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  1. #1
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    TALK Stanley Kubrick

    http://us.imdb.com/Name?Kubrick,+Stanley


    Date of birth (location)
    26 July 1928
    Manhattan, New York, New York, USA
    Date of death (details)
    7 March 1999
    Harpenden, Hertfordshire, England, UK. (natural causes)

    Trade mark
    [Narration] Nearly all of Kubrick's films contain a narration at some point (2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) contains narration in the screenplay and The Shining (1980) has some sparse title cards).

    Most often adapted his films from novels Killer's Kiss (1955), and Fear and Desire (1953).

    Often features shots down the length of tall, parallel walls, e.g. the head in Full Metal Jacket (1987), the maze and hotel coridors in Shining, The (1980) and the computer room in 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).

    His films have a common theme of dehumanization.

    Symmetric image composition and long "zooming out" and/or "zooming in" sequences [zoom].

    Constructs three-way conflicts [three-way].

    Extreme close-ups of intensely emotional faces [faces].

    [114]: often uses the number 114 in serial numbers, eg. - It's the name of the decoder in Dr. Strangelove - It's the Jupiter explorer's "licence plate number" in 2001 - Alex is given "Serum 114" when he undergoes the Ludovico treatment

    Bathroom: All of Kubrick's films feature a scene that takes place in a bathroom

    So who is Stanley Kubrick to you?
    Do you like his movies?
    What is your favorite movie that he directed?


    i like

    Clockwork Orange, A (1971)
    Shining, The (1980)

    he does not really have a long LIST, but damn he is one of the best directors Hollywood ever had...
    http://img53.imageshack.us/img53/6324/fightclubmlzq1.jpg

  2. #2
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    As one of the most universally acclaimed and influential directors of the postwar era, Stanley Kubrick enjoyed a reputation and a standing unique among the filmmakers of his day. A perennial outsider, he worked far beyond the confines of Hollywood, maintaining complete artistic control and making movies according to the whims and time constraints of no one but himself, but with the rare advantage of studio financial support for all of his endeavors. Working in a vast range of styles and genres spanning from black comedy to horror to crime drama, Kubrick was an enigma, living and creating in almost total seclusion, far away from the watchful eye of the media. His films were a reflection of his obsessive nature, perfectionist masterpieces which remain among the most provocative and visionary motion pictures ever made.


    Born July 26, 1928 in New York City, Kubrick initially earned renown as a photographer, selling his first free-lance pictures to Look magazine while still in high school. By the age of 17 he was working as a Look staff photographer, travelling the world in their employ for several years. He subsequently enrolled as a non-matriculating student at Columbia University, attending classes taught by the likes of Calvin Trillin and Mark Van Doren. In the late 1940s Kubrick became enamored of filmmaking, attending Museum of Modern Art showings regularly. To supplement his income, he also played chess for money in Greenwich Village.


    In 1951, Kubrick used his life savings to finance his first film, Day of the Fight, a 16-minute documentary profiling boxer Walter Cartier. The piece was later purchased by RKO for its This Is America series and played at the Paramount Theatre in New York. Encouraged by his success, Kubrick quit his post at Look to pursue filmmaking full-time. Soon, RKO assigned him to helm a short for their documentary series Pathe Screenliner. Titled Flying Padre, the nine-minute work spotlighted Fred Stadtmueller, a priest who piloted a Piper Cub around his 400-mile New Mexico parish. In 1953 the Atlantic and Gulf Coast District of the Seafarers International Union commissioned Kubrick to direct a half-hour industrial documentary called The Seafarers, his first color film.


    With the aid of relatives, Kubrick raised some $13,000 in order to finance his feature debut, the war story Fear and Desire. Filmed in the San Gabrielle mountains near Los Angeles with a crew of less than ten people (including Kubrick's then-wife Toba Metz), the picture was filmed silently, with its dialogue dubbed-in later (a measure which ultimately added $20,000 to the final cost). Shown only briefly on the New York arthouse circuit, Fear and Desire failed to earn back its initial investment and was later disowned by its creator, who successfully blocked a number of planned screenings several decades later. His sophomore feature, the gangland melodrama Killer's Kiss, followed in 1955. A more successful effort, it was sold to United Artists and received worldwide distribution, playing primarily as a second feature.


    In 1956 Kubrick directed his first studio picture, The Killing. A heist film told via an ambitious overlapping time structure, the film starred Sterling Hayden, with dialogue from the legendary hard-boiled crime novelist Jim Thompson. The result was the director's first artistic triumph, and it brought him to the attention of MGM production head Dore Share, where Kubrick was teamed with novelist Calder Willingham to develop future projects. After preparing a screenplay based on Steven Zweig's story "The Burning Secret" which went unproduced, Thompson joined the duo to adapt the Humphrey Cobb war novel Paths of Glory. Studio after studio rejected the project until Kirk Douglas agreed to star, resulting in a financing deal with United Artists. Shot in Germany, the 1957 film won considerable critical acclaim, and further cemented Kubrick's reputation as a rising talent.


    However, the next two years left him in a state of limbo, as a pair of proposed projects -- I Stole 16 Million Dollars, a planned vehicle for Douglas based on the life of safecracker Herbert Emmerson Wilson, and an untitled film about Mosby's Rangers, a southern guerilla force active during the U.S. Civil War -- both failed to come to fruition. Kubrick then spent some six months on pre-production work for the Marlon Brando western One-Eyed Jacks, only to look on helplessly as Brando decided at the eleventh hour to direct the picture himself. Finally, in 1959 he replaced Anthony Mann on Spartacus, a lavish historical epic starring Douglas, Laurence Olivier, and Tony Curtis. The most costly film produced in Hollywood to date, with a budget of over $12 million, it proved to be a major hit, winning the Golden Globe Award for "Best Picture."


    In 1962 Kubrick resurfaced with the controversial Lolita, based on the infamous Nabokov novel about a man's infatuation with his teenaged stepdaughter. Due to a number of financial and legal difficulties, the film was shot in England, where Kubrick continued to live and work after the project's completion. He next turned to his first undisputed masterpiece, the 1964 Cold War-era black comedy Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, a brilliant adaptation of the Peter George novel Red Alert starring Peter Sellers in no less than three different roles.


    In December of 1965 Kubrick began production on what was to become his crowning achievement, 2001: A Space Odyssey. Inspired by the Arthur C. Clarke story The Sentinel, the 1968 film -- a complex meditation on man's instinctive desire for violence, set against a backdrop of an American spacecraft's contact with extraterrestrial intelligence -- quickly emerged as a landmark in motion picture history, growing in status to become recognized as one of the greatest and most thought-provoking movies ever released. A biography of Napoleon was projected as the follow-up, but when expected costs proved too prohibitive, the film never moved beyond the planning stages.


    Instead, Kubrick turned to another controversial novel, Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange. A satiric 1971 essay on crime and punishment set in a violent future world, the film initially scored an "X" rating in the U.S. but proved surprisingly popular regardless, even netting several Oscar nominations. In Britain, A Clockwork Orange played theatrically for a year without incident, but was pulled after a number of copy-cat crimes which authorities blamed on the picture's influence, including a brutal gang-rape mirroring a scene in the film. Moving from the future to the past, in 1975 Kubrick adapted William Makepeace Thackery's 19th century novel Barry Lyndon, a lavish costume drama detailing the rise and fall of an Irish rogue (Ryan O'Neal) during the 1700s.


    In 1980, Kubrick helmed The Shining, an adaptation of a horror novel by author Stephen King. While one of the director's greatest popular successes, critical notice was less kind, and he spent the early half of the decade away from the camera, plotting his next move. The result was 1987's Full Metal Jacket, a Vietnam War drama which scored with both audiences and critics. Despite the film's success however, Kubrick again went into hibernation. One planned project, an ambitious science-fiction tale dubbed A.I., was reportedly placed on hold because it outpaced the special effects capabilities of the moment, while another, The Aryan Papers, failed to progress beyond the pre-production stage. Finally, in late 1996 Kubrick began work on Eyes Wide Shut, starring husband and wife Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. In 1997, Kubrick was given two of the film world's highest honors, winning the D.W. Griffith Award from the Director's Guild of America as well as the Golden Lion Award at the 54th Venice International Film Festival. Two years later, Eyes Wide Shut was released to extremely mixed reviews; a dreamlike erotic odyssey, it proved to be Kubrick's last film. He died of natural causes on March 7 of that year, leaving behind one of the cinema's most provocative, varied, and altogether brilliant legacies. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
    Well Spartacus and Full Metal Jacket are classics, but other than that I'm not a fan. Look to my bottom 20 list for my feelings on his most aclaimed work.

  3. #3
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    way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way overrated director =)


    a few good movies but hes not the director god that ppl try and make him.


    best his made. Dr Strangelove.
    "A celibate clergy is an especially good idea, because it tends to suppress any hereditary propensity toward fanaticism." / Carl Sagan

  4. #4
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    ZUBi is offline Valued Longtime Member (1971-2006)
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    Thumbs up

    >So who is Stanley Kubrick to you?

    GENIOUS!

    >Do you like his movies?

    some of them yes.

    >What is your favorite movie that he directed?

    2001. MASTERPIECE !

    Bush, Bin Laden, Hussein, Castro: SAME $HIT

  5. #5
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    Cool

    Stanley Kubrick is my favorite movie director. I've seen and enjoyed, all of his movies. My favorite one is "A Clockwork Orange".

  6. #6
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    Re: TALK Stanley Kubrick

    So who is Stanley Kubrick to you?

    See my sig, dammit!

    Do you like his movies?

    Same as above for an idea

    It is also a crime that none of his trailers in high-res are being posted to the Forum or the main List!!!

    What is your favorite movie that he directed?

    1. A Clockwork Orange (one of 20 editman's fav of all time)
    2. 2001: A Space Odyssey
    3. The Shining
    4. Full Metal Jacket
    5. Eyes Wide Shut / Lolita

    "The idea was to be a symbol. editman could be anybody, that was the point."

    Trolls destroyed the Forum

    my DVD/blu-ray List

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    Eyes Wide Shut ..i remember it had a cool trailer and most trailer Stanley edited himself..right?

    maybe u can upload it

    and Editman... 1 of his movies has been posted already

    http://www.movie-list.com/f/fullmetaljacket.shtml

  8. #8
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    Originally posted by Gaumont
    way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way way overrated director =)


    a few good movies but hes not the director god that ppl try and make him.


    best his made. Dr Strangelove.
    I'm sorry, were u under a rock for the past 50 years or something?!

    HAve u seen Full Metal Jacket?!
    Have u seen Clockwork Orange?!

  9. #9
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    Originally posted by tisoy
    Editman... 1 of his movies has been posted already

    http://www.movie-list.com/f/fullmetaljacket.shtml
    Yeah, I know. But I'm talking about DA real deal: ie A Clockwork Orange, 2001, The Shining! Full Metal Jacket's good, but a M-L Classic? JPB may as well post Barry Lyndon!

    Originally posted by tisoy
    Eyes Wide Shut ..i remember it had a cool trailer and most trailer Stanley edited himself..right?
    It's a shame Warner Bros never put the teaser/ShoWest clip on the DVD. (I swear I saw that one in cinema, with title 'Coming Soon' at the end. So it qualifies as a teaser!) I love that more than the trailer (which is also cool.)

    Originally posted by tisoy
    maybe u can upload it
    You bet your a** I would!

  10. #10
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    I haven't seen all his work, but what I have seen I've liked.

    2001 **1/2
    Clockwork Orange ***1/2
    The Shining ***
    Full Metal Jacket ***
    Eyes Wide Shut ***
    Whatcha Gonna Do!?

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