

While planet Earth poises on the brink of nuclear self-destruction, a team of Russian and American scientists aboard the Leonov hurtles to a rendezvous with the still-orbiting Discovery spacecraft and its sole known survivor, the homicidal computer HAL.
Practical Effects
Zero-G wire work that still looks better than most CGI today.
Acting
Helen Mirren's Russian commander steals every scene she's in.
Score
David Shire's brassy score trying SO hard to fill Kubrick's silence.

Director
Peter Hyams
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Arthur C. Clarke wrote the novel sequel simultaneously but the film and book have different endings—Clarke preferred his version where the monolith warns humanity, not transforms Jupiter.
Released during actual Cold War tensions, the film's hopeful Soviet-American collaboration played like pure fantasy—Reagan reportedly loved it.
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Reactions from the web
How did the graphics look better in 1960
@2wenty4our24 10
I didn't even know there was a sequel
@brandonnaylor2735 82
As a Jaws fan when I saw that Roy Schieder was in it I was excited because this is the sequel of my cousins favourate movie! RIP Roy
@thebrickcat905 2
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