Science Fiction

 

Discovery from "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968)

2001: A Space Odyssey - Discovery One - Lunar Models - 1

Lunar Models Logo

SCALE: 1/211

INITIAL RELEASE: 1988

MEDIUM: Resin

RARITY: (2)

 

2001: A Space Odyssey - Discovery One - Lunar Models - 2

 

2001: A Space Odyssey - Discovery One - Lunar Models - 3

 

ABOUT THE DESIGN

ABOUT THE KIT

The "Discovery" interplanetary spacecraft is the setting for half of the "action" of Stanley Kubrick's 1968 sci-fi masterpiece "2001: A Space Odyssey."   The ship carried a crew of six: Two primary astronauts, three mission specialists (who spent the 18 month-long trip to Jupiter in cryogenic hibernation), and one sentient HAL 9000 computer.

The craft was composed of three basic sections:  The spherical command module that contained a revolving centrifuge to provide the astronauts with artificial gravity, the flight deck, and the Space Pod hangar bay; the boom-like service module that held life-support supplies and the communications array; and the engine, the big block-like section at the spacecraft's stern that housed a nuclear reactor and three nuclear engines. 

The need to protect the astronauts from possible nuclear contamination was the reason the ship was as elongated as it was; like many nuclear-powered spacecraft envisioned in the 1950s and 1960s, the "Discovery" was laid out so as to put as much distance between the engine and the human crew as possible.  

As many moviegoers and critics pointed out, the result was a spacecraft that -- intentionally or otherwise -- resembled a giant flying sperm.

Although Aurora models reportedly considered creating a "Discovery" kit in injection-molded plastic (That would have been amazing!), it was left to the "garage kit" companies of the 1980s and 1990s to fill this much-needed demand from "2001" fans.  The first -- and largest -- model to be produced was this three-foot-long resin kit from Lunar Models. 

The kit was highly uneven in its presentation.  The command and engine sections were expertly patterned and molded, requiring little finishing work.  The central service section, however, was poorly designed and molded, the plethora of tiny pieces containing numerous pits and air bubbles that tended to seriously mar the appearance and integrity of the finished product.  The ship's "spine" was a metal rod the modeler had to provide for him/herself.

A tiny One Man Space Pod was also provided.

This model is from the kit's early run.

Filming Miniature

 

2001: A Space Odyssey - Discovery One - Lunar Models - Box Art

Original Box Art

 

Pop Culture

1900-1930

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Home   X-Planes   Concept Aircraft   Spacecraft & Missiles   Concept Spacecraft   Science Fiction   Grab Bag