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2010 Poster

2010

In the very near future, a small group of Americans and Russians set out on the greatest adventure of them all...to see if there is life beyond the stars.
1984 | 116m | English

(60053 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

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.
Release Date: Dec 06, 1984
Director: Peter Hyams
Writer: Arthur C. Clarke, Peter Hyams
Genres: Science Fiction, Thriller
Keywords space travel, sequel, monolith, super computer, ghost ship, astronaut, near future, jupiter, space mission, space, space opera
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $40,400,000
Budget: $28,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 30, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Roy Scheider Dr. Heywood Floyd
John Lithgow Dr. Walter Curnow
Helen Mirren Tanya Kirbuk
Bob Balaban Dr. R. Chandra
Keir Dullea Dr. David Bowman
Douglas Rain HAL 9000 (voice)
Madolyn Smith Osborne Caroline Floyd
Savely Kramarov Dr. Vladimir Rudenko
Taliesin Jaffe Christopher Floyd
James McEachin Victor Milson
Mary Jo Deschanel Betty Fernandez
Ilya Baskin Maxim Brailovsky
Dana Elcar Dimitri Moisevitch
Oleg Rudnik Dr. Vasili Orlov
Natasha Shneider Irina Yakunina
Vladimir Skomarovsky Yuri Svetlanov
Victor Steinbach Nikolaj Ternovsky
Candice Bergen SAL 9000 (voice)
Gene McGarr Commercial Announcer
Herta Ware Jessie Bowman
Jan Tříska Alexander Kovalev
Larry Carroll Anchorman on TV
Cheryl Carter Nurse
Ron Recasner Hospital Neurosurgeon
Robert Lesser Dr. Hirsch
Delana Michaels Commercial Announcer
Arthur C. Clarke Man on Park Bench (uncredited)
Name Job
Rick Simpson Set Decoration
Mia Goldman Editor
Bruce Walkup Costume Supervisor
Michael J. Kohut Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Gregory L. McMurry Visual Effects Supervisor
Mario Iscovich Location Manager
Vivian McAteer Hairstylist
John Baron Chief Lighting Technician
William Ladd Skinner Set Designer
Gene S. Cantamessa Production Sound Mixer
Warren Hamilton Jr. Sound Editor
Robin Haskins Sound Re-Recording Mixer
David Blitstein Special Effects Assistant
Henry Millar Jr. Special Effects Supervisor
Albert Brenner Production Design
Penny Perry Casting
Nancy McArdle Costume Supervisor
Gregory Pickrell Set Designer
Carlos Delarios Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Aaron Rochin Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Ralph Gerling Camera Operator
Randy Peters Transportation Coordinator
Marty Wunderlich Property Master
William S. Beasley First Assistant Director
David B. Brenner Set Designer
Michael J. Benavente Sound Editor
Donald Flick Sound Editor
David E. Stone Sound Editor
Dan Sharp Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Robert Harman Special Effects, Stunts
Doug Hubbard Special Effects
D. Michael Wheeler Second Assistant Camera
Juniko Moody Visual Effects
Patricia Norris Costume Design
James Mitchell Editor
Greg Papalia Set Designer
Dale Strumpell Sound Designer
Ray O'Reilly Sound Re-Recording Mixer
M. James Arnett Stunt Coordinator
William Saracino Music Editor
Paul Huston Conceptual Design
Marshall Schlom Script Supervisor
Alan B. Curtiss Second Assistant Director
Kandy Stern Set Designer
James Christopher Sound Editor
Vince Melandri ADR Editor
Tim Mangini Sound Effects Editor
Andy Evans Special Effects Assistant
William Guest Special Effects
James M. Halty Stunts
Burke Mattsson Title Designer
Arthur C. Clarke Novel
Peter Hyams Screenplay, Director, Director of Photography
Richard L. Anderson Supervising Sound Editor
Bruce McBroom Still Photographer
Michael Westmore Makeup Supervisor
John C. Meier Stunts
Mic Rodgers Stunts
Jim Burk Stunts
Freddie Hice Stunts
Gary Morgan Stunts
Don E. FauntLeRoy Assistant Camera
David Shire Original Music Composer
Linda Klein Medical Consultant
Name Title
Peter Hyams Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 25 38 17
2024 5 29 39 18
2024 6 28 46 17
2024 7 27 41 13
2024 8 27 40 17
2024 9 21 39 12
2024 10 25 35 15
2024 11 22 31 14
2024 12 20 46 13
2025 1 19 32 13
2025 2 14 22 3
2025 3 7 25 1
2025 4 4 8 2
2025 5 3 9 2
2025 6 3 5 2
2025 7 2 3 2
2025 8 2 3 2
2025 9 4 8 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 7 910 910
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 744 838
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 406 721
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 773 869
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 610 874
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 602 805
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 478 725
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 436 464

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Reviews

Wuchak
7.0

_**Another trip to Jupiter to find answers**_ After the mysterious failure of the Discovery One mission to Jupiter in 2001, Dr. Heywood Floyd (Roy Scheider) resigned his position as head of the National Council for Astronautics. Several years later, the Soviets send the spacecraft Leonov & crew t ... o Jupiter along with three Americans, including Floyd, to help investigate Discovery and the malfunction of the vessel's sentient computer, HAL 9000. Keir Dullea returns as the missing astronaut David Bowman while Helen Mirren plays the captain of the Leonov. Bob Balaban and John Lithgow also appear as the other two American astronauts. "2010: The Year We Make Contact" (1984) is realistic science-fiction that’s less artsy and more dramatically compelling compared to its predecessor, “2001: A Space Odyssey” (1968). That doesn’t make it better, of course, just different. “2001” raised questions while this one provides answers, which some people inevitably won’t like. The questions include: Why did HAL malfunction? What was the real reason for Discovery's original mission, unknown to Floyd? What happened to Bowman? What is the purpose of the colossal monolith orbiting Jupiter? Both films compliment and counterbalance each other. This one’s more of a straightforward space adventure in the near future. Unlike Star Wars, which is space fantasy, “2010” is space-oriented adult science-fiction. Star Trek is too, but “2010” is far more realistic, which I appreciate. In other words, don’t expect any Klingons or spacecraft dogfights. This is more along the lines of “Mission to Mars” (2000) and “The Martian” (2015). The film runs 1 hours, 56 minutes. GRADE: B

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
7.0

A much more standard affair compared to its predecessor. Given that's the case, I honestly enjoyed this more than <em>'2001: A Space Odyssey'</em> - if only because it's more closer to what I'd personally want from a film than what that 1968 flick offers, which is moreso an attempted art piece. O ... f course, the original does things visibly and audibly far, far greater than this 1984 release - just plot-wise, this is better in my opinion. That's not to say that <em>'2010'</em> is something I'd consider great, because I wouldn't. It is, though, solid sci-fi fare, one I had a decent time watching. I'm not a fan of recasts, but Roy Scheider does a good job in place of William Sylvester as Heywood Floyd. Bob Balaban does well, while it's neat to see John Lithgow and Helen Mirren involved. I'm somewhat surprised (but agreeable) that this has, seemingly, been fairly well received. I was expecting it to be poorly thought of by the majority, as is usually the case for sequels of iconic movies that aren't cut from the same cloth; different director etc.

Jan 16, 2024