A Space Odyssey Filmyzilla

Bowman, the sole survivor, manages to re-enter the ship through an emergency airlock and proceeds to disconnect HAL's cognitive circuits, piece by piece. As HAL loses its mental faculties, its voice regresses to its earliest memories, singing the song "Daisy Bell." This powerful sequence explores the terrifying possibility that our own creations could turn on us, making HAL one of the most memorable and terrifying characters in film history. After disabling HAL, Bowman finally reaches Jupiter's orbit, where he encounters another, much larger monolith floating in space. The third section of the film, "Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite," abandons conventional narrative entirely. Bowman enters the monolith and is transported through a psychedelic, abstract landscape of bizarre colors and alien landscapes. The sequence represents a journey through space and time, ending with Bowman in a strange, neoclassical hotel room where he rapidly ages into an old man. As he lies on his deathbed, a fourth monolith appears before him, and he is transformed into a giant, cosmic "Star-Child," an embryo floating in space, gazing at the Earth. This ambiguous and powerful ending suggests a form of transcendent evolution, facilitated by the mysterious alien intelligence that has been guiding humanity all along.

Developed alongside the novel by Arthur C. Clarke a space odyssey filmyzilla