Stanley Kubrick

Stanley Kubrick has long been one of my favorite film directors. I first became aware of him in my teens, after watching 2001: A Space Odyssey on the OETA Movie Club one Saturday night (OETA is the Oklahoma PBS channel). When the star child appeared in the final scene of the movie, I knew I had seen something tremendous. The credits listed Stanley Kubrick as the director, and I remember thinking I wanted to learn more about him. Gradually, I watched all of his movies.

Kubrick died suddenly while I was in college; I still vividly remember one of my friends coming to my room to break the news. His final film, Eyes Wide Shut, was completed shortly before his death, and is the only one of his movies that I saw in theaters during its initial release.

I mention all of this because in the past few months I've come across several articles about Kubrick, for a variety of reasons:

  • It's the 25th anniversary of the release of Eyes Wide Shut
  • A short documentary was recently release about the making of The Shining
  • A new biography of Kubrick was released this year

There were several tidbits in the articles that I found fascinating.

The first article, found at The Film Stage, is an interview with a Brazilian director who talked about seeing Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket in a theater on opening day. It was full of very loud, obnoxious teenagers who had just gotten out of school and didn't care what movie they saw. They were so loud that no one could hear the trailers, and they didn't shut up as the movie was starting. But then as the first scene began:

we begin to see those soldiers losing their hair along with the music and the whole place just calmed down. Just the image of those men losing their hair is so mysterious and enigmatic and everybody kind of shut up... It was completely silent until the end of the film. I never forgot that. The film kind of hypnotized everyone in a way that I have rarely seen. It was really crazy and it says a lot about who Stanley Kubrick was as a filmmaker.
I didn't remember the first scene, so I looked it up and found it on YouTube:

I think he's right. There is something hypnotic about all the recruits having their heads shaved. I liked Full Metal Jacket, but it is a powerful movie, with some scenes that messed me up. 

The other article, titled Spaces Between The Stars, is a review of the new biography. There are a couple of things I found interesting:

For a long time, Kubrick wanted to make a movie about the Holocaust. When he was discussing the idea with a screenwriter, the screenwriter suggested that Schindler's List surely fulfilled the need for a Holocaust movie. Kubrick surprisingly replied that he did not think Schindler's List was about the Holocaust, saying:

The Holocaust is about six million people who get killed. Schindler’s List is about six hundred people who don’t.

A sobering response.

One final point:

Early in his career, Kubrick directed the hit movie Spartacus, although he was frustrated by the experience because he didn't have full creative control. While filming a movie much later in his career, Kubrick was spending an inordinate amount of time adjusting a camera, causing the extras to get annoyed. One extra muttered in annoyance, followed by another. Kubrick got angry and demanded to know who had spoken:

One of the men said, ‘I am Spartacus,’ another fell in, ‘I am Spartacus,’ and so it went, an act of organised resistance, a homage and parody of a moment he had shot from a different crane.

I suppose you won't get how funny that is if you haven't seen Spartacus. Here's the scene it's referencing:


I haven't even mentioned some of his other great films, like Paths of Glory and Dr. Strangelove. He had an incredible career.