i have still never watched clockwork orange, though i now have it on video
― mark s (mark s), Monday, 9 December 2002 11:57 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Cecil Kittens (Cecil), Monday, 9 December 2002 12:02 (10 years ago) Permalink
I like the story that Terry Southern told him when Eyes Wide Shut was in the gestative state that it should be a comedy. I think he meant an intentional one.
― Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 00:19 (10 years ago) Permalink
There's nothing wrong with it, I just don't think he expresses it very well.
I mean, yes, I can see where certain aspects of Kubrick have influenced Lynch but by and large I think Lynch is a better storyteller, whereas Kubrick throws too much emphasis on the stylistic interest of his films and doesn't pay as much attention to getting the story told in the most effective manner. I only really like Strangelove, I suppose, but it's not a film I'd actively go out of my way to watch anymore.
Like I said, he's someone that people either love or hate. No one is kind of "eh" about Kubrick.
― Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 01:30 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 01:36 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Chris Barrus (xibalba), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 02:49 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 03:08 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 03:13 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 03:30 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 03:40 (10 years ago) Permalink
it is pervy not at all
― mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 09:25 (10 years ago) Permalink
― dave q, Tuesday, 10 December 2002 09:30 (10 years ago) Permalink
― Andrew L (Andrew L), Tuesday, 10 December 2002 10:01 (10 years ago) Permalink
I chalk it up to Kubrick's confidence. There's an air to every film he did, something I can feel come through the screen. I think I've said elsewhere that my definition of a good film is one where the director accomplished what he set out to do. Kubrick's films always meet that criteria for me - he knew what he wanted, and he shot it.
I haven't seen Lolita or Barry Lyndon, but of the rest, the closest to a dud is A Clockwork Orange, even that's occasionally great.
― miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 03:47 (9 years ago) Permalink
detractors expect too much of it.
― ryan (ryan), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 04:09 (9 years ago) Permalink
(it was about him getting access to Kubrick's archives. The man was so anal, he even designed his own archival boxes. V. interesting)
― caitlin (caitlin), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 09:20 (9 years ago) Permalink
― s1ocki (slutsky), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 16:57 (9 years ago) Permalink
*
I haven't seen some of the most important films: Lolita, 2001, Strangelove, but the ones I've seen follow a very odd pattern, in that, in my opinion, the first halves seem to be brilliant, particularly the openings, and the second halves poor. The films strike me as getting more and more conventional as the story unravels, for some reason.
The first half of "A Clockwork Orange" is full of extraordinary imagery, for example, but the plot dies a sudden death the minute the McDowell is arrested and his menace cancelled. The opening of Full Metal Jacket - the drill sergeant and the recruits, is mesmerising, but the later stuff, so obviously filmed among old British warehouses, is dismal, particularly the fight against the female sniper, her femaleness seeming to me irrelevent: a sniper's a sniper. The Shining sets itself up grippingly, but goes too over the top, for my money, later on. Barry Lyndon is beautiful at first and then gets remarkably slow and dull, though I agree that Rossiter is extraordinary as the dancing piper. Eyes Wide Shut - well the relationship stuff interested me at first, but then the whole culty thing became risible - and, once again, slow.
But Kubrik's INTERESTING, no two ways about it.
― Baravelli. (Jake Proudlock), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 18:26 (9 years ago) Permalink
― s1ocki (slutsky), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 18:32 (9 years ago) Permalink
If you haven't seen Dr. Strangelove, I'd think you like it. It's hilarious from the beginning to the end. Definitely Kubrick's best flick. Lolita is in my opinion underrated, perhaps because it's kinda different from the book (though the script was written by Nabokov) - it's more of a black comedy, and the power relations between Lolita and Humbert are reversed.
― Tuomas (Tuomas), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 18:47 (9 years ago) Permalink
Eyes Wide Shut on the other hand did just seem a little slow for me. The pacing made it tense, but it also made it hard to be passionate about.
― dleone (dleone), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:00 (9 years ago) Permalink
I like the second half of FMJ better than the first. The first is easier to enjoy - lots of quotable lines and laughs, and the setup is so familiar in an anti-military way. But the second is darker and has such a surreal aura (the movie crew, the general, etc.), and the way it doesn't just play out as an anti-war movie is great.
About the sets - sometimes I hear that it looks just like Vietnam, some people claim it looks like a UK location. Having never been to either, I couldn't say. (They could be one and the same - what were Vietnamese colonial-era cities like?)
― miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:06 (9 years ago) Permalink
― nickalicious (nickalicious), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:08 (9 years ago) Permalink
― miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:11 (9 years ago) Permalink
that was the reading i learned in school, anyway. i buy it. it's a fucked up sense of humor and a boring movie if you're not focused on "getting it", though.
― vahid (vahid), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:14 (9 years ago) Permalink
― s1ocki (slutsky), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:15 (9 years ago) Permalink
― vahid (vahid), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:16 (9 years ago) Permalink
― s1ocki (slutsky), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:16 (9 years ago) Permalink
Well, Dr. Strangelove is a comedy, and "should I be laughing at this? what's wrong with me!?!" is exactly what it's about. I guess Kubrick should've done more comedies, perhaps his nihilism would've suited that genre better.
― Tuomas (Tuomas), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:17 (9 years ago) Permalink
sigh
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:22 (9 years ago) Permalink
― pete s, Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:27 (9 years ago) Permalink
arendt was fascinated by satellites - she thought it was funny that we'd send up this thing INTO SPACE and we were all so excited that it was IN SPACE and we'd make such a big deal about SPACE, yet the whole time the thing was just staring back at the earth. y'know how 99% of space shuttle photographs show the earth, either in the background or as the subject.
so for her the space programs and science fiction are funny because they're not about outer space, they just reinforce or explain our relations to the earth and ourselves. heidegger wrote extensively in the same vein, though about technology and nature.
the heidegger/arendt part = we send man INTO SPACE to confront a GIANT ALIEN MONOLITH and he basically he ends up confronting texas instruments. in the meantime, there's not really anything to do but stare at photos from earth, eat packaged earth food, confront yourself in the form of endless mental and physical exercise. sort of deflates romantic sci-fi.
again, not entirely vacuous but not so great as to decisively redeem the hour-and-a-half space sequence.
― vahid (vahid), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:29 (9 years ago) Permalink
― vahid (vahid), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:31 (9 years ago) Permalink
― pete s, Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:33 (9 years ago) Permalink
Um, I have to disagree. Kubrick took his films rather seriously, the black humour is just one aspect of them. I'd say only Lolita, Dr. Strangelove and A Clockwork Orange were "driven" by Kubrick's humour, though some of the others have comedic moments as well, obviously. Still, it's hard to imagine someone calling Paths of Glory, or Barry Lyndon, or even Eyes Wide Shut "comedies".
― Tuomas (Tuomas), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 19:34 (9 years ago) Permalink
(Incidentally, i'm aware it's based on Thackeray's 19th c. novel)
― pete s, Tuesday, 30 March 2004 20:05 (9 years ago) Permalink
― s1ocki (slutsky), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 20:06 (9 years ago) Permalink
this seems to me to be a pretty subjective reaction, because i dont find any part of the film "still and lifeless"--sometimes the characters themselves are, but the film itself never is. the docking sequence is beautiful, and the strauss is perfect because the machines are dancing.
― ryan (ryan), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 20:40 (9 years ago) Permalink
― s1ocki (slutsky), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 21:02 (9 years ago) Permalink
― vahid (vahid), Tuesday, 30 March 2004 21:04 (9 years ago) Permalink
― N_RQ, Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:14 (8 years ago) Permalink
eg the day she, sistrah becky, me and becky's boyf aplyed DESERT ISLAND DVDS and i sighed audibly when 2001 was mentioned and wz quite korrektly taken to task
psi have now seen clockwork o. (as in "o dear")
― mark s (mark s), Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:21 (8 years ago) Permalink
― N_RQ, Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:26 (8 years ago) Permalink
― Huey (Huey), Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:30 (8 years ago) Permalink
― latebloomer: correspondingly more exaggerated mixing is a scarifying error. (lat, Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:35 (8 years ago) Permalink
― mark s (mark s), Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:36 (8 years ago) Permalink
Accusations of "no sense of humor" several years xpost: fucked. "A clod with dialogue"? Strangelove is one of the most quoted films ever, and when his characters say banal things, it's quite purposeful.(except in Spartacus, in which he had no script input)
Barry Lyndon is a smarter, subtler film about desire and violence than A Clockwork Orange.
― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:50 (8 years ago) Permalink
by sense of humour i meant the actually funny kind
― mark s (mark s), Thursday, 10 March 2005 14:54 (8 years ago) Permalink
I used to love Kubrick in my revering great artists phase but right now the only films i can imagine sitting down to watch again are Barry Lyndon and Eyes Wide Shut (which really is a comedy i think in the classical sense, much like Fight Club, another film often taken too seriously.)
― ryan (ryan), Thursday, 10 March 2005 15:02 (8 years ago) Permalink
spielberg shld hire Miklós Jancsó to direct the napoleon script
― Ward Fowler, Friday, 8 March 2013 19:27 (2 months ago) Permalink
ai was boring and cruel in the way kubrick is prone to but without his enigmatic stateliness
― plax (ico), Saturday, 9 March 2013 00:21 (2 months ago) Permalink
enigmatic stateliness replaced by Spielberg's sweaty hamfists
― Donkamole Marvin (Shakey Mo Collier), Saturday, 9 March 2013 00:29 (2 months ago) Permalink
nope
― Gukbe, Saturday, 9 March 2013 00:50 (2 months ago) Permalink
for the umpteenth fucking time, K gave the project to him, saying he was better for it.
― Pope Rusty I (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 9 March 2013 01:03 (2 months ago) Permalink
yeah we've all done this too many times
― Gukbe, Saturday, 9 March 2013 01:12 (2 months ago) Permalink
Retrospective at the ifc center in NYC later this month
― calstars, Monday, 11 March 2013 12:17 (2 months ago) Permalink
can anyone tell me what the album cover referenced here is?
― the 'dirty sprite' is implied (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 March 2013 15:56 (2 months ago) Permalink
kraftwerk's radioactivity
― ☠ ☃ ☠ (mh), Monday, 11 March 2013 15:57 (2 months ago) Permalink
(it's in the air for you and me)
http://www.nfb.ca/film/universe/
Universe, by Roman Kroitor & Colin Low196028 min 53 s
This is the Canada Film Board documentary that 'inspired' 2001. Kubrick brought over a number of people that worked on this, including the voice of HAL 9000 Douglas Rain, who appears here as narrator! Great film!
― Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 11 March 2013 16:01 (2 months ago) Permalink
oh for fuck's sake i knew that and couldn't place it. thanks.
― the 'dirty sprite' is implied (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 March 2013 16:06 (2 months ago) Permalink
now to go buy and wear it with impunity
Awesome link Adam, thank you
― calstars, Monday, 11 March 2013 16:13 (2 months ago) Permalink
http://filmmakeriq.com/2011/08/30-amazing-stanley-kubrick-cinemagraphs/
― MaresNest, Monday, 20 May 2013 16:26 (5 days ago) Permalink