Favorite Stanley Kubrick Film |
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Argo2112
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Posted: October 11 2022 at 08:35 |
I've always been a big Kubrick fan. Which of these do you think is his best?
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Archisorcerus
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I'll pick A Clockwork Orange.
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Psychedelic Paul
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2001: A Space Odyssey
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Gentle and Giant
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Dr Strangelove...
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Oh, for the wings of any bird, other than a battery hen
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JD
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A little like asking the same thing of Quentin Tarantino movies. Since the option wasn't provided...ALL OF THEM. |
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dwill123
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"Full Metal Jacket"
The guy in the video below who was shooting the machinegun was supposed to be the guy who was to play Gunnery Sergeant Hartman, but R. Lee Ermey convinced Kubrick to give the job to him. So Kubrick gave the gunner job to this guy instead. Edited by dwill123 - October 11 2022 at 19:12 |
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moshkito
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Hi, Same here. Of all his films, this one was likely the most important when it came to zingers and commentaries. It made a lot of the other films seem weak by comparison, and this was supposed to be a satire ... it was way more than that! But let's not forget some great lines ... in LOLITA, Shelly Winters tells James Mason that her daughter is going to the doctor to get a cavity filled in! ... You can take that any way you want on that story! It actually sounds best as a sound bite, and not watching the film. Just listening to the words! And Shelly Winters says it like she knows the in-joke. Edited by moshkito - October 12 2022 at 05:48 |
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Jared
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Barry Lyndon
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verslibre
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There is only one correct answer.
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Argo2112
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Went with Spartacus here but Clockwork Orange & Dr. Strangelove are right there as well.
Three very different movies but all great.
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Psychedelic Paul
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The one thing I remember about Full Metal Jacket is that it was filmed in London's Docklands and not in the jungles of Vietnam.
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Grumpyprogfan
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Here's Johnny!!
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Argo2112
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I'm surprised, No love for Paths of Glory here.
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essexboyinwales
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The Shining
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Heaven is waiting but waiting is Hell
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suitkees
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As JD says, this is actually an impossible choice. They are all interesting and good to great to real masterpieces. My least preferred ones are Eyes Wide Shut and Barry Lyndon. After that they all could end up on top of a list. If it becomes a desert island of gun-to-head question then I would go with 2001.
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Moonshake
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Really touch choice, but I will go with The Shining.
2001 - A Space Odyssey would be my second one.
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mellotronwave
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FMJ
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moshkito
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Hi,
I wanted to mention/discuss "A Clockwork Orange", but I wonder if some younger folks got attached to the youth running a muck ... and later getting ganged up by "society" for his doings. It was/is a perfect example of what happened to the "flower children" and how the media destroyed the whole thing, and eventually tried to destroy all the arts ... that came with that era. Didn't quite succeed because the music survived and then some, but a lot of all the other artistic things, specially in America, are not remembered, or even appreciated as fully as they should. I often look at some of the films at the time and how they were "anti-establishment" in many ways ... "The Wild Bunch", "A Clockwork Orange", "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", "Five Easy Pieces", "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" and other things. Quite interesting, but I don't think that Stanley Kubrick was not quite aware of the time and place of things, and his films in the early days were more "on topic" than the later material ... so it seems for the most part. By the time he got to his last films, I think that most of us had tuned out.
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Argentinfonico
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Stanley Kubrick is my favourite director and I always say that is the best of all, if you have to pick one. Every film is perfect in its own way. I mean, truly perfect. The Shining was the first one that I saw of his catalogue, and enlightened me forever. I didn't believe my eyes. The direction, the use of colour, the handling of the cameras, the dialogue, the acting, the symbolism... Not to mention the psychological profile of Jack's character. SIMPLY MAGNIFICENT!!!
Edited by Argentinfonico - January 31 2023 at 07:38 |
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moshkito
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Hi, I think the "psychological profile" is something that Stanley Kubrick allowed a lot of his actors to do and even goes back to Peter Sellers in "Dr. Strangelove" where a lot of improvisation is used, and not likely to have been written, and allowing actors that have a good feel for things, and Peter definitely had tuned that very well with The Goons on radio for 12 years, a chance to fly ... they will always give you moments that are special, and I think that Jack Nicholson has a lot of that and it goes back to "some of his early material, and is very evident in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest". Moments like the "here's Johnny" line, are rarely written ... and are best shown when it happens ... specially when it was well known that Stanley Kubrick had a habit or re-shooting things ... Jack would probably have dropped an F-bomb and then just let it all hangout ... and ... voila ... there it was what SK was looking for but had no words for it! LOLITA does not appear, at first sight, to have any improvisation, but all of a sudden you hear Shelly Winters say her line about the cavity to James Mason, and you know right away that the idea was to make a sex joke around it. It's really hard to write those, because they are so dependent on the moment itself, though it can be done, but the use and implementation, specially in film or theater, suffers, because interpretations break the mood and take out the fun in it, although today we would say how sexist and this and that it is! There are a lot of other very well known implementations of improvisation in Stanley Kubrick's films, however, he is a good director and he tries to blend those parts with everything else, so it does not seem that far away from the character's completeness for the piece. A lot of films let go of that cohesion so that what you get later is not even close to the early part, but in SK's films it tends to last. And there are times when it is difficult to watch, since it is clear that the actors are not quite comfortable with it, and are struggling with it. And it makes the film seem uneven and not quite enjoyed by a lot of folks. And this is the hard part of improvisation ... some folks can do it, and some actors have to know the lines to be able to get close to it, but they are not very good at it. Dustin Hoffman is a good example, however, he is a "deep" student of his characters, and he knows how to FILL IN the space, so you can't tell the difference, and his ability is in this "blank" space, as it is called on the stage. A good actor, will hide all these moments and you will never know it. Of the great "Actor's Studios" folks, not many were really good at improvisation, although it is believed that Marlon Brando was the best of them, and most of the folks around him, were too self-conscious to be able to let go like Marlon did in at least one play ... the moment that was never quite repeated even in film ... it was that strong. The English, conversely, are specialists in this and both the RSC and NT worked a lot of improvised theater, and their 60's was almost all ... improvisation left and right until it freed a lot of actors into some incredible performances everywhere. This helped make GODOT possible, for example, and make us think of everything else but!
Edited by moshkito - January 31 2023 at 07:24 |
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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com |
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