How
Stanley Kubrick
Faked the Apollo Moon Landings:
Alchemical Kubrick II
By
Jay Weidner
Copyright
July 20 th 2009
Sacred Mysteries Productions
Page 2:
Let's show another
example. Here is a still from the famous 'water hole' scene from
2001:
This next image
is again the same image as above but with the gamma and contrast
increased:
While watching
2001,with the scenes of the ape-men, one can begin to see the tell
tale fingerprints that always reveal when the Front Screen Projection
system is being used.
It should be emphasized
that the sets that surround the ape-men in the movie are real. Those
are 'real' rocks (whether paper mache or real) that surround the
ape-men. But behind the fabricated rocks on the set, the desert scene
is being projected via the Front Screen Projector.
One of the ways
that you can tell the Front Screen system is being used is that the
bottom horizon line between the actual set and the background Scotchlite
screen has to be blocked. Kubrick strategically located rocks and
other things near the bottom of the scene in order to hide the projection
screen. In other words, the camera and the viewers would see the
bottom of the background projection screen if it weren't blocked
in some fashion. As part of the 'trick' it became necessary to place
things in between the screen and the set to hide the bottom of the
screen.
I have photo-shopped
a line differentiating the set and the background Scotchlite Front
Projection Screen. Please note how everything is in focus, from the
pebbles on the ground in the set to the desert mountains beyond.
You will see that
hiding the bottom of the Scotchlite screen is always being done when
the Front Screen Projection system is used in 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Hiding the screen is one of the fingerprints; it is evidence of its
use. Just like the stage magician who needs the long sleeves of his
costume to hide the mechanism of his tricks, so too Kubrick needed
to hide the mechanism of his trick behind the carefully placed horizon
line between set and screen.
Here is another
example from 2001: A Space Odyssey:
And here is the
same image with my photo shop line separating the set with the ape-man
actor and the Scotchlite Front Projection Screen.
And you will see,
before this article is finished, that this same fingerprint, this
same evidence, is clearly seen in all of the NASA Apollo stills and
video footage.
It is this fingerprint
that reveals, not only that NASA faked the Apollo missions but also
HOW they faked them.
Let's examine a
few NASA Apollo images now.
This is a still
from Apollo 17. This is also a great example of the Front Screen
Projection process.
Again I have photo-shopped
a line indicating the back of the set. One can see that there is
a slight uprising behind the rover, which is hiding the bottom of
the screen. Also notice that even though everything is in focus from
the lunar rover to the mountains in the background, there is a strange
change in the landscape of the ground right behind my lines. This
is because the photo of the mountains being used on the Front Projection
system has a slightly different ground texture than the set. As we
go on we will see that this fingerprint is also consistent throughout
the Apollo images.
Here is another
Apollo image.
Now here is my
version where I show the line between set and screen.
Again notice that
the texture of the ground changes right behind my lines.
Now let's go to
some more Apollo images. We can see that the same thing occurs here
as in the ape-men scenes in 2001. There is always a line separating
the set from the screen. Even if you do not see it at first it will
become apparent, as one grows more familiar with the Front Screen
Projection process and how it is being used to fake the astronauts
standing on the lunar surface.
Go to any NASA
site like ( http://www.apolloarchive.com/apollo_gallery.html)
and start looking for yourself.
Not all lunar surface
shots are using the process. Sometimes the astronauts are just standing
on the set with a completely (and suspicious) black background. The
early missions used the Front Screen Projection system only when
they had to. But as the missions went on and they had to look better,
Kubrick began to perfect the process.
Although you can
see the Front Screen Projection process on every mission, the seriously
revealing images are in the later missions, particularly Apollo 14,
15, 16 and (my favorite) 17.
Here are a few
from Apollo 17.
That astronaut
is driving the lunar rover parallel to the screen and the rover is
only three or four feet away from the Scotchlite. Please note how
the tire treads just lead to nowhere. Actually they are going to
the edge of the set.
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