Best Stanley Kubrick movie

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"A blaster ass in butt-stained piss-sense," I weirdly found myself typing out.

You are exactly why people root for the apes (Eric H.), Friday, 1 August 2014 16:24 (eleven years ago)

about Dave Franco?

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 1 August 2014 16:25 (eleven years ago)

three months pass...

anyone read/ heard this? looks amazing

http://www.fullmetaljacketdiary.com

http://36.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mb4pl5QLoL1rovfcgo4_1280.jpg

piscesx, Sunday, 9 November 2014 19:42 (eleven years ago)

Tried rewatching FMJ the other night and, man, it felt tedious. :(

Acid Hose (Capitaine Jay Vee), Sunday, 9 November 2014 20:53 (eleven years ago)

I thought this revive was going to be about Paths of Glory today. No offence but this looks like some standard hagiography type shit where the narrator weaves their own mediocre, uninteresting arses into the mix.

xelab, Sunday, 9 November 2014 21:06 (eleven years ago)

I'd need to re-(or first-)screen to do a proper list, but here's an attempt anyway:
1. Eyes Wide Shut
2. Dr. Strangelove
3. Full Metal Jacket
4. 2001
5. Paths of Glory
6. Barry Lyndon
7. The Killing
8. The Shining
(8.5 A.I.)
9. A Clockwork Orange

I haven't paid sufficient attention to Lolita, and haven't seen the first two.

I may be overconsidering production values, or overobjecting to British accents.

benbbag, Sunday, 9 November 2014 22:49 (eleven years ago)

Xp: why would the revive be about Paths of Glory?

how's life, Monday, 10 November 2014 11:24 (eleven years ago)

Over here it was remembrance Sunday and there has been lots of WW1 related stuff on TV recently I thought maybe it was broadcast, saying that it is probably on a BBC blacklist for portraying futility.

xelab, Monday, 10 November 2014 18:06 (eleven years ago)

I have the most trouble with the middle of that list - BL and PoG (among others?) could easily be reversed.

benbbag, Tuesday, 11 November 2014 04:08 (eleven years ago)

two years pass...

A brief list.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 23 September 2017 05:46 (eight years ago)

Interesting to neglect the major players, but absolutely love Lolita/Barry Lyndon. Good list

Week of Wonders (Ross), Saturday, 23 September 2017 07:50 (eight years ago)

George Macready in Paths Of Glory + Patrick Magee in BL, are such powerhouse performances. And Sterling Hayden's straight-faced "precious bodily fluids" spiel is still piss funny, even though I wore out a VHS recording of Strangelove in the 80's.

calzino, Saturday, 23 September 2017 09:04 (eight years ago)

Kubrick admitted Lolita needed to be more explicit.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 23 September 2017 09:18 (eight years ago)

lolita the book is not really all that explicit, tbh

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Saturday, 23 September 2017 09:54 (eight years ago)

1/ Full Metal Jacket
2/ Dr Strangelove
3/ 2001: A Space Odyssey
4/ Barry Lyndon
5/ Eyes Wide Shut

Well bissogled trotters (Michael B), Saturday, 23 September 2017 11:52 (eight years ago)

it's clear, JD

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 23 September 2017 14:08 (eight years ago)

Lyne's was just as ambiguous on that point

rip van wanko, Saturday, 23 September 2017 15:04 (eight years ago)

Love Alfred's challopsy lists. I never agree with them but they make for great reading and dissecting

Shat Parp (dog latin), Monday, 25 September 2017 14:47 (eight years ago)

Largely agree with this one and the point about concision. Bar 2001 I think it hits the essential work.

be the cringe you want to see in the world (Noodle Vague), Monday, 25 September 2017 15:38 (eight years ago)

as it happens, a student told me this morning that his Euro history professor showed POG last week and the class was devastasted when it ended.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 25 September 2017 15:42 (eight years ago)

i'm pretty sure i've said this before here but kirk douglas' slow burn in paths of glory is my platonic model of how these things can be done. i would love to know the conversations he had with kubrick about it, how much they collaborated on the emotional structure of his part (if at all), and how tricky it must have been to correctly modulate given that they were probably shooting a lot of stuff out of sequence

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Monday, 25 September 2017 15:49 (eight years ago)

I don't know if Douglas' autobio has much on the playing of Dax, but it has Kirk's infamous anger w/ SK

http://www.fistful-of-leone.com/forums/index.php?topic=8851.0;wap2

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 25 September 2017 15:56 (eight years ago)

the way Kubrick keeps the audience's righteous anger at a rising boil is pretty masterful.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 25 September 2017 15:58 (eight years ago)

Stanley Kubrick and his partner, James Harris, the man who put up money to develop the script, went ahead to Germany to prepare PATHS OF GLORY. When I arrived at the Hotel Vierjahrzeiten in Munich, I was greeted by Stanley and a completely rewritten script. He had revised it on his own, with Jim Thompson. It was a catastrophe, a cheapened version of what I thought had been a beautiful script. The dialogue was atrocious. My character said things like: "You've got a big head. You're so sure the sun rises and sets up there in your noggin you don't even bother to carry matches,"And "And you've got the only brain in the world. They made yours and threw the pattern away? The rest of us have a skullful of Cornflakes." Speeches like this went on for pages, right up to the happy ending, when the general's car arrives screeching to halt the firing squad and he changes the men's death sentence to thirty days in the guardhouse. Then my character, Colonel Dax, goes off with the bad guy he has been fighting all through the movie, General Rousseau, to have a drink, as the general puts his arm around my shoulder.

I callled Kubrick and Harris to my room. "Stanley, did you write this?"

"Yes." Kubrick always had a calm way about him. I never heard him raise his voice, never saw him get excited or reveal anything. He just looked at you though those big, wide eyes.

I said, "Stanley, why would you do that?"
He very calmly said, "To make it commercial. I want to make money."

I hit the ceiling. I called him every four-letter word I could think of. "You come to me with a script written by other people. It was based on a book. I love THAT script. I told you I didn't think this would be commercial, but I want to make it. You left it in my hands to put the picture together. I got the money, based on THAT script. Not this shit!" I threw the script across the room. "We're going back to the original script, or we're not making the picture."

Stanley never blinked an eye. We shot the original script. I think the movie is a classic, one of the most important pictures--possibly the MOST important picture--Stanley Kubrick has ever made.

from Morbs' link

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 25 September 2017 16:00 (eight years ago)

Interesting tidbit about a director who has written or co-written, with an exception, every film he's made:

Stanley is not a writer. He has always functioned better if he got a good writer and worked with him on a concept.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 25 September 2017 16:02 (eight years ago)

makes sense if you think of Jim Thompson, Terry Southern, Arthur Clarke, Frederic Raphael, but afaik SK did the adap of Lyndon himself.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 25 September 2017 16:04 (eight years ago)

apparently he also tossed the Nabokov script in the ashcan; it was very long and unfilmable.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 25 September 2017 16:05 (eight years ago)

Yeah, I knew that. For BL and ACO (also a solo credit) I think I read that he followed the Huston method for The Maltese Falcon: ask a secretary to re-type the novel in script format, then he'd edit it.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 25 September 2017 16:07 (eight years ago)

two months pass...

we should do this again. i imagine Barry Lyndon and Eyes Wide Shut would place much higher now

flappy bird, Wednesday, 13 December 2017 07:34 (eight years ago)

Yeah i was surprised how low EWS (my number 1) was. Looking forward to watching it again over the season; soooo Christmass-y.

piscesx, Wednesday, 13 December 2017 10:26 (eight years ago)

one year passes...

Barry Lyndon on TV klaxon (BBC4, Sunday at 9pm)

— Hardcore for Nerds (@HC4N) April 27, 2019

j., Sunday, 28 April 2019 00:17 (seven years ago)

Can't believe I am finally going to watch this, unless the snooker is amazing

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:10 (seven years ago)

On a schoolnight?

milkshake chuk (wins), Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:11 (seven years ago)

knock that fucking billiards on't head - it's an alltime great movie!

calzino, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:15 (seven years ago)

It's how I roll.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:16 (seven years ago)

Xp

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:16 (seven years ago)

Yeah I know...I've missed screening after screening of this. But ya know Trump and Ding could be serving up a classic tonight.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:20 (seven years ago)

Filmworker is on Film4 at 00:30 tonight. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6851066/

Dan Worsley, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:37 (seven years ago)

https://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/03174/barryl_3174963c.jpg
so many good performances in BL but Patrick Magee's turn as The Chevalier is exceptional.

calzino, Sunday, 28 April 2019 10:44 (seven years ago)

Probably one of the most well-designed and photographed of films. The one-track coldness that Kubrick deals in really works to temper down the iffy (twee) source material.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 28 April 2019 23:09 (seven years ago)

it is fucking gorgeous.

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Sunday, 28 April 2019 23:29 (seven years ago)

Patrick Magee's turn as The Chevalier is exceptional.

I don't think I've ever seen Patrick Magee be anything less than exceptional in anything.

Freddie Starr (Hitler in shorts) (Tom D.), Sunday, 28 April 2019 23:32 (seven years ago)

have to see Barry Lyndon again, I think I will really appreciate it, but also don't think it will replace 2001 as my personal favorite film of all time

Dan S, Sunday, 28 April 2019 23:36 (seven years ago)

Gotta say it's the first one of his I've seen where I get what ppl are on about wrt Kubrick.

I don't think I've ever seen Patrick Magee be anything less than exceptional in anything.

*Looks at wiki* How much Hammer horror have you seen?

xyzzzz__, Monday, 29 April 2019 08:58 (seven years ago)

Magee only appeared in one Hammer film, the fairly obscure Demons of the Mind. He's in a fair few horror movies from Hammer's UK rival Amicus, tho.

Ward Fowler, Monday, 29 April 2019 09:02 (seven years ago)

Yes, he did a lot of crap but he's a magnetic presence. Not exactly what you'd call a naturalistic actor, lol.

Freddie Starr (Hitler in shorts) (Tom D.), Monday, 29 April 2019 09:23 (seven years ago)

Cool it was striking to see someone in a few amazing films and then contrast with horror (I called it hammer only bcz of seeing discussion of their output on here is the extent of my knowledge) which I assume won't have as many demands placed on your actorly skill set (again another assumption)

xyzzzz__, Monday, 29 April 2019 10:28 (seven years ago)

Don't get me wrong, I love Hammer, Amicus, Tigon and all that guff.

Freddie Starr (Hitler in shorts) (Tom D.), Monday, 29 April 2019 10:30 (seven years ago)

Clockwork Orange was showing at my local cinema and I missed out on seeing it. Been very long since I originally saw it, and I've never seen it at the cinema.

I love Barry Lyndon.

frame casual (dog latin), Monday, 29 April 2019 10:46 (seven years ago)

I had Patrick Magee and Henry McGee confused in my mind for a minute there. Now that was a wild ride.

Elitist cheese photos (aldo), Monday, 29 April 2019 11:47 (seven years ago)


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