How To Use Kubrick In A Sentence
- Kubrick himself banned its showing after a series of copycat crimes were attributed to the influence of the film.
- KILLER'S KISS paints a vivid portrayal of Kubrick's unique brand of romance and violence.
- Jessica Alba: no, no, and no. hoth base hey thats Stanley Kubrick that wrote a short sentence on the picture, look carfeully. Casey Affleck and Jessica Alba to Star in “The Killer Inside Me” | /Film
- The Cold War nuclear stand-off did much to sharpen Kubrick's awareness of global politics.
- Stanley Kubrick did not "hypothesize" a doomsday device, they actually existed. Strangelove
- But Mr. Kubrick makes the coda work—with Mr. Krause's camera locking onto a host of careworn faces as beasts transform into men while listening to the girl's halting version of a sentimental ballad. A Great Film's Sadly Timeless Message
- In film after film, Kubrick's misanthropy - the magisterial technique that reduced the actors in his films to stick figures carrying out his bidding - represented the triumph of the mechanical over the human.
- Considerations such as the above serve to explain why writers and film directors since George Orwell's 1984 have depicted the future, not as paradise regained, but as a series of dystopias and cacotopias (perhaps the most memorable, after Orwell's haunting novel, was Anthony Burgess's more 'lyrical' cacotopia, "A Clockwork Orange", which found the perfect director in Stanley Kubrick, the misanthrope of the twentieth century). The Incoherence of Progress
- In 1974, only a couple of years after Kubrick abandoned "Napoleon" to the snows of time, Burgess wrote a novel, "The Napoleon Symphony," that might have been devised as a reproach to Kubrick for never calling him to enliven his unmade chef-d'oeuvre. How Stanley Kubrick Met His Waterloo
- Studying the inky pictures on pulpy pages, the adolescent Kubrick was soon a fan.