Apollo and the Odyssey: The Shared Orbit of NASA’s Lunar Mission and Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey

Featuring Todd Douglas Miller (director, Apollo 11), Barry Miller (NASA Chief Historian), and Bert Ulrich (Multimedia Liaison at NASA Headquarters in Washington), in conversation with Eric Hynes, Curator of Film, and Sonia Epstein, Associate Curator of Science and Film.

In the late 1960s, while NASA’s Apollo program planned for humanity’s first steps on the Moon, Stanley Kubrick and his production team worked on their own ambitious voyage, 2001: A Space Odyssey. This conversation will explore the cultural and scientific points of intersection, influence, and competition between the U.S. space program and Kubrick’s film, supplemented by rare archival footage and images.

RSVP here.  An invitation will be sent to join the event one hour before start time (from [email protected]).
While this event is free, we hope you will consider supporting the Museum with a donation. MoMI’s staff is working hard to fulfill its mission via remote programming. This comes with opportunities to experiment but also profound challenges. Your support is critical to ensure our work remains vital and visible to a broad public. Suggested donation: $10. Donate here.










When: Thu., Jul. 23, 2020 at 7:00 pm
Where: Museum of the Moving Image
36-01 35th Ave.
718-777-6888
Price: Free, donations welcome
Buy tickets/get more info now
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Featuring Todd Douglas Miller (director, Apollo 11), Barry Miller (NASA Chief Historian), and Bert Ulrich (Multimedia Liaison at NASA Headquarters in Washington), in conversation with Eric Hynes, Curator of Film, and Sonia Epstein, Associate Curator of Science and Film.

In the late 1960s, while NASA’s Apollo program planned for humanity’s first steps on the Moon, Stanley Kubrick and his production team worked on their own ambitious voyage, 2001: A Space Odyssey. This conversation will explore the cultural and scientific points of intersection, influence, and competition between the U.S. space program and Kubrick’s film, supplemented by rare archival footage and images.

RSVP here.  An invitation will be sent to join the event one hour before start time (from [email protected]).
While this event is free, we hope you will consider supporting the Museum with a donation. MoMI’s staff is working hard to fulfill its mission via remote programming. This comes with opportunities to experiment but also profound challenges. Your support is critical to ensure our work remains vital and visible to a broad public. Suggested donation: $10. Donate here.
Buy tickets/get more info now