Today July 26 2005 is 97th birth anniversary of Stanley Kubrick.
I love Stanley Kubrick's art, almost every movie he has made...even the music of 2001: A Space Odyssey, for instance, when air hostesses on the spacecraft Discovery One are moving around...
Paths of Glory, 1957, Lolita, 1962 are great works of art of 20th century. They are such profound commentary on human life.
I read David Bromwich's review of a new book "Kubrick: An
Odyssey" by Robert P. Kolker and Nathan Abrams in LRB in September 2024
It was so funny reading: "...Once, on the set of Full Metal Jacket, when he had spent a long time double-checking a camera, one of the extras muttered: ‘Get off the crane.’ Kubrick paid no attention and went on checking until a second extra pitched in, ‘Get off the fucking crane,’ at which he looked up and demanded: ‘Who fucking talked?’ 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. Stanley Kubrick of the Bronx, filming in the demolished Beckton Gasworks which doubled as the bombed-out city of Hue, gave up the pretence of discipline for a moment, laughed and went on with his work."
"I am Spartacus" moment from Kubrick directed film "Spartacus", 1960...when Romans asked who Spartacus was, every slave got up and said he was
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