Short films (1951–1953) Kubrick shared a love of film with his school friend
Alexander Singer. Through Singer, who worked in the offices of the newsreel production company
The March of Time, Kubrick learned it could cost $40,000 to make a proper short film, a sum he could not afford. He had $1500 in savings and produced a few short documentaries with encouragement from Singer. He began learning all he could about filmmaking on his own, calling film suppliers, laboratories, and equipment rental houses. Kubrick decided to make a short film documentary about boxer
Walter Cartier, whom he had photographed and written about for
Look magazine a year earlier. He rented a camera and produced a 16-minute black-and-white documentary,
Day of the Fight. Kubrick found the money independently to finance it. He had considered asking
Montgomery Clift to narrate it, but settled on CBS news veteran
Douglas Edwards. According to Paul Duncan the film was "remarkably accomplished for a first film", and used a backward tracking shot to film a scene in which Cartier and his brother walk towards the camera, a device which later became one of Kubrick's characteristic camera movements. Vincent Cartier, Walter's brother and manager, later reflected, "Stanley was a very stoic, impassive but imaginative type person with strong, imaginative thoughts. He commanded respect in a quiet, shy way. Whatever he wanted, you complied, he just captivated you. Anybody who worked with Stanley did just what Stanley wanted". After a score was added by Singer's friend
Gerald Fried, Kubrick had spent $3900 in making it, and sold it to
RKO-Pathé for $4000, which was the most the company had ever paid for a short film at the time. Kubrick described his first effort at filmmaking as having been valuable since he believed himself to have been forced to do most of the work, and he later declared that the "best education in film is to make one". Inspired by this early success, Kubrick quit his job at
Look and visited professional filmmakers in New York City to learn the technical aspects of filmmaking. He stated that he was given the confidence during this period to become a filmmaker because of the number of bad films he had seen, remarking, "I don't know a goddamn thing about movies, but I know I can make a better film than that". He began making
Flying Padre (1951), a film which documents Reverend Fred Stadtmueller, who travels some 12,000 miles annually to visit his 11 churches. Several of the views from and of the plane in
Flying Padre are later echoed in
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) with the footage of the spacecraft, and a series of close-ups on the faces of people attending the funeral were most likely inspired by
Sergei Eisenstein's
Battleship Potemkin (1925) and
Ivan the Terrible (1944/1958).
Flying Padre was followed by
The Seafarers (1953), Kubrick's first color film, which was shot for the
Seafarers International Union in June 1953. For the cafeteria scene in the film, Kubrick chose a
dolly shot to establish the life of the seafarer's community; this kind of shot would later become a signature technique.
Day of the Fight,
Flying Padre and
The Seafarers constitute Kubrick's only surviving documentary works; some historians believe he made others.
Early feature work (1953–1955) After raising $1000 showing his short films to friends and family, Kubrick found the finances to begin making his first feature film,
Fear and Desire (1953), originally running with the title
The Trap, written by his friend
Howard Sackler. Kubrick's uncle, Martin Perveler, a Los Angeles pharmacy owner, invested $9000 on condition that he be credited as executive producer of the film. Kubrick assembled a small crew totaling fourteen people and flew to the
San Gabriel Mountains in California for a five-week, low-budget shoot. Later renamed
The Shape of Fear before finally being named
Fear and Desire, it is a fictional
allegory about a team of soldiers who survive a plane crash and are caught behind enemy lines in a war. One of the soldiers becomes infatuated with an attractive girl in the woods and binds her to a tree. This scene and others are noted for their rapid close-ups on the faces of the cast. Kubrick had intended for
Fear and Desire to be a
silent picture to ensure low production costs; the added sounds, effects, and music ultimately brought production costs to around $53,000, exceeding the budget. He was bailed out by producer
Richard de Rochemont on the condition that he help in de Rochemont's production of a five-part television series about
Abraham Lincoln.
Fear and Desire was a commercial failure, but garnered positive reviews upon release. The reviewer from
The New York Times believed that Kubrick's professionalism as a photographer shone through in the picture, and that he "artistically caught glimpses of the grotesque attitudes of death, the wolfishness of hungry men, as well as their bestiality, and in one scene, the wracking effect of lust on a pitifully juvenile soldier and the pinioned girl he is guarding".
Columbia University scholar
Mark Van Doren was highly impressed by the scenes with the girl bound to the tree, remarking that it would live on as a "beautiful, terrifying and weird" sequence which illustrated Kubrick's immense talent and guaranteed his future success. Kubrick himself later expressed embarrassment with
Fear and Desire, and attempted over the years to disown it, keeping prints of the film out of circulation. During the production of the film, Kubrick accidentally almost killed his cast with poisonous gasses. Following
Fear and Desire, Kubrick began working on ideas for a new boxing film. Due to the commercial failure of his first feature, Kubrick avoided asking for investments, but commenced a
film noir script with Howard O. Sackler. Originally under the title
Kiss Me, Kill Me, and then
The Nymph and the Maniac, ''
Killer's Kiss'' (1955) is a film noir about a young boxer's involvement with a woman being abused by her criminal boss. Like
Fear and Desire, it was privately funded by Kubrick's family and friends, with some $40,000 put forward from Bronx pharmacist Morris Bousse. Kubrick began shooting footage in
Times Square, and frequently explored during the filming process, experimenting with
cinematography and considering the use of unconventional angles and imagery. He initially chose to record the sound on location, but encountered difficulties with shadows from the microphone booms, restricting camera movement. His decision to drop the sound in favor of imagery was a costly one; after 12–14 weeks shooting the picture, he spent some seven months and $35,000 working on the sound.
Alfred Hitchcock's
Blackmail (1929) directly influenced the film, and
Martin Scorsese has, in turn, cited Kubrick's innovative shooting angles and atmospheric shots as an influence on
Raging Bull (1980). Actress
Irene Kane, the star of ''Killer's Kiss'', observed: "Stanley's a fascinating character. He thinks movies should move, with a minimum of dialogue, and he's all for sex and sadism". ''Killer's Kiss'' met with limited commercial success. Critics have praised the film's camerawork, but its acting and story are generally considered mediocre.
Hollywood success and beyond (1955–1962) While playing chess in Washington Square, Kubrick met producer
James B. Harris, who considered Kubrick "the most intelligent, most creative person I have ever come in contact with." The two formed the Harris-Kubrick Pictures Corporation in 1955. Harris purchased the rights to
Lionel White's novel
Clean Break for $10,000 and Kubrick wrote the script, but at Kubrick's suggestion, they hired film noir novelist
Jim Thompson to write the dialog for the film—which became
The Killing (1956)—about a racetrack robbery gone wrong. The film starred
Sterling Hayden, who had impressed Kubrick with his performance in
The Asphalt Jungle (1950). Kubrick and Harris moved to Los Angeles and signed with the
Jaffe Agency to shoot the picture, which became Kubrick's first full-length feature film shot with a professional cast and crew. The Union in Hollywood stated that Kubrick would not be permitted to be both the director and the cinematographer, resulting in the hiring of veteran cinematographer
Lucien Ballard. Kubrick agreed to waive his fee for the production, which was shot in 24 days on a budget of $330,000. He clashed with Ballard during the shooting, and on one occasion Kubrick threatened to fire Ballard following a camera dispute, despite being 20 years Ballard's junior. Hayden recalled Kubrick was "cold and detached. Very mechanical, always confident. I've worked with few directors who are that good".
The Killing failed to secure a proper release across the United States; the film made little money, and was promoted only at the last minute, as a second feature to the Western
Bandido! (1956). Several contemporary critics lauded the film, with a reviewer for
Time comparing its camerawork to that of
Orson Welles. Today, critics generally consider
The Killing to be among the best films of Kubrick's early career; its nonlinear narrative and clinical execution also had a major influence on later directors of
crime films, including
Quentin Tarantino.
Dore Schary of
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) was highly impressed as well, and offered Kubrick and Harris $75,000 to write, direct, and produce a film, which ultimately became
Paths of Glory (1957).
Paths of Glory, set during
World War I, is based on
Humphrey Cobb's 1935
antiwar novel of the same name. Schary stated that MGM would not finance another war picture, given their backing of the anti-war film
The Red Badge of Courage (1951). After Schary was fired by MGM in a major shake-up, Kubrick and Harris managed to interest
Kirk Douglas in playing Colonel Dax. Douglas, in turn, signed Harris-Kubrick Pictures to a three-picture co-production deal with his film production company,
Bryna Productions, which secured a financing and distribution deal for
Paths of Glory and two subsequent films with
United Artists. The film, shot in
Munich, from March 1957, follows a French army unit ordered on an impossible mission, and follows with a war trial of three soldiers, arbitrarily chosen, for misconduct. Dax is assigned to defend the men at court-martial. For the battle scene, Kubrick meticulously lined up six cameras one after the other along the boundary of no-man's land, with each camera capturing a specific field and numbered, and gave each of the hundreds of extras a number for the zone in which they would die. Kubrick operated an
Arriflex camera for the battle, zooming in on Douglas.
Paths of Glory became Kubrick's first significant commercial success, and established him as an up-and-coming young filmmaker. Critics praised the film's unsentimental and unvarnished combat scenes and its raw, black-and-white cinematography. Despite the praise, the Christmas release date was criticized, and the subject was controversial in Europe. The film was banned in France until 1974 for its "unflattering" depiction of the French military, and was censored by the Swiss Army until 1970. In October 1957, after
Paths of Glory had its world premiere in Germany, Bryna Productions optioned Canadian church minister-turned-safecracker Herbert Emerson Wilsons's autobiography,
I Stole $16,000,000, especially for Kubrick and James B. Harris. The picture was to be the second in the co-production deal between Bryna Productions and Harris-Kubrick Pictures, which Kubrick was to write and direct, Harris to co-produce and Douglas to co-produce and star.
Marlon Brando contacted Kubrick, asking him to direct a film adaptation of the Charles Neider western novel,
The Authentic Death of Hendry Jones, featuring
Pat Garrett and
Billy the Kid. Brando was impressed, saying "Stanley is unusually perceptive, and delicately attuned to people. He has an adroit intellect, and is a creative thinker—not a repeater, not a fact-gatherer. He digests what he learns and brings to a new project an original point of view and a reserved passion". The two worked on a script for six months, begun by a then unknown
Sam Peckinpah. Many disputes broke out over the project, and in the end, Kubrick distanced himself from what would become
One-Eyed Jacks (1961). on the set of
Spartacus in 1960 In February 1959, Kubrick received a call from Kirk Douglas asking him to direct
Spartacus (1960), based on the historical
Spartacus and the
Third Servile War. Douglas had acquired the rights to the novel by
Howard Fast and
blacklisted screenwriter
Dalton Trumbo began penning the script. It was produced by Douglas, who also starred as Spartacus, and cast
Laurence Olivier as his foe, the Roman general and politician
Marcus Licinius Crassus. Douglas hired Kubrick for a reported $150,000 fee to take over direction soon after he fired director
Anthony Mann. Kubrick had, at 31, already directed four feature films, and this became his largest by far, with a cast of over 10,000 and a budget of $6 million. At the time, this was the most expensive film ever made in America, and Kubrick became the youngest director in Hollywood history to make an epic. It was the first time that Kubrick filmed using the anamorphic 35 mm horizontal
Super Technirama process to achieve ultra-high definition, which allowed him to capture large panoramic scenes, including one with 8,000 trained soldiers from Spain representing the Roman army. Disputes broke out during the filming of
Spartacus. Kubrick complained about not having full creative control, insisting on improvising extensively during the production. Kubrick and Douglas were also at odds over the script, with Kubrick angering Douglas when he cut all but two of his lines from the opening 30 minutes. Despite the on-set troubles,
Spartacus took $14.6 million at the box office in its first run. The film established Kubrick as a major director, receiving six Academy Award nominations and winning four; it ultimately convinced him that if so much could be made of such a problematic production, he could achieve anything.
Spartacus also marked the end of the working relationship between Kubrick and Douglas.
Collaboration with Peter Sellers (1962–1964) Lolita Kubrick and Harris decided to start production of Kubrick's next film
Lolita (1962) in England, due to clauses placed on the contract by producers
Warner Bros. that gave them complete control over the film, and the fact that the
Eady plan permitted producers to write off the costs if 80% of the crew were British. They signed a $1 million deal with
Eliot Hyman's
Associated Artists Productions, and a clause which gave them the artistic freedom that they desired.
Lolita, Kubrick's first attempt at
black comedy, was an adaptation of the
novel of the same name by
Vladimir Nabokov, the story of a middle-aged college professor becoming infatuated with a 12-year-old girl. Stylistically,
Lolita, starring
Peter Sellers,
James Mason,
Shelley Winters, and
Sue Lyon, was a transitional film for Kubrick, "marking the turning point from a naturalistic cinema ... to the surrealism of the later films", according to film critic
Gene Youngblood. Kubrick was impressed by the range of actor Peter Sellers and gave him one of his first opportunities to improvise wildly during shooting, while filming him with three cameras. Kubrick shot
Lolita over 88 days on a $2 million budget at
Elstree Studios, between October 1960 and March 1961. Kubrick often clashed with Shelley Winters, whom he found "very difficult" and nearly fired at one point. Because of its provocative story,
Lolita was Kubrick's first film to generate controversy; he was ultimately forced to comply with censors and remove much of the erotic element of the relationship between Mason's Humbert and Lyon's Lolita which had been evident in Nabokov's novel. The film was not a major critical or commercial success, earning $3.7 million at the box office on its opening run.
Lolita has since become critically acclaimed.
Dr. Strangelove '' in 1963 Kubrick's next project was
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964), another satirical black comedy. Kubrick became preoccupied with the issue of
nuclear war as the
Cold War unfolded in the 1950s, and even considered moving to Australia because he feared that New York City might be a likely target for the Russians. He studied over 40 military and political research books on the subject and eventually reached the conclusion that "nobody really knew anything and the whole situation was absurd". After buying the rights to the novel
Red Alert, Kubrick collaborated with its author,
Peter George, on the script. It was originally written as a serious political thriller, but Kubrick decided that a "serious treatment" of the subject would not be believable, and thought that some of its most salient points would be fodder for comedy. Kubrick's longtime producer and friend,
James B. Harris, thought the film should be serious, and the two parted ways, amicably, over this disagreement. Kubrick and George then reworked the script as a satire in which the plot of
Red Alert was situated as a film-within-a-film made by an alien intelligence, but this idea was also abandoned, and Kubrick decided to make the film as "an outrageous black comedy". Just before filming began, Kubrick hired journalist and satirical author
Terry Southern to transform the script into its final form, a black comedy, loaded with sexual innuendo, becoming a film which showed Kubrick's talents as a "unique kind of absurdist" according to the film scholar Abrams. Southern made major contributions to the final script, and was co-credited (above George) in the film's opening titles; his perceived role in the writing later led to a public rift between Kubrick and George, who subsequently complained in a letter to
Life magazine that Southern's intense but relatively brief (November 16 to December 28, 1962) involvement with the project was being given undue prominence in the media, while his own role as the author of the film's source novel, and his ten-month stint as the script's co-writer, were being downplayed – a perception Kubrick evidently did little to address. Kubrick found that
Dr. Strangelove, a $2 million production which employed what became the "first important visual effects crew in the world", would be impossible to make in the U.S. for various technical and political reasons, forcing him to move production to England. It was shot in 15 weeks, ending in April 1963, after which Kubrick spent eight months editing it. Peter Sellers played three different roles in the film. The film stirred up considerable controversy and mixed opinions.
The New York Times film critic
Bosley Crowther worried that it was a "discredit and even contempt for our whole defense establishment ... the most shattering sick joke I've ever come across", while
Robert Brustein of
Out of This World called it a "
juvenalian satire". Kubrick responded to the criticism, stating: "A satirist is someone who has a very skeptical view of human nature, but who still has the optimism to make some sort of a joke out of it. However brutal that joke might be". Today, the film is considered to be one of the sharpest comedy films ever made, and holds a near-perfect 98% rating on
Rotten Tomatoes based on 91 reviews . It was named the
39th-greatest American film and
third-greatest American comedy film of all time by the
American Film Institute, and in 2010, it was named the sixth-best comedy film of all time by
The Guardian.
Science fiction (1965–1971) 2001: A Space Odyssey Kubrick spent five years developing
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), having been highly impressed with science fiction writer
Arthur C. Clarke's novel ''
Childhood's End. After meeting Clarke in New York City in April 1964, Kubrick made the suggestion to work on his 1948 short story "The Sentinel", in which a monolith found on the Moon alerts aliens of mankind. That year, Clarke began writing the novel 2001: A Space Odyssey'' and collaborated with Kubrick on a screenplay. The film's theme, the birthing of one intelligence by another, is developed in two parallel intersecting stories on two different time scales. One depicts evolutionary transitions between various stages of man, from ape to "star child", as man is reborn into a new existence, each step shepherded by an enigmatic alien intelligence seen only in its artifacts: a series of seemingly indestructible eons-old black monoliths. In space, the enemy is a supercomputer known as
HAL who runs the spaceship, a character which novelist
Clancy Sigal described as being "far, far more human, more humorous and conceivably decent than anything else that may emerge from this far-seeing enterprise". Kubrick intensively researched for the film, paying particular attention to detail in what the future might look like. He was granted permission by
NASA to observe the spacecraft being used in the
Ranger 9 mission for accuracy. Filming commenced on December 29, 1965, with the excavation of the monolith on the moon, and footage was shot in
Namib Desert in early 1967. The special effects team continued working until the end of the year to complete the film, taking the cost to $10.5 million.
2001: A Space Odyssey was conceived as a
Cinerama spectacle and was photographed in
Super Panavision 70, giving the viewer a "dazzling mix of imagination and science" through ground-breaking effects, which earned Kubrick his only personal Oscar, an
Academy Award for Visual Effects. Kubrick said of the concept of the film in an interview with
Rolling Stone: "On the deepest psychological level, the film's plot symbolized the search for God, and finally postulates what is little less than a scientific definition of God. The film revolves around this metaphysical conception, and the realistic hardware and the documentary feelings about everything were necessary in order to undermine your built-in resistance to the poetical concept". Upon release in 1968,
2001: A Space Odyssey was not an immediate hit among critics, who faulted its lack of dialog, slow pacing, and seemingly impenetrable storyline. The film appeared to defy genre convention, and clearly different from any of Kubrick's earlier works. Kubrick was particularly outraged by a scathing review from
Pauline Kael, who called it "the biggest amateur movie of them all", with Kubrick doing "really every dumb thing he ever wanted to do". Despite mixed contemporary critical reviews,
2001 gradually gained popularity and earned $31 million worldwide by the end of 1972. Today, it is widely considered to be one of
the greatest and most influential films ever made. Baxter describes the film as "one of the most admired and discussed creations in the history of cinema", and
Steven Spielberg has referred to it as "the big bang of his film making generation". For biographer Vincent LoBrutto it "positioned Stanley Kubrick as a pure artist ranked among the masters of cinema". The film marked Kubrick's first use of classical music.
Roger Ebert writes: Although Kubrick originally commissioned an original score from
Alex North, he used classical recordings as a temporary track while editing the film, and they worked so well that he kept them. This was a crucial decision. North's score, which is available on a recording, is a good job of film composition, but would have been wrong for
2001 because, like all scores, it attempts to underline the action -- to give us emotional cues. The classical music chosen by Kubrick exists outside the action. It uplifts. It wants to be sublime; it brings a seriousness and transcendence to the visuals.
A Clockwork Orange '' (1971) After completing
2001: A Space Odyssey, Kubrick searched for a project that he could film quickly on a more modest budget. He settled on
A Clockwork Orange (1971) at the end of 1969, an exploration of violence and experimental rehabilitation by law enforcement authorities, based around the character of
Alex (portrayed by
Malcolm McDowell). Kubrick had received a copy of
Anthony Burgess's
novel of the same name from Terry Southern while they were working on
Dr. Strangelove, but had rejected it on the grounds that
Nadsat, a street language for young teenagers, was too difficult to comprehend. The decision to make a film about the degeneration of youth reflected contemporary concerns in 1969; the
New Hollywood movement was creating a great number of films that depicted the sexuality and rebelliousness of young people.
A Clockwork Orange was shot over 1970–1971 on a budget of £2 million. Kubrick abandoned his use of CinemaScope in filming, deciding that the 1.66:1 widescreen format was, in the words of Baxter, an "acceptable compromise between spectacle and intimacy", and favored his "rigorously symmetrical framing", which "increased the beauty of his compositions". The film heavily features "pop erotica" of the period, including a large white plastic set of male genitals, decor which Kubrick had intended to give it a "slightly futuristic" look. McDowell's role in
Lindsay Anderson's
if.... (1968) was crucial to his casting as Alex, and Kubrick professed that he probably would not have made the film if McDowell had been unavailable. The film marked Kubrick's first collaboration with
Wendy Carlos, who provided electronic renditions of
Henry Purcell's
Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary and
Beethoven's "
Ode to Joy". Because of its depiction of teenage violence,
A Clockwork Orange became one of the most controversial films of its time. It received an
X rating, or certificate, in both the UK and US, on its release, though many critics saw much of the violence as satirical. Kubrick personally pulled the film from release in the UK after receiving death threats following a series of copycat crimes based on the film; it was thus completely unavailable legally in the UK until after Kubrick's death, and not re-released until 2000.
John Trevelyan, the censor of the film, personally considered
A Clockwork Orange to be "perhaps the most brilliant piece of cinematic art I've ever seen," and believed it to present an "intellectual argument rather than a sadistic spectacle" in its depiction of violence, but acknowledged that many would not agree. Negative media hype over the film notwithstanding,
A Clockwork Orange received four Academy Award nominations, for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay and Best Editing, and was named by the
New York Film Critics Circle as the Best Film of 1971. After
William Friedkin won Best Director for
The French Connection that year, he told the press: "Speaking personally, I think Stanley Kubrick is the best American film-maker of the year. In fact, not just this year, but the best, period."
Period and horror filming (1972–1980) Barry Lyndon Barry Lyndon (1975) is an adaptation of
William Makepeace Thackeray's
The Luck of Barry Lyndon, a
picaresque novel about the adventures of an 18th-century Irish rogue and social climber.
John Calley of Warner Bros. agreed in 1972 to invest $2.5 million into the film, on condition that Kubrick approach major Hollywood stars, to ensure success. Like previous films, Kubrick and his art department conducted an enormous amount of research on the 18th century. The film was shot on location in Ireland, beginning in the autumn of 1973, at a cost of $11 million. The production was problematic from the start, plagued with heavy rain and
political strife involving Northern Ireland at the time. After Kubrick received death threats from the
IRA in 1974 due to the shooting scenes with English soldiers, he fled Ireland with his family on a ferry from
Dún Laoghaire under an assumed identity and resumed filming in England. 's
The Country Dance (c. 1745) illustrates the type of interior scene that Kubrick sought to emulate with
Barry Lyndon. Baxter notes that
Barry Lyndon was the film which made Kubrick notorious for paying scrupulous attention to detail, often demanding twenty or thirty retakes of the same scene. Often considered to be his most authentic-looking picture, the cinematography and lighting techniques were highly innovative. Interior scenes were shot with a specially adapted high-speed
Zeiss camera lens originally developed for NASA to be used in satellite photography. The lenses allowed many scenes to be lit only with candlelight, creating two-dimensional, diffused-light images reminiscent of 18th-century paintings. Cinematographer
Allen Daviau states that the method gives the audience a way of seeing the characters and scenes as they would have been seen by people at the time. Many of the fight scenes were shot with a hand-held camera to produce a "sense of documentary realism and immediacy".
Barry Lyndon found a great audience in France, but was a box office failure, grossing just $9.5 million in the American market, not even close to the $30 million Warner Bros. needed to generate a profit. The pace and length of
Barry Lyndon at three hours put off many American critics and audiences, but the film was nominated for seven
Academy Awards and won four, more than any other Kubrick film. As with most of Kubrick's films,
Barry Lyndons reputation has grown through the years and it is now considered to be one of his best. Numerous polls, such as
The Village Voice (1999),
Sight & Sound (2002), and
Time (2005), have rated it as one of the greatest films ever made. Ebert referred to it as "one of the most beautiful films ever made ... certainly in every frame a Kubrick film: technically awesome, emotionally distant, remorseless in its doubt of human goodness".
The Shining were used as templates for the sets of the Overlook Hotel.
The Shining, released in 1980, was adapted from the
novel of the same name by
Stephen King. The film stars
Jack Nicholson as a writer who takes a job as a winter caretaker of an isolated hotel. He spends the winter there with his wife, played by
Shelley Duvall, and their young son, who displays
paranormal abilities. They confront both Jack's descent into madness and apparent supernatural horrors in the hotel. Kubrick gave his actors freedom to extend the script and even improvise on occasion. Kubrick often demanded 70 or 80 retakes of the same scene. Kubrick made extensive use of the newly invented
Steadicam, a weight-balanced camera support, which allowed for smooth hand-held camera movement in scenes where a conventional camera track was impractical. According to
Garrett Brown, Steadicam's inventor, it was the first picture to use its full potential.
The Shining was not the only horror film to which Kubrick had been linked; he had turned down the directing of both
The Exorcist (1973) and
Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977), despite saying in 1966 to a friend that he had long desired to "make the world's scariest movie, involving a series of episodes that would play upon the nightmare fears of the audience". Five days after release on May 23, 1980, Kubrick ordered the deletion of a final scene, in which the hotel manager Ullman (
Barry Nelson) visits Wendy (Shelley Duvall) in hospital, believing it unnecessary after witnessing the audience excitement in cinemas at the film's climax.
The Shining opened to strong box office takings, earning $1 million on the first weekend. The original critical response was mixed, and King detested the film and disliked Kubrick.
The Shining is now considered to be a horror classic, and the American Film Institute
ranked it as the 29th greatest thriller film of all time in 2001.
Later work and final years (1981–1999) Full Metal Jacket Kubrick met author
Michael Herr through mutual friend David Cornwell (novelist
John le Carré) in 1980, and became interested in his book
Dispatches, about the
Vietnam War. Kubrick was also intrigued by
Gustav Hasford's Vietnam War novel
The Short-Timers. With the vision in mind to shoot what would become
Full Metal Jacket (1987), Kubrick began working with both Herr and Hasford separately on a script. He eventually found Hasford's novel to be "brutally honest" and decided to shoot a film which closely follows the novel. The film was shot at a cost of $17 million between August 1985 and September 1986, later than scheduled as Kubrick shut down production for five months following a near-fatal accident with a jeep involving
Lee Ermey. A derelict gasworks in
Beckton in the
London Docklands area posed as the ruined city of
Huế, which makes the film visually very different from other Vietnam War films. Around 200 palm trees were imported by road from North Africa, at a cost of £1000 a tree, and thousands of plastic plants were ordered from Hong Kong to provide foliage for the film. Kubrick explained he made the film look realistic by using natural light, and achieved a "newsreel effect" by making the Steadicam shots less steady, which reviewers and commentators thought contributed to the bleakness and seriousness of the film. According to critic
Michel Ciment, the film contained some of Kubrick's trademark characteristics, such as ironic music, portrayals of men being dehumanized, and attention to extreme detail to achieve realism. The film opened strongly in June 1987, taking over $30 million in the first 50 days, but critically it was overshadowed by the success of
Oliver Stone's
Platoon, released a year earlier. Co-star
Matthew Modine stated one of Kubrick's favorite reviews read: "The first half of
FMJ is brilliant. Then the film degenerates into a masterpiece." Ebert was not particularly impressed with it, awarding it 2.5 out of 4. He concluded: "Stanley Kubrick's
Full Metal Jacket is more like a book of short stories than a novel", a "strangely shapeless film from the man whose work usually imposes a ferociously consistent vision on his material".
Eyes Wide Shut Kubrick's final film was
Eyes Wide Shut (1999), starring
Tom Cruise and
Nicole Kidman as a Manhattan couple on a sexual odyssey. The story is based on
Arthur Schnitzler's 1926 Freudian novella
Traumnovelle (
Dream Story). Kubrick was almost 70, but worked relentlessly for 15 months to get the film out by its planned release date of July 16, 1999. He commenced a script with
Frederic Raphael, and worked 18 hours a day, while maintaining complete confidentiality about the film.
Eyes Wide Shut, like
Lolita and
A Clockwork Orange, faced censorship before release. Kubrick sent an unfinished preview copy to the stars and producers a few months before release, but his sudden death on March 7, 1999, came a few days after he finished editing. He never saw the final version, but he did see the preview and had reportedly told Warner executive Julian Senior that it was his "best film ever". At the time, critical opinion of the film was mixed. Ebert awarded it 3.5 out of 4 stars, comparing the structure to a thriller and writing that it is "like an erotic daydream about chances missed and opportunities avoided", and thought that Kubrick's use of lighting at Christmas made the film "all a little garish, like an urban sideshow".
Stephen Hunter of
The Washington Post disliked the film, writing that it "is actually sad, rather than bad. It feels creaky, ancient, hopelessly out of touch, infatuated with the hot taboos of his youth and unable to connect with that twisty thing contemporary sexuality has become."
Unfinished and unrealized projects A.I. Artificial Intelligence (pictured in 1994), whom Kubrick approached in 1995 to direct the 2001 film
A.I. Artificial Intelligence Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, Kubrick collaborated with
Brian Aldiss on expanding his short story "
Supertoys Last All Summer Long" into a three-act film. It was a futuristic fairy tale about a robot that resembles a child, and his efforts to become a 'real boy' in a manner similar to
Pinocchio. Kubrick approached
Steven Spielberg in 1995 with the AI script with the possibility of Steven Spielberg directing it and Kubrick producing it. Kubrick reportedly held long telephone discussions with Spielberg regarding the film, and, according to Spielberg, at one point stated that the subject matter was closer to Spielberg's sensibilities than his. Following Kubrick's sudden death in 1999, Spielberg took the notes left by Kubrick and his writers and composed a new screenplay based on an earlier 90-page story treatment by
Ian Watson written under Kubrick's supervision. In association with what remained of Kubrick's production unit, he directed the film
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001), produced by Kubrick's longtime producer (and brother-in-law)
Jan Harlan. Sets, costumes, and art direction were based on the works of conceptual artist
Chris Baker, who had also done much of his work under Kubrick's supervision. Spielberg said he felt "inhibited to honor" Kubrick, and followed Kubrick's visual schema with as much fidelity as he could. Spielberg, who once referred to Kubrick as "the greatest master I ever served", admitted, "I felt like I was being coached by a ghost." The film contains a posthumous production credit for Kubrick at the beginning and the brief dedication "For Stanley Kubrick" at the end.
John Williams's score contains many allusions to pieces heard in other Kubrick films.
Napoleon Following
2001: A Space Odyssey, Kubrick planned to make a film about
Napoleon. Fascinated by the French leader's life and "self-destruction", Kubrick spent a great deal of time planning the film's development and conducted about two years of research into Napoleon's life, reading several hundred books and gaining access to his personal memoirs and commentaries. He tried to see every film about Napoleon and found none of them appealing, including
Abel Gance's
1927 film which is generally considered a masterpiece, but for Kubrick, was a "really terrible" movie. LoBrutto states that Napoleon was an ideal subject for Kubrick, embracing Kubrick's "passion for control, power, obsession, strategy, and the military", while Napoleon's psychological intensity and depth, logistical genius and war, sex, and the evil nature of man were all ingredients which deeply appealed to Kubrick. Kubrick drafted a screenplay in 1961, and envisaged making a "grandiose" epic, with up to 40,000 infantry and 10,000 cavalry. He intended hiring the armed forces of an entire country to make the film, as he considered Napoleonic battles to be "so beautiful, like vast lethal ballets", with an "aesthetic brilliance that doesn't require a military mind to appreciate". He wanted them replicated as authentically as possible on screen. Kubrick sent research teams to scout for locations across Europe, and commissioned screenwriter and director
Andrew Birkin to the
Isle of Elba,
Austerlitz, and
Waterloo, taking thousands of pictures. Kubrick approached numerous stars to play leading roles, including
Audrey Hepburn for
Empress Josephine, a part which she could not accept due to semiretirement. British actors
David Hemmings and
Ian Holm were considered for the lead role of Napoleon, before
Jack Nicholson was cast. The film was well into preproduction and ready to begin filming in 1969 when MGM canceled the project. Numerous reasons have been cited for the abandonment of the project, including its projected cost, a change of ownership at MGM, and the poor reception that the 1970 Soviet film about Napoleon,
Waterloo, received. In 2011,
Taschen published the book ''Stanley Kubrick's Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made
, a large volume compilation of literature and source documents from Kubrick. In March 2013, Steven Spielberg, who previously collaborated with Kubrick on A.I. Artificial Intelligence
and is a passionate admirer of his work, announced that he would be developing Napoleon'' as a TV miniseries based on Kubrick's original screenplay.
Other projects In the 1950s, Kubrick and Harris developed a sitcom starring
Ernie Kovacs and a film adaption of the book
I Stole $16,000,000, but nothing came of them. Tony Frewin, an assistant who worked with the director for a long period, revealed in a 2013
Atlantic article: "[Kubrick] was limitlessly interested in anything to do with Nazis and desperately wanted to make a film on the subject." Kubrick had intended to make a film about , a Nazi officer who used the pen name "Dr. Jazz" to write reviews of German music scenes during the Nazi era. A screenplay was never completed and Kubrick's adaptation was never initiated. The unfinished
Aryan Papers, based on
Louis Begley's debut novel
Wartime Lies, was a factor in the abandonment of the project. Work on
Aryan Papers depressed Kubrick enormously, and he eventually decided that Steven Spielberg's ''
Schindler's List'' (1993) covered much of the same material. According to biographer
John Baxter, Kubrick had shown an interest in directing a
pornographic film based on a satirical novel written by Terry Southern, titled
Blue Movie. Baxter claims that Kubrick concluded he did not have the patience or temperament to become involved in the porn industry, and Southern stated that Kubrick was "too ultra conservative" towards sexuality to have gone ahead with it. Kubrick was unable to direct a film of Umberto Eco's ''
Foucault's Pendulum as Eco had given his publisher instructions to never sell the film rights to any of his books after his dissatisfaction with the film version of The Name of the Rose''. Also, when the film rights to
Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings were sold to United Artists,
the Beatles approached Kubrick to direct them in a film adaptation, but Kubrick was unwilling to produce a film based on a very popular book. == Career influences ==