We finally complete our extended look at the films of Stanley Kubrick with part 3 of A Film Odyssey.
The
Shining (1980) 8/10
Loosely
based on the novel by Stephen King, Stanley Kubrick's The Shining is
among the very first true epics of the horror genre, so vast in scope and
ambition the running time can barely contain, let alone explain, the experience
projected onscreen. The story concerns
Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson), a writer and former alcoholic, who accepts a
job to be the caretaker of the massive and isolated Overlook Hotel for the
Winter. His wife Wendy (Shelly Duvall)
and son Danny (Danny Lloyd) move in with him for the season and are snowed
in. Danny seems to have psychic
abilities called “shining” and begins to receive visions of the hotel's violent
past. Reportedly the last caretaker of
the hotel, Delbert Grady, murdered his family before taking his own life. Soon after, Jack and his family find
themselves snowed in before Jack begins to follow in Mr. Grady's footsteps.
Seemingly disconnected
and anecdotal before slyly linking all the details together, The Shining
finds Kubrick at his most labyrinthine.
Though the scenes of Jack Nicholson axing the bathroom door down with
the infamous line “Here's Johnny” are familiar, you can watch The Shining
dozens of times and still come up with a new questions which remain
unanswered. Is Jack Torrance really the
caretaker from 1921 and is the Overlook his ghostly Hell? Are there really supernatural occurrences
taking place or are they merely hallucinations?
How much of the film, if not all, takes place within Jack or Danny's
head? Is it about the horrors of
alcoholism terrorizing a family, or something far more sinister? Can Danny and the chef Dick Hallorann
(Scatman Crothers) really “shine”? When
pondering the prospect of the afterlife or spirits wandering the Earth, as with
2001: A Space Odyssey, Kubrick shows far more than he tells.
Germane to Kubrick's
work are his enormous set pieces filmed with precise care. Among his greatest are the war room in Dr.
Strangelove, the centrifuge in 2001, and most notably, the Overlook
hotel in The Shining. Filled with
seemingly endless corridors with a penchant for red wallpapers, it's as though
the walls have been painted with more blood than what flows from the elevator
in Danny's visions. Stronger still is
the operatic use of the Steadicam, gracefully careening through the halls and
stairwells of the Overlook. It's as
though we're gliding through a maze with no exit. Kubrick's gloriously surreal lighting give
the walls and chandeliers an eerie glow, furthering a sense of either the
supernatural or delirium. Avant-garde
Polish composer Krzyzstof Pendercki's terrifying strings find themselves at
perfect home here when the terror levels are turned up higher.
Considered a failure
by it's famed author Stephen King for Kubrick's free use of creative license,
as well as Jack Nicholson's spectacularly over-the-top performance of a man's
gradual descent into maniacal sociopathy, The Shining for many years was
considered Kubrick's first artistic failure.
Kubrick himself responded to the public reaction to the film by
withdrawing the film one week after it's world premiere to remove a coda which
he felt offset the impact of the finale.
Further still, in Europe the film was shorted by Kubrick again by 25
minutes, while curiously leaving the US version at it's initial 144 minute
length.
Still, whatever your
interpretation of the film is (and there are many, enough to fill the
conspiracy theorist documentary Room 237), this is one of the lushest
and richest horror films ever made, if not the fullest of ideas. Watching the film and attempting to discuss
it will have viewers chasing their tails for decades trying to make sense of
what we think we're seeing onscreen.
Perhaps Kubrick meant for his film interpretation of Stephen King's
novel to reflect the process of really trying to ponder the notion of spiritual
entities and a dimension far beyond our realm of comprehension. Much like 2001, it aims to open the
door wide and keep it from being closed.
Full
Metal Jacket (1987) 8/10
With
Kubrick's second military film dealing with firearms combat warfare, Full
Metal Jacket has been called everything from the greatest war film ever
made to a disservice to the military.
Divided into two halves, we're immediately plunged neck deep into boot
camp at the height of the Vietnam War.
Seen from the perspective of omniscient narrator and trainee Private
Joker (Matthew Modine), enter Gunnery Sergeant Hartman, the Senior Drill
Instructor (played by former Drill Sergeant R. Lee Ermey), and like the new
recruits, we the audience are immediately and most certainly his. Undeniably this is most realistic portrait of
basic military training ever put on film.
From morning until night, Hartman systematically breaks down and
rebuilds each trainee into a soldier. He
swears, chides, derides, assaults and attacks until every recruit has his fears
burned away. All except for one, that
is, Private Gomer Pyle (Vincent D'Onofrio), who can't seem to catch on and
forms a tragic antagonism with the Drill Instructor.

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Related article: A Film Odyssey Part One |
Though Kubrick had been
planning Full Metal Jacket for well over a decade, many felt he was
beaten to the finish line by other Vietnam pictures like Apocalpyse Now,
The Deer Hunter, and Platoon.
In hindsight, however, in terms of sales, critical consensus and legacy,
critics and audiences still point to Full Metal Jacket as the
unequivocal greatest war film of all time, largely for not taking a moral
stance and not trying to bring politics or human rights issues into the
picture. Moreover, it's a phenomenon, a
machine which systematically churns people out and brings to light their inner
murderer.
Eyes Wide Shut (1999) 8/10
Kubrick's final swan
song and most extravagant production to date, Eyes Wide Shut, is an
unfairly maligned and misunderstood masterwork of illicit thoughts and a cold,
hard notion that alternatives to monogamy will only end in death. Completed and edited just before Kubrick's
untimely death, the film stars Tom Cruise as Bill Hartford, a married family
man and doctor who with time has taken his wife and place in life for
granted. After a stoned argument with
his wife Alice Hardford (Nicole Kidman), Alice confesses on one of their prior
Carribbean Cruise trips, she came dangerously close to having an affair with a
sailor. Jealous and angry, Bill is thrust
deep into the New York underworld of sex as trade, vengeance, and exploring
one's own inner evil. Bill wanders the
landscape of New York (filmed on an elaborate downtown set lit up like a
Christmas tree) bumping into patients of his who long for him, prostitutes, and
colleagues of his with more to hide than he realizes.
Contrary to the pop
cultural notion that Eyes Wide Shut is a giant porn film depicting Tom
Cruise and Nicole Kidman having sex onscreen (which never happens), it's really
a horror film about dark forces not only posing threats to marriage, but to
one's own life. Virtually every near
sexual encounter Bill Hartford experiences narrowly evades death. While Bill may have been excited at the
prospect of sinning and cheating on Alice, he finds the underworld beneath his
nose is one he wishes he never opened his eyes to. It's most famous and opulent sequence
involves a Satanic costumed orgy/masquerade ball with dozens of scattered nudes
engaged in intercourse. Bill is found
out as an outsider to the aristocratic engagement and is nearly ritualistically
murdered before the cult. Worse still is
Bill's realization that many of his best friends partook in the orgy and
potential murder of a whore who sacrifices herself in Bill's place when he's found
out. That the crime remains unresolved
and tidily swept away can't help but continually haunt Bill for the remainder
of the picture.
Unlike Kubrick's prior
efforts, Eyes Wide Shut has a curious visual schema in that it's largely
lensed with high-contrast grain, making the film appear as though it's being
projected onto a thick carpet. Not until
the Blu-ray release was Home Video able to reproduce the scratchy, archaic and
dreamy look Kubrick painstakingly created.
In true Kubrick form, he returns to his longtime avant garde composer
Gyorgy Ligeti, who scored the shrieking monolith as well as numerous pieces for
'The Shining', to create a stark, minimal piano key thumping that speaks of
pure dread. In terms of acting, Tom
Cruise and Nicole Kidman both give solid performances borne of duress and
exhaustion, as Kubrick would wear the actors out over 2 years of retakes. Cruise himself developed an ulcer during
filming. The film also sports a unique
performance from director Sydney Pollack as the wealthy entrepreneur and friend
of Bill's who might have something to do with the supposed murder.
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Related article: A Film Odyssey Part Two |