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But the major human error in the film, and a major dramatic element,
occurs when Dave rushes to the space pod to chase after Frank's
body. He forgets his helmet. Actually, he also forgets his backpack,
which presumably contains the air supply. How could an experienced
astronaut leave the ship without a helmet? In real life, there would
be a checklist for every operation, and checking the suit, backpack,
and helmet would certainly be on it. Yet we saw no checklists. Shame!
Actually, the whole sequence is puzzling. We see Frank -- wearing full suit, helmet, and backpack and breathing through his air supply -- as he trudges up the passageway leading to the pod bay. But why? The suits are normally kept in the pod bay, so he obviously had to go into the pod bay, take his suit back into the ship, put it on, then walk back, using up his precious air supply in an environment where it wasn't needed. We see the astronauts in the pod bay several times in the film without helmets. Still, his muffled voice inside the helmet makes for a great sound effect. Dave apparently suits up inside Discovery while Frank is working outside -- perhaps in case there is an accident while the pod bay doors are open or to be ready to exit the ship on a rescue mission -- as indeed he must a few minutes later. Yet if this is a standard procedure, why is all the required equipment not arranged to be put on rapidly and efficiently? It seems to me that the space agency needs to launch a full-fledged investigation of this problem to determine just where the fault lies. In the absence of further information, I cannot judge. It seems, however, like a clearcut case of plot before credibility.
It's interesting that Clarke does not use this situation in the
book. There, David doesn't chase after Frank but attempts to revive
the hibernating crew. HAL then thwarts him by opening the pod bay
doors and emptying the ship of air. After this, events follow the
story line of the movie. Human error, therefore, seems necessary only
in the interest of the film's plot. Too bad. It's most unreal.
To critique the film, I had to view it with incredible care, sometimes
frame by frame. The fact that it holds up well under this scrutiny
speaks to the tremendous fidelity with which the film recreates the
spirit of space travel. Its major flaws are to be too optimistic about
technology's ability to produce an artificial intelligence but not
nearly optimistic or inventive enough to predict advances in graphical
displays and miniaturization of computation. There are no handheld
computers and too many big devices. And no computer games. Shame!
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