William Kloman (14 de abril de 1968). «In 2001, Will Love Be a Seven-letter Word?». The New York Times. Consultado el 31 de agosto de 2010. The interview is available from many other online sources.
[7] calls them bombs, model manufacturer AJAMODELS manufactures a model of the German "satellite"[8]. Website [9] describes their model in the text as an "orbital satellite" appearing in quotes but the image's internal jpeg title calls it a bomb.
Tim Dirks. «2001: A Space Odyssey». AMC. Consultado el 25 de febrero de 2011. He notes that in the ape encounter "With the mysterious monolith in the foreground, the glowing Sun rises over the black slab, directly beneath the crescent of the Moon." and that on the moon "Again, the glowing Sun, Moon and Earth have formed a conjunctive orbital configuration."
[7] calls them bombs, model manufacturer AJAMODELS manufactures a model of the German "satellite"[8]. Website [9] describes their model in the text as an "orbital satellite" appearing in quotes but the image's internal jpeg title calls it a bomb.
DeMet, George. «Authorship of 2001». Palantir.net. Consultado el 2 de febrero de 2008.
planet3earth.co.uk
[7] calls them bombs, model manufacturer AJAMODELS manufactures a model of the German "satellite"[8]. Website [9] describes their model in the text as an "orbital satellite" appearing in quotes but the image's internal jpeg title calls it a bomb.
Pietrobon notes on the Starship Modeler website [2] that the markings on the first and second satellites seen denote them as American and German respectively. The Iron Cross can be seen in close-up at [3]. Pietrobon states "It's unclear as to where that is a functional detail, such as an RCS thruster, or whether this model was supposed to represent something from the modern German arsenal." See 20:07 in 2007 DVD issue of film.
suntimes.com
rogerebert.suntimes.com
Roger Ebert. «2001: A Space Odyssey». Chicago Sun-Times. Archivado desde el original el 12 de octubre de 2012. Consultado el 3 de febrero de 2011.