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Showing posts with label Stanley Kubrick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stanley Kubrick. Show all posts

Late Night Blogging: Stanley Kubrick Trailers

Tuesday, December 11, 2012


























Ask JKM #57: Stanley Kubrick?

Monday, December 10, 2012




A reader, Trent, writes:                                                                                                                       

“Your thoughts on Stanley Kubrick and his contributions to the world of film as it relates to horror/sci-fi?

And do you think he did a disservice to his fans by directing so few films over such a long career, or, was his meticulous preparation what made his films so unique?

Trent, that’s a great question. 

Stanley Kubrick (1928 – 1999) is one of my all-time favorite film directors, in part because he hopped so adroitly between genres.  He wouldn’t consider himself a horror or science fiction film director, I’m quite certain, and yet he gave the world Dr. Strangelove (1964), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), A Clockwork Orange (1971), and The Shining (1980). 


I also count Eyes Wide Shut (1999) as a meaningful horror genre contribution, by the way.  In fact, it’s one of the most unnerving and deeply creepy films of the last fifteen years.  In a very real sense, the film features real-life vampires: a predatory, vulture-like upper-class feeding on the rest of society.  Watch Eyes Wide Shut again today, and you’ll detect immediately how it forecasts the kind of Occupy Wall Street divisions we’ve seen playing out culturally in the last year or so.

What I appreciate most about Kubrick and the films I listed above however, is their overtly cerebral and intellectual nature.  Even outside of the chilly setting of The Shining, the aforementioned films boast a sense of removed, dispassionate, glacial intelligence.  There is nothing warm or “easy” about these films, and yet -- engaging with Kubrick’s films -- I love to align myself with that kind of crisp, unemotional mentality.  For me, Kubrick offers a unique vision, one of almost clinical precision and focus.  His films are beautiful to watch, and challenging – but rewarding -- to interpret.

A great many folks count 2001: A Space Odyssey as the greatest science fiction film ever made, and one of the best films ever produced to boot.  I don’t place 2001 at the number one slot for the genre, but I understand the arguments for such positioning.  I prefer the political/social commentary of Planet of the Apes (1968) to the technological vision of 2001, and yet I take every opportunity to watch 2001 again.  It’s indisputably a great film and a landmark sci-fi film.


 I believe Stephen King convincingly wrote chapter-and-verse on the reason that he didn’t care too much for Kubrick’s interpretation of The Shining

And yet that horror film has flourished as the definitive adaptation of that literary work, and as one of the most beloved horror films made in the last half-century.  I suspect this is because of Kubrick’s intelligent, obsessive, psychological approach to the material.  From the wintry, foreboding landscapes and the recurring title cards, to the episodic, repeating incidents at Jack’s typewriter, the film perfectly captures the sense of a human mind coming slowly unhinged…a piece at a time.  The film may not work in supernatural terms, but there’s an uncomfortable truth -- brought out ably by both Nicholson and Kubrick -- in Torrance’s psychological disintegration that’s tough to deny.   The film is the ultimate nightmare of a "bad" Father.

I suspect that if Kubrick had made films more quickly, he would have sacrificed his own particular, obsessive genius.  

The films I’ve mentioned here are just one facet of his glorious career, but there are other enterprises of fascinating dimension (Barry Lyndon, Full Metal Jacket, Paths of Glory, Spartacus) as well.  Until Ridley Scott’s Black Hawk Down (2001), Full Metal Jacket was my favorite war film, actually.

In all, Stanley Kubrick gave audiences a good dozen films or so, and that’s more than enough quality work by which to assess his genius. 

Instead of working faster, I just wished he had lived another decade.  I would have loved to see a Kubrick-directed A.I. (2001), for instance.   But I’m immensely grateful for the films Mr. Kubrick gave the world in his time on this mortal coil.

Ask me a question at Muirbusiness@yahoo.com.


157. The Shining

Sunday, August 19, 2012

157. (18 Aug) /The Shining/ (1980, Stanley Kubrick) 80



I rarely get overly impressed by complicated mise-en-scène, but most of the compositions in The Shining are swoon-worthy. Kubrick's use of lines and patterns serve to disorient and distress the viewer. Still, this is a film I'd rather not appreciate on such an academic level. As a visceral experience, it gets me every time.

Top Ranked Films of Stanley Kubrick

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

All 11 titles of Kubrick's made the top 1000. He is 2nd in overall points (after Hitchcock) with 57,302

These are all the films of Kubrick’s that made the top 1000 in our 2011 update of the Top Ranked 1000 Films on the Net, all polls. In fact, these are all eleven films that Kubrick made, and he has the most titles in the top 100 with six. 2001 thankfully changed the look of science fiction

Top Ranked 1000 Films, 2011 Edition

Monday, July 11, 2011



New Top Ranked 1000 Films on the Net
All Polls Combined (Updated July 11, 2011)
© William Lawrence Sinclair

For this new addition, we updated the lists from the internet that are kept updating constantly in real-time, as well as adding a new major film site's fan list of favorites, the first 1000 films there.

[This July update removed some dupes listed in both English and their native

The Best Film of All Time?

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Which movie is generally considered the best of all time? This depends on the poll you're placing in highest regard, and also whether you mean the critics choice or the popular choice among fans. There's an interesting but incomplete and unsatisfying Wikipedia article of films considered the best, check it out here

Here are some famous film polls and the winners

Sight and Sound (surveys of

Top Ranked Directors on the Net

Sunday, March 20, 2011

© 2009-11, William L. Sinclair

All Directors in the top 1011 list that we compiled from all the internet surveys we could find, ranked by total points for all films on our spreadsheet. Alfred Hitchcock led the list [photo above with fellow director, artist Andy Warhol]. John Ford and Jean-Luc Godard had the most films listed at 16 each. Charles Laughton made the list highest with only one film

Great Directors: Stanley Kubrick

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures
Jan Harlan, 2001 (9*)

TCM recently showed this documentary on master director Stanley Kubrick which was appropriately released in 2001, by his brother-in-law Jan Harlan. It's also available on dvd.

Using home movies, interviews with his ex-wife, other relatives, film stars, other directors, collaborators, writers, composers, and clips from his movies, we

Director Point Totals in Critics Top 1000

Sunday, June 7, 2009

I totalled up all the films for each listing in the critics top 1000, and these are the resulting point totals, not that I agree with the results. I decided to go to 120 rather than 100 because of some of those just out of the 100, like Yimou, Cimino, Campion, Reifenstahl, Eastwood.
Photo courtesy of FanPix.com





Director Points
1.Hitchcock, Alfred - US
 

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