2010: The Year We Make Contact/Trivia
- Fake Nationality: Messed around with. Dr. Chandra is supposed to be Dr. Sivasubramanian Chandrasegarampillai, originally from Madras, but a naturalized US citizen at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. When they cast the Russian-Jewish American Bob Balaban in the role, they dropped any reference to his Indian heritage (and changed his affiliation to the University of Chicago, to boot).
- Surprisingly more-or-less averted with the rest of the cast. With the glaring exception of Dana Elcar as Dimitri, most of the Soviets are in fact from the Soviet Union (if not Russia specifically), and any others are Czech. Tanya is a special case: she was played by Helen Mirren, who while English is ethnically Russian (her grandfather was an emigre from the Red October) and can do a flawless Russian accent.
- Freeze-Frame Bonus: In the very first interior shot of the Leonov, the camera tilts down from a closeup of a computer monitor in the medical bay. Printed underneath the monitor is a paragraph of English text, beginning with "You may leave the lavatory if the green exit light is on over the door...." This is actually step 4 of the Zero Gravity Toilet instructions from 2001. Not only do you have to freeze-frame it, you need to watch the movie on Blu-Ray in order to make out the text! Additionally, the image on the monitor is captioned "KIRBUK" in Cyrillic (see Mildly Military on the Main page.)
- Hey, It's That Guy!: Queen Elizabeth I AND Queen Elizabeth II as the commander of the Leonov
- Sheriff Brody as Heywood Floyd
- Mr. Henderson/Lord John Whorfin/Dick Solomon as Curnow
- Captain Orr as Dr. Chandra
- Peter Parker's landlord as Max Brailovsky
- Not to mention Dave Bowman as...well, Dave Bowman.
- Hey, It's That Voice!: Candice Bergen portrays HAL's earthbound twin, SAL 9000. Her fisheye lens is blue - a bit of Red Oni, Blue Oni, perhaps?
- Prop Recycling: The blue 2001-style spacesuit hanging in the Discovery pod bay ended up in the hands of the crew of Babylon 5 years later. (This is precisely the kind of thing that Stanley Kubrick wanted to avoid by destroying all of 2001's sets and props.) They did their best to change what the could on it, "though it was pretty much what it was regardless." To make it further Hilarious in Hindsight, the episodes the suit appeared in both involved time travel, a lost astronaut appearing and disappearing, and a mild degree of Mind Screw.
- The space pod that appears in Watto's junkyard in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace may also have come from 2010's Discovery pod bay, but this has not been confirmed.
- Shout-Out: The prop designers for Babylon 5 used the design of the Leonov as inspiration for the Omega Destroyers used by the Earthers on that show. Compare the rotating gravity sections of the two ships, they have a largely identical profile.
- What Could Have Been: Arthur C. Clarke suggested that Peter Hyams try to get Ben Kingsley, who had just won his Oscar for Gandhi, to play Chandra. Twenty years later, Hyams would direct Kingsley in a much worse film, A Sound of Thunder.
- What's odd is that the film version of 2001 gave HAL's creator's name as "Mr Langley", rather than "Dr Chandra". You have to wonder why they didn't simply rename the character Langley when they cast a white guy...
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