unknown artist who created this illustration changed the mood of the art by making the figure of the bombardier – relative to the size of the B-17 – perhaps twice as small as in actuality, making the aircraft look practically cavernous. You can see this in the image below, which illustrates a B-17 bombardier as seen looking forward from the crew station of the aircraft’s navigator. If he’s seated, there’s just enough room for him and not much more. This WW II Army Air Force Photo 3200 / A45511) is captioned, “Lt. Maurice A. Bonomo, Bombardier, 333 W. 86th St., New York City, 18 daylight missions; holds Air Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters”. The picture gives an excellent representative view of the the bombardier’s position in a B-17 Flying Fortress (specifically, a B-17G Flying Fortress).
Given that Lt. Bonomo isn’t (!) wearing his oxygen mask, and is directly touching the control panel without (!) gloves (neither of which would be advisable at altitude…) this is certainly a “posed” photograph, taken while the B-17 was on the ground.
Though the date of this photograph is unknown, what is known is that Lt. Bonomo, a member of the 401st Bomb Squadron, 91st Bomb Group, became a prisoner of war on July 20, 1944, during a mission to Leipzig, Germany. On that date, he was a member of 1 Lt. Arthur F. Hultin’s crew in B-17G 42-102509, which was lost due to anti-aircraft fire. Fortunately, all 10 crewmen survived as POWs. The plane’s loss is covered in MACR 7274 and Luftgaukommando Report KU 2560, the latter document being unusually detailed in its description of the plane.
The husband of Janet A. Bonomo, of 333 West 86th Street, in New York, Maurice Bonomo was imprisoned in North Compound 2 of Stalag Luft I, in Barth, Germany.
Here’s a similar picture. Taken on or before December 28, 1942, Army Air Force photo 3A40521 / 23535AC is captioned, “Bombardier on a Boeing B-17 flying on a search mission in the Hawaiian Islands.” The nose framing reveals that this is an “E’ model of the B-17, unlike the “G” version in the photo of Lt. Bonomo. (I scanned this picture at the National Archives in College Park, Maryland.)
And, here’s a view limited to the photo itself, with contrast and lighting slightly adjusted to render details (clouds in the distance) in greater clarity.
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The contemplative and serious nature of the advertisement, both in print and art, cannot help but remind one of the scene – in William Wyler’s wonderful 1946 movie (see at Archive.org) “The Best Years of Our Lives” – in which former 8th Air Force bombardier Capt. Fred Derry, played by Dana Andrews, highly uncertain of his place in the America to which he has returned; completely uncertain about his future, and certainly seeing no future for himself in his hometown of “Boone City” (any-midwestern-state-USA), decides to leave for parts unknown.
While awaiting the departure of his flight at a nearby Army Air Force Base (the sequence having been shot at Ontario Army Airfield, California), he happens to wander through a boneyard of surplus warplanes (past rows of Wright Cyclone Engines with Hamilton Standard propellers stacked alongside, like lines of soldiers-all-in-a-row, engineless P-39 Airacobras, and then engineless B-17s; this would’ve been under the auspices of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation).
Randomly coming across an aircraft nicknamed “ROUND ? TRIP” (the plane is B-17F 42-3463, which never actually left the United States, its nose art having been created for the movie), he enters the nose compartment and climbs into the bombardier’s position. (Once and again.) Then, in one of the most evocative and moving scenes to emerge from a film of this era – truly, any era – he relives the past. Viewed from the front, the camera zooms in on the aircraft and then pans across each of the B-17’s four nacelles from the plane’s left to right, momentarily focusing on each as the background music rises in pitch and intensity, symbolizing the plane coming to life for a combat mission. The fact that the aircraft’s engines are actually missing from this plane – the camera focusing on each nacelle’s empty bulkhead – reveals to us that for Captain Derry, past and present are indistinguishable.
The camera then zooms in on Derry as (breaking out in a sweat), he leans forward as if to peer through imagined bombsight, and relives the experience of witnessing a friend’s B-17 being shot down in combat – with no survivors. Only when the foreman of a salvage crew looks up to notice Derry in the aircraft and yells from below, does Derry abruptly awaken from his dark reverie. This transition is symbolized in the way that Derry (as viewed from outside the bombardier’s nosepiece) is filmed out of focus amidst his flashback, and only comes into clear focus when he leaves the past. Having returned to the present, Derry leaves the plane, and after a brusque but straightforward conversation with the foreman that entails the possibility of a job – a menial job for a former Captain but a job nonetheless – returns to the present, and the possibility of a real future.
Below you’ll find a clip of this sequence. In the full version at Archive.org, it begins near the film’s end, at @ 2 hours 32 minutes.
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It was an arduous journey, but our bombardier came back.
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A Reference or Two (and More)
Nash-Kelvinator, at…
The impact of Ridley Scott’s 1979 film “Alien” in the worlds of horror and cinematography has surely been enormous, and, continues. Certainly the movie didn’t appear “out of nowhere”, and – consciously or otherwise, as in works of art of all genres – its creation is the result of numerous influences and cultural antecedents, both literary and cinematic. Among the influences that immediately came to my mind – at least, upon writing this post! – are the films “It! The Terror from Beyond Space” (1958), “Planet of the Vampires” (1965), and A.E. van Vogt’s 1939 Astounding Science Fiction short stories “Black Destroyer” and “Discord in Scarlet” both of which were incorporated into his 1950 fix-up novel The Voyage of the Space Beagle.
My supposition was confirmed through the (inevitably!) very lengthy entry for the film at Wikipedia, which discusses “Alien’s” origins in great detail. Specifically: “Alien‘s roots in earlier works of fiction have been analyzed and acknowledged extensively by critics. The film has been said to have much in common with B movies such as The Thing from Another World (1951). Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954), It! The Terror from Beyond Space (1958), Night of the Blood Beast (1958), and Queen of Blood (1966), as well as its fellow 1970s horror films Jaws (1975) and Halloween (1978). Literary connections have also been suggested: Philip French of the Guardian has perceived thematic parallels with Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None (1939). Many critics have also suggested that the film derives in part from A. E. van Vogt‘s The Voyage of the Space Beagle (1950), particularly its stories “The Black Destroyer”, in which a cat-like alien infiltrates the ship and hunts the crew, and “Discord in Scarlet”, in which an alien implants parasitic eggs inside crew members which then hatch and eat their way out. O’Bannon denies that this was a source of his inspiration for Alien‘s story. Van Vogt in fact initiated a lawsuit against 20th Century Fox over the similarities, but Fox settled out of court.
Several critics have suggested that the film was inspired by Italian filmmaker Mario Bava‘s cult classic Planet of the Vampires (1965), in both narrative details and visual design. Rick Sanchez of IGN has noted the “striking resemblance” between the two movies, especially in a celebrated sequence in which the crew discovers a ruin containing the skeletal remains of long-dead giant beings, and in the design and shots of the ship itself. Cinefantastique also noted the remarkable similarities between these scenes and other minor parallels. Robert Monell, on the DVD Maniacs website, observed that much of the conceptual design and some specific imagery in Alien “undoubtedly owes a great debt” to Bava’s film. Despite these similarities, O’Bannon and Scott both claimed in a 1979 interview that they had not seen Planet of the Vampires; decades later, O’Bannon would admit: “I stole the giant skeleton from the Planet of the Vampires.”
But…! Another “key” to the origin of “Alien” can be found at CultureNC’s YouTube channel (“Culture NC est une chaîne qui regroupe des vidéos sur la culture calédonienne” ((“Culture NC is a channel that brings together videos on New Caledonian culture”)) in the video “Alien: Pulp Origins“, of September 5, 2022. Therein, along with mention of “It! The Terror from Beyond Space” and “Planet of the Vampires”, CultureNC touches upon Howard Hawks’ 1951 “The Thing From Another World”, the two aforementioned A.E. van Vogt stories, the anthology Strange Relations by Philip José Farmer, and, the 1953 short story “Junkyard” by Clifford D. Simak. Ultimately, however, CultureNC arrives at an even earlier short story as having either prefigured “Alien”: Clark Ashton Smith’s “The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis” from the May, 1932 issue of Weird Tales.
I find CultureNC’s discussion fascinating, While it’s unknown if Smith’s specific tale truly influenced the creators of “Alien” – that I doubt, given the tale’s time-frame and perhaps relative obscurity – what is remarkable (and correct) is that the story foreshadowed, if not anticipated, plot elements that emerged in the movie forty-seven years after its very Weird publication.
You can view Richard Corben’s adaptation of Smith’s story here. I’ve created PDF of the tale (by way of the Pulp Magazine Archive) which you can access (“yay! – free stuff!”), here.
For all its impact, and in spite of its obvious science-fiction tropes (space travel, cybernetics, suspended animation, and extraterrestrial life (of a gross and very deadly sort)), “Alien” unlike “Blade Runner” is emphatically not science fiction. It’s gothic horror; visual horror, which simply uses the idea (to be true, with marvelous effectiveness) – versus the reality – of “space” as a setting of emotional darkness, fear, and negative infinitude.
But yeah, it’s entertaining movie!
So, without further mouse clicking / scrolling delay, here’s Culture NC’s video:
There are two YouTube (audio) versions of “The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis”. Here they be:
HorrorBabble’s YouTube channel features ““The Vaults of Yoh Vombis” / A Weird Tale of Mars by Clark Ashton Smith“, from March 22, 2021. The tale is narrated by Ian Gordon, with musci and production by Gordon, and, Jennifer Gill.
Shwan Pleil’s YouTube channel features “The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis by Clark Ashton Smith“, narrated by Joe Knezevich, from March 15, 2023.
And otherwise…
Clark Ashton Smith, at…
… Internet Speculative Fiction Database
… The Eldritch Dark (“The Sanctum of Clark Ashton Smith”)
… Darkworlds Quarterly – The Culture of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror
… The Avocado (“A Primer on Clark Ashton Smith”)
… Social Ecologies (“Clark Ashton Smith: Visionary of the Dark Fantastic”)
… Comic Art Fans (one item)
… The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis, at …
While not the most compelling cover illustration – it didn’t have to be, given the success of the novel! – artist Howard Terpning’s cover art for Dell’s 1965 edition of John le Carré’s The Spy Who Came in From the Cold includes a straightforward representation of actor Richard Burton, the book probably having been released during the same time frame as Paramount’s 1965 film by the same name.
Searching hi, low, and every-virtual-where for the movie yields only one result: A Spanish-subtitled, low resolution version, which can be found at Archive.org.
Ashe was typical of that strata of mankind
which conducts its human relationships according to a principle of challenge and response.
Where there was softness, he would advance;
where he found resistance, retreat.
Having himself no particular opinions or tastes,
he relied upon whatever conformed with those of his companion.
He was as ready to drink tea at Fortnum’s as beer at the Prospect of Whitby;
he would listen to military music in St. James’s Park or jazz in a Compton Street cellar;
his voice would tremble with sympathy when he spoke of Sharpeville,
or with indignation at the growth of Britain’s colonial population.
To Leamas this observably passive role was repellent;
it brought out the bully in him,
so that he would lead the other gently into a position where he was committed,
and then himself withdraw,
so that Alex was constantly scampering back from some cul-de-sac into which Leamas had enticed him. There were moments that afternoon when Leamas was so brazenly perverse
that Ashe would have been justified in terminating their conversation –
especially since he was paying; but he did not.
The little sad man with spectacles who sat alone at the neighboring table,
deep in a book on the manufacture of ball bearings,
might have deduced, had he been listening, that Leamas was indulging a sadistic nature –
or perhaps (if he had been a man of particular subtlety)
that Leamas was proving to his own satisfaction
that only a man with a strong ulterior motive would put up with that kind of treatment.
Richard Powers’ trio of covers for Ballantine Books’ late 1950s editions of Arthur C. Clarke’s anthologies Expedition to Earth, Reach for Tomorrow, and, his novel Childhood’s End, show a level of originality, symbolic power, entrancing ambiguity, and just-plain-old-unusualness that stand out even for that artist’s unique body of work. You can view the cover of the 1954 edition, here. However, when Ballantine republished these three books in the early 1970s, a different illustrative path was followed. Rather than reprise Powers’ original art, or avail the skills of contemporary artists such as Jack Gaughan, Paul Lehr, or John Schoenherr, the covers of all three editions featured works by a (yet) anonymous illustrator. The cover art for each book is representational, conventionally “spacey”, and different in format from much science-fiction cover art – then and now – in that it occupies only a portion of the cover’s “real estate”, the remainder of the cover is simply plain, blank, and empty. (Well, the title, price, and publisher’s name still show!)
The inspiration for each painting is – for anybody in the early 70s, and still today in 2023 – immediately recognizable: Each composition was inspired by a different aspect of the spacecraft appearing in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. For Expedition to Earth and Reach for Tomorrow, the cover art is inspired by the Jovian expedition ship Discovery One; for Childhood’s End, by the Aries 1b lunar lander.
You can see this below, on the cover of the 1971 edition of Expedition to Earth.
The artist clearly used the spherical command / control / habitation module of the Discovery as the inspiration for his painting. Though different in detail from the Discovery, the sphere retains three evenly-spaced, equally-sized circular hatches of the Discovery, inspired by the original craft’s pod bay doors. It also features the Discovery’s line of cockpit viewports above the sphere’s centerline. It’s very different in having two almost-stuck-on parabolic antennas and a radar mast. There’s also that big boxy clunky rectangular thing stuck to its side, which I think was inspired by the docking port of the earth-orbiting space station which appears early and briefly in the 2001 film, when Pan Am’s space clipper Orion III approaches the station, particularly at 1:22. Enjoy, from Screen Themes:
Curious; the Internet Speculative Fiction Database entry for these three early 1970s Ballantine editions indicates (correctly) that the cover art for each is uncredited and unsigned.
What happened? Were the rights singed over to Ballantine?
So, in thought, just an idea: The paintings look like (look like!) the work of Vincent Di Fate.
(Just an idea!)
Here’s Lawrence D. Miller’s 1984 diagram of the components of Discovery One….
And, at Spacedock’s YouTube channel, the video “2001 A Space Odyssey: Discovery One | Extended Ship Breakdown (May 27, 2011)” shows the spacecraft’s components, in the context of both that film, and the later 2010: The Year We Make Contact.
So, What’s In the Book?
“Second Dawn”, from Science Fiction Quarterly, August, 1951
“If I Forget Thee, Oh Earth …, from Future, combined with Science Fiction Stories, September, 1951
“Breaking Strain”, from Thrilling Wonder Stories, December, 1949
“History Lesson”, from Startling Stories, May, 1949
“Superiority”, from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August, 1951
“Exile of the Eons”, (variant of “Nemesis”), from Super Science Stories, March, 1950
“Hide and Seek”, from Astounding Science Fiction, September, 1949
“Expedition to Earth”, (variant of “Encounter in the Dawn”), from Amazing Stories, June-July, 1953
“Loophole”, from Astounding Science Fiction, April, 1946
“Inheritance”, from New Worlds #3, October, 1947
“The Sentinel”, from 10 Story Fantasy, Spring, 1951
“About Arthur C. Clarke”, uncredited essay
Some References…
Expedition to Earth, at…
… Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Discovery One, at…
… Space Stack Exchange (“Is 2001: A Space Odyssey’s Discovery One still a plausible design for interplanetary travel?”)
… Model Paint Solutions (“Moebius 1/350 XD-1 “Discovery One” from 2001: A Space Odyssey”)
Vincent Di Fate, at…
… Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Richard Powers’ three covers for Ballantine Books’ late 1950s editions of Arthur C. Clarke’s novel Childhood’s End, and his two anthologies Expedition to Earth, and Reach for Tomorrow, have a level of originality and entrancing mystery that are unusual even by the standards of that artist’s unique body of work. You can view the cover of the 1956 edition, here. However, when Ballantine republished this trio of books a decade and a half later, their cover art was of a strikingly different, more conventional style. Rather than update versions of Powers’ original art, or use the skills of newly established artists such as Jack Gaughan, Paul Lehr, or John Schoenherr, the covers of all three editions revealed work by a (still) anonymous illustrator. The cover art for each book is more mainstream and representationally “spacey”, differing in format from most science-fiction cover art – then and now – in that it covers only a portion of the book’s “real estate”, the remainder of the cover being left unadorned, blank, and still. (Okay; the title, price, and publisher’s name still show!)
For anybody in the early 70s; for anyone yet today in 2023 … the inspiration for each painting is easily recognizable: Each composition was inspired by a different aspect of the spacecraft appearing in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. For Expedition to Earth and Reach for Tomorrow, the cover art is inspired by the Jovian expedition ship Discovery One; for Childhood’s End, by the Aries 1b lunar lander.
You can see this below, on the cover of the 1970 edition of Reach for Tomorrow.
The elongated nature of the spacecraft’s design is clearly inspired by the general (admittedly, very general) configuration of the Discovery One, the major difference being that the latter has one only spherical module – the front, control and habitation module, the rear of the craft being allocated for propulsion, communication, and storage. The ship on the cover of this edition instead features two spherical sections – one at each end – connected by two trusses and a connecting tube; there’s no visible means of propulsion. This resemblance comes through at The HAL Project’s Discovery One | 2001: A Space Odyssey Ambience 4K. (Unfortunately, this video can’t be shared in WordPress, so I have to give the link.) However, the clincher revealing the cinematic inspiration for the cover is the combined communications and telemetry antenna unit on the rear module, which is a dead ringer for the unit (that was instrumental to the plot!) of Kubrick’s film. Also, if you look really, really close – to the lower right of the foreground module – you’ll see a tiny, oval craft that’s emerged from a hatch in the bottom of the module. The little ship looks just like a space pod from the movie.
How odd; the Internet Speculative Fiction Database entry for these three early 1970s Ballantine editions indicates (correctly) that the cover art for each is uncredited and unsigned.
What gives? Did Ballantine secure the rights to the paintings? Were the originals saved? Were they discarded?
Pondering, just an idea: The paintings look like (seems to me) the work of Vincent Di Fate.
(Just a possibility)
Here’s Lawrence D. Miller’s 1984 diagram of the components of Discovery One….
At Spacedock’s YouTube channel, the video “2001 A Space Odyssey: Discovery One | Extended Ship Breakdown (May 27, 2011)” shows the spacecraft’s major components, in the context of both that film, and the later 2010: The Year We Make Contact.
And What’s In the Book?
Rescue Party, Astounding Science Fiction, May, 1946
A Walk in the Dark, Thrilling Wonder Stories, August, 1950
The Forgotten Enemy, Avon Science Fiction and Fantasy Reader, January, 1953
Technical Error (“The Reversed Man”), from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June, 1950
The Parasite, from Avon Science Fiction and Fantasy Reader, April, 1953
The Fires Within, from Startling Stories, September, 1949
The Awakening, from Future Science Fiction Stories, January, 1952
Trouble With the Natives, from Marvel Science Stories, May, 1951
The Curse, from Cosmos Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine, September, 1953
Time’s Arrow, from Science Fantasy, Summer, 1950
Jupiter Five, from If, May, 1953
The Possessed, Dynamite Science Fiction, March, 1953
Some References…
Reach for Tomorrow, at…
… Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Discovery One, at…
… Space Stack Exchange (“Is 2001: A Space Odyssey’s Discovery One still a plausible design for interplanetary travel?”)
… Model Paint Solutions (“Moebius 1/350 XD-1 “Discovery One” from 2001: A Space Odyssey”)
Vincent Di Fate, at…
… Internet Speculative Fiction Database
“…writing is different because you do not have to learn or practise…”
____________________
“Kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond bracelet lasts forever.”
____________________
Bergey, Bergey, Bergey!…
Earle K. Bergey, cover illustrator of mainstream publications, pulp magazines, and paperbacks – all in a variety of genres – produced a body of work that while more conventional in terms of subject matter than that of artists like Frank Kelly Freas or Edmund Emshwiller, is eye-catchingly distinctive, and is truly emblematic of mid-twentieth-century illustration.
His science-fiction art commenced in the late 1930s and continued until his untimely death in 1952 … see examples here, here, and here. As described at Wikipedia, his, “…science fiction covers, sometimes described as “Bim, BEM, Bum,” usually featured a woman being menaced by a Bug-Eyed Monster, alien, or robot, with an heroic male astronaut coming to her assistance. The bikini-tops he painted often resembled coppery metal, giving rise to the phrase “the girl in the brass bra,” used in reference to this sort of art. Visionaries in TV and film have been influenced by Bergey’s work. Gene Roddenberry, for example, provided his production designer for Star Trek with examples of Bergey’s futuristic pulp covers. The artist’s illustrations of scantily-clad women surviving in outer space served as an inspiration for Princess Leia‘s slave-girl outfit in Return of the Jedi, and Madonna’s conical brass brassiere.”
An example? The Spring, 1944, issue of Thrilling Wonder Stories.
Commencing in 1948, Bergey became heavily involved in creating cover art for paperbacks. This began with Popular Library’s 1948 edition of Anita Loos’ Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, which was first published in 1925. Though the book is a light-hearted work of conventional fiction (perhaps lightly semi-autobiographical; perhaps loosely inspired by fact), Bergey’s cover is a sort-of…, kind-of…, maybe…, perhaps…, well…, variation on a theme of “Good Girl Art” characteristic of American fiction of the mid-twentieth-century, and likewise is a stylistic segue from Bergey’s science fiction pulp cover art. Sans shining copper brassiere, however.
Here is it…
From Bergey’s biographical profile at Wikipedia, here’s an image of the book’s original cover art. The only information about the painting (does it still exist?) is that it’s “oil on board”.
A notable aspect of this painting, aside from the extraordinarily and deliberately idealized depiction … exaggeration?! … of Miss Lorelei Lee (looks like she’s being illuminated by a klieg light, doesn’t it?) is the appearance of the men around her, each of whom is each vastly more caricature than character. Well, exaggeration can work in two directions.
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She was a
GIVE AND TAKE GIRL
Lorelei Lee was a cute number with lots of sex
appeal and the ability to make it pay off.
With her curious girl friend, Dorothy,
she embarked on a tour of England and the
Continent. And none of the men who crossed
their path was ever the same again.
When one of Lorelei’s admirers sent her a
diary she decided to write about her
adventures. They began with Gus Eisman, the
Button King, who wanted to improve her “mind”
and reached a climax in her society debut
party – a three-day circus that rocked
Broadway to its foundations.
A hilarious field study of the American
chorus girl in action set down in her
own inimitable style!
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Lorelei Lee’s appearance in Ralph Barton’s cartoons in the 1925 edition of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes is – wellll, granting that they’re just cartoons; thirty-three appear in the book – vastly less exaggerated than her depiction on Bergey’s cover. Three of his cartoons are shown below…
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It would be strange if I turn out to be an authoress.
I mean at my home near Little Rock, Arkansas,
my family all wanted me to do something about my music.
Because all of my friends said I had talent and they all kept after me and kept after me about practising.
But some way I never seemed to care so much about practising.
I mean I simply could not sit for hours at a time practising just for the sake of a career.
So one day I got quite tempermental and threw the old mandolin clear across the room
and I have never really touched it since.
But writing is different because you do not have to learn or practise
and it is more tempermental because practising seems to take all the temperment out of me.
So now I really almost have to smile because I have just noticed
that I have written clear across two pages onto March 18th, so this will do for today and tomorrow.
And it just shows how tempermental I am when I get started. (Illustration p. 13)
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“Kissing your hand may make you feel very good but a diamond bracelet lasts forever.” (Illustration p. 101)
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“Dr. Froyd seemed to think that I was quite a famous case.” (Illustration p. 157)
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What would be the book without the movie? Here’s Howard Hawks’ 1953 production of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, at Network Film’s YouTube channel.
A qualifier: Despite being a movie aficionado and voracious reader, I’ve not actually viewed this movie, for … despite being able to appreciate and enjoy most any genre of film … I’ve absolutely never been a fan of musicals. (Ick.)
What would Gentlemen Prefer Blondes be without “Diamond’s Are a Girl’s Best Friend”? (Starts at 59:00 in the film.) The idea of a rotating chandelier formed of women strikes me as really bizarre, if not disturbing… Oh, well.
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Some Other Things…
Anita Loos…
…at Wikipedia
…at Brittanica.com
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes…
…at Archive.org (“Gentlemen prefer blondes” : the illuminating diary of a professional lady, Boni & Liveright, New York, N.Y., 1925)
…at Wikipedia
Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend…
…at Wikipedia
…at Genius.com (lyrics)
Earle K. Bergey…
…at Wikipedia
Though probably best known for his 1929 novel All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque’s literary oeuvre comprises (well, going by Wikipedia!) fourteen other novels, all written between 1920 and 1971. One of these is Arch of Triumph, first published in 1945 as Arc de Triomphe.
Unsurprisingly – well, given the power of Remarque’s writing, and his genuine success as a novelist – Arch of Triumph has been made into two feature films, released in 1948 and 1984.
The 1948 version starred Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer in the title roles of Dr. Ravic and Jean Madou, while in the 1985 remake the title roles were reprised by Anthony Hopkins and Lesley Ann-Down, with Donald Pleasance in the role of the chief (only?) villain, van Haake, a, “…a German Gestapo man who tortured Ravic and committed his beloved girl Sibylla to suicide. Killed by Ravic at the end of the novel.” The latter is quite ironic, given the fact that as a member of the Royal Air Force, Donald Pleasance flew sixty-one bombing missions over Germany as a wireless operator in Lancaster heavy bombers, and was a prisoner of war at Stalag Luft I!
You can view the trailer (from Media Graveyard) for the 1948 version here…
…and, watch the trailer (from Movieman Trailers) for the 1985 production here…
Interested in viewing the full production? You can view the 1985 film at Archive.org, here.
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Thus for film. Now, back to print…!
Here’s Signet’s 1959 paperback edition of the novel. The themes of the cover art are direct and immediate: The Arc de Triomphe stands in the background, while a lady both sultry and forlorn (Jean Madou?), casting her gaze upon something, or someone, in the distance. Unfortunately, I’ve not been able to identify the artist on this one!
Ravic walked on.
The large hall with its staircase came steadily toward him.
And suddenly, high above everything, rose the Nike of Samothrace.
It was a long time since he had seen her.
The last time it had been on a gray day.
The marble had looked dull and in the dirty winter light of the museum
the princess of victory had seemed hesitant and freezing.
But now shed stood high above the staircase on the bow of the marble ship,
illuminated by spotlights, gleaming,
her wings wide spread,
her garment pressed tight by the wind against her striding body,
bright and ready for flight.
Behind her the wine-colored Sea of Salamis seemed to roar,
and the sky was dark with the velvet of expectation.
She knew nothing of morals.
She knew nothing of problems.
She did not know the storms and dark ambushes of the blood.
She knew the victory and the defeat, and the two were almost the same.
She was not temptation; she was flight.
She was not enticement; she was unconcernedness.
She held no secret;
and yet she was more exciting than Venus, who by hiding her sex emphasized it.
She was akin to birds and ships, to the wind, to the waves, and the horizon.
She had no country.
She had no country, Ravic thought. But she did not need one either.
She was at home on all ships.
She was at home wherever there was courage and conflict and even defeat if it was without despair. She was not only the goddess of victory,
she was also the goddess of all adventures and the goddess of refugees –
so long as they did not give up. (244)
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A brilliant refugee doctor and a beautiful headstrong actress find love in Paris, during the tense and tragic days before the outbreak of World War II, in this great bestseller that became an important motion picture.
A tempestuous, romantic picture of a touching and tormenting love affair, Arch of Triumph “will surely go down as one of the truly memorable works of fiction of our time.” – Philadelphia Record
“A vivid picture of a crisis in history, a gallery of brilliant portraits of of individuals, a study of human motives – a work of art that would have added to the fame of Balzac.” – Cleveland Plain Dealer
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Here’s Remarque’s portrait (and caption) from the novel’s rear cover…
ERICH MARIA REMARQUE was born in Germany in 1898, fought in World War I and was wounded five times. All Quiet on the Western Front was his first and most famous novel. He was driven from Nazi Germany to France by the Nazis, and in 1939 came to America. Arch of Triumph, published originally by Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc., sold over 700,000 copies in its original trade and booklcub editions.
….while this image (Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R05148, Westfront, deutscher Soldat) supposedly shows Remarque as a soldier in the German Army during World War I.
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A fascinating aspect of Arch of Triumph (well, Signet’s paperback edition, that is!) is not necessarily the novel itself, but instead, what is physically within the book: A perforated, tear-out subscription card for Doubleday’s One Dollar Book Club (mailing location, Garden City, New York), which provides a fascinating window upon popular literature, public tastes, and (*ahem*) book prices of the late 1950s: “Choose any 4 for 99 ¢.” (? – !!!)
Rather than simply present the subscription card as scanned images, I thought the “flavor” of the advertising could be more adequately conveyed as full text.
Which, appears below…
Choose Any 4
of these hard-bound best-sellers for 99¢
when you join the Dollar Book Club and
agree to take as few as 6 best-selling novels
out of 24 to be offered within the year
AROUND THE WORLD IN 2000 PICTURES.
Sail the Seven Seas – visit Rome, Paris, London, Hong Kong, Mexico, Peru … see the wonders of 84 lands in this huge 832-page volume of vivid photos and informative reading.
GARDEN IDEAS AND PROJECTS.
Brand new year-round handbook that tells how to enhance your “backyard living room”. Sections on building garden furniture, walks, trellises, terraces, designing pools and rock gardens, etc. Illustrated.
GRIMM’S FAIRY TALES.
Famed children’s classic in a superb new edition! 32 never-to-be forgotten stories – Tom Thumb, Snow White, Hansel & Gretel, Sleeping Beauty, Rumpelstiltskin, etc. Illustrated.
HAMMOND’S FAMILY REFERENCE WORLD ATLAS.
Brand new! Big 256-page Volume covers U.S., Canada, all foreign lands. 190 pages of the latest color maps! With profusely illustrated world geography, historical maps, etc.
HEALTH SET – 2 volumes.
Handy Home Medical Adviser by Dr. Morris Fishbein; includes latest on allergies, mental health, new drugs, etc. Plus Stay Slim For Life – new book that tells how to eat and reduce. 620 pages. Illustrated.
What Happens When a Young Psychiatrist Falls in Love with His Patient?
Dr. Jim Corwin’s love for beautiful Lynn Thorndike forces him into a desperate medical gamble which risks not only their future together but also his professional standing. Frank G. Slaughter’s DAYBREAK is new, exciting.
A Pair of Golden Slippers for a Night of Love!
A dandy gift of golden slippers to a tantalizing café girl in exchange for her favors – followed by a shocking murder – looses a storm of passions in a Louisiana town. VICTORINE is Frances Parkinson Keyes’ most exciting hit since “Dinner at Antoine’s.”
ICE PALACE – Edna Ferber tops “Giant” in this new best-selling novel about a beautiful young girl whose quest for love is caught up in a struggle for power in her native Alaska. Timely different!
LADIES’ HOME JOURNAL BOOK OF INTERIOR DECORATION.
New edition! Big, lavish volume contains 293 illustrations – 144 in full color! Crammed with exciting new ideas on fabrics, lighting, color, furniture, table settings, accessories, etc.
MODERN FAMILY COOK BOOK – Meta Given.
1,250 delicious recipes, 250 tempting menus, 640 pages. Latest edition of the most useful cook book ever published. Helps plan meals, guides shopping. New freezing section. Illustrated.
THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY – H.G. Wells.
2 volumes. 1,024 pages, over 200 maps and pictures. The whole dramatic story of man from earliest times to our own years. One of the most widely acclaimed works of the twentieth century!
THRONDIKE-BARNHART COMPREHENSIVE DICTIONARY.
2 volumes. Latest edition – 80,000 entries, 700 illustrations, 896 pages! Sections on letter writing, grammar, punctuation, pronunciation, etc. Hundreds of new words.
Send No Money – Mail Attached Card
MAIL THIS CARD TODAY – NO STAMP REQUIRED
Doubleday One Dollar Book Club, Dept. PB-32, Garden City, N.Y.
Enroll me as a Dollar Book Club member. Send me at once as my gift books and first selection the 4 books checked at the right and bill me only 99 ¢ FOR ALL 4, plus a small shipping charge. As a member, I will be offered best-selling novels at the members’ price of only $1 each – a few extra-volume selections somewhat higher – the same full-size complete, hard-bound novels that cost up to $3.95 each in publishers’ editions. (Members have received books by such authors as Thomas Costain, Daphne du Maurier, Frank Yerby and other popular best-selling novelists.) An exciting new bonus plan entitles me to other big savings too.
Also send me my first issue of The Bulletin, describing new forthcoming one-dollar book selections and other bargains for members. I may notify you in advance if I do not wish the following month’s selections. I do not have to accept a book every month – only six a year. I pay nothing except $1 for each selection I accept (plus a small shipping charge) unless I choose an extra-value selection at a somewhat higher price.
NO-RISK GUARANTEE: If not delighted, return all books within 7 days, and your membership will be cancelled.
TO RESIDENTS OF CANADA: Selection price #1.10 plus shipping. Enclose this card in an envelope and mail to Doubleday Book Club, 105 Bond St., Toronto 2. Offer good in U.S. and Can. only.
For Further Thought
Eric Maria Remarque, at…
Nov. 20, 2017 135