Kubrick

[ US /ˈkjuˌbɹɪk/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States filmmaker (born in 1928)
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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.
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