1. Stanley Kubrick and #MeToo - New Review of Film & Television Studies
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By James Fenwick Why has Stanley Kubrick, by and large, escaped the #MeToo era unscathed? While other directors have been toppled (with varying degrees of success) from their canonical ivory towers—Alfred Hitchcock, Roman Polanski, Woody Allen—Kubrick remains standing, his reputation and legacy arguably greater than it ever was, particularly with the blockbuster success of the official travelling Stanley Kubrick exhibition. Yet Kubrick’s films, in particular the likes of Lolita (1962), A Clockwork Orange (1971), The Shining (1980), Full Metal Jacket (1987) and Eyes Wide Shut (1999), construct and represent women and women’s bodies in a highly problematic way, while evidence exists of Kubrick’s own exploitative behaviour, alongside that of other powerful men he worked with in Hollywood. Considering all this, is it now time to take full account of the quite often misogynistic representations in Kubrick’s films and how they stem from the production cultures in which they were produced? As Karen Ritzenhoff, one of the few academic voices in calling out Kubrick and his films as misogynistic, argued in 2021, ‘After two years of turmoil in and around Hollywood surrounding the relaunch of the #MeToo movement, the question is whether the “genius provocations” that Kubrick evoked in his films have to be looked at differently under the veil of gender equality, sexual harassment and abuse, and different reiterations of the women’s movement?’ (177-178). My response is...
2. Stanley Kubrick's Genius | The New Yorker
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Jeremy Bernstein’s Profile of the director of “Dr. Strangelove” and other films, originally published in 1966.
3. Stanley Kubrick, cinephile | BFI
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Stanley Kubrick worked for almost half a century in the medium of film, making his first short documentary in 1951 and his last feature in 1999. He went to extraordinary lengths to avoid mediocrity in his work, in order that it might last and not fall into oblivion. With each project, his initial preoccupation involved trying to find the right story. Some arrived quickly – Terry Southern handed Kubrick a copy of Anthony Burgess’ A Clockwork Orange in the 1960s and Kubrick persuaded Warners to buy the rights immediately – but later projects came more slowly or were regretfully abandoned after years of research due to events out of his control. However, once a story was settled on, Kubrick strove to make a film unlike any other before it.
4. Stanley Kubrick: The Ultimate Guide to the Legendary Filmmaker
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See AlsoAccuradio UnblockedDerniers avis sur le film C'est le monde à l'envers !FREE - Divitarot.com - Tarot Denis Lapierre - Free divinatory tarot - Your divinatory tarot - Your future according to the cards! - Official website of Denis Lapierre - LIVE TAROT - Online Free Tarot cards reading - TAROT - Your free online latin tarot reTokyo Spa Memphis Tn ReviewsFIRST WORKS (1951) There’s not much more to write about director Stanley Kubrick than what’s already been written. His work has been analyzed, pored-over an ...
5. The Secret Photographs of Stanley Kubrick - The Daily Beast
May 9, 2018 · Kubrick was a photographer for the picture magazine, evocatively and empathically documenting ordinary New Yorkers, celebrities, athletes, and post-war ...
Before becoming a great filmmaker, the director of ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ and ‘A Clockwork Orange’ was a photographer for Look magazine. Now you can see his work on show.
6. The Craziest Moments in Stanley Kubrick's Career - Ranker
He Made Shelley Duvall Walk Backwards Up Stairs for 127 Takes ... The stories regarding Kubrick's treatment of actress Shelley Duvall during the filming of The ...
There are directors who are known as actor-friendly. Then there is Stanley Kubrick, a filmmaker who was not too afraid to tell an actor to do a scene again and again and again and again. Some may call a director who asks an actor to do the simple task of walking through a door 95 times demanding,...
7. The Photography of Stanley Kubrick - AnOther Magazine
Aug 15, 2014 · ... Stanley Kubrick's early foray into photography. ... Hot Again: Dixieland in New York, March 1950Photography by Stanley Kubrick.
Marking the 50th Anniversary of Dr Strangelove, we take a look at Stanley Kubrick's early foray into photography
8. Stanley Kubrick: Stars share secret history of legendary director
Nov 9, 2012 · In Hollywood, there is a cult of Kubrick. More than any other director, Stanley Kubrick is worshiped among his fellow filmmakers, ...
Stanley Kubrick: Stars share secret history of legendary director
9. TSPDT - Stanley Kubrick
Stanley Kubrick. "The scrupulous care with which he chose his subjects ... Hot Dogs for Gauguin (GF-23646). 1972 - The Hot Rock (GF-11072). 1972 - Hôtel ...
They Shoot Pictures, Don't They? is dedicated to the art of motion picture film-making and most specifically to that one particular individual calling the shots from behind the camera - the film director.
10. Kubrick Stare - TV Tropes
When a show or film utilizes the look, it's often a homage to Stanley Kubrick, as the look appeared in a lot of his films. Either way, it's really creepy ...
The Kubrick Stare is really quite simple to pull off. You simply do the following: Tilt head down Look up beneath eyebrows ...and voila! Instant super-creepy look! It generally signifies that the character in question is either really, really …
11. Breaking Down Stanley Kubrick's Favorite Cameras and Lenses
What kinds of cameras did Stanley Kubrick use to direct his movies? And why did he pick them?
Stanley Kubrick has always been a mythical character in cinema. What tools did he use to build his masterpieces?
12. The Queer Undertones of Stanley Kubrick's Masterful 'Eyes Wide Shut ...
Jul 15, 2024 · ... Stanley Kubrick to discuss star power, queer undertones and auteur filmmaking. ... The Lady Killers continue Hot Girl Summer with a luxurious trip ...
Kubrick Edging June proved to be a wild month: we talked about the wacky space antics of Leprechaun 4: In Space (listen), the underseen-but-very-good Horror Queers podcast looks at the final film by the late Stanley Kubrick to discuss star power, queer undertones and auteur filmmaking
13. 1940s hot dog stand, taken by Stanley Kubrick
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1940s hot dog stand, taken by Stanley Kubrick