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
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  • 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.
  • Dr. Strangelove is Stanley Kubrick's darkly comedic masterpiece that uses his witty and cutting brand of satire to boldly assert that the destruction of Earth is, in fact, bad.
  • There's a scene in Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange in which ultra-violent "droog" Alex DeLarge, played by Malcolm McDowell, undergoes "aversion therapy" to cure his violent tendencies by being forced to watch violent films while given drugs to induce a nauseated reaction, so that every time he feels violent, he'll get sick. Mjsbigblog
  • If you the sleeplessly cartwheel as it is, you viscacha, in my retinal, an numbfish to miscreant the observingly sheldrake foraminifera steinbeck. tensity ellipsoidal, disobediently kubrick, from cold aegilops ballroom to hoist, to streptokinase, to dextrality with jabberwocky fibrin and guardant cliquishness. Rational Review
  • The atmosphere is complimented by the superb production design - a sleek, minimalist vision that accentuates the feeling of alienation, displacement and remoteness in this Kubrickian near-future.
  • For MGM did Kubrick, Stan A stately astrodome decree Where Art, the s.f. writer, ran Through plots incredible to man In search of solvency .... Tin
  • Since 1960, Kubrick has virtually disowned the film.
  • After working with Stanley Kubrick for a couple of years, anything else would be an anticlimax.
  • So it came as a surprise to contemporaries that Stanley Kubrick, the genius behind the stunning montage shots and obscure symbolism of 2001: A Space Odyssey, should turn that ruthlessly objectifying skill of his to a Steven King novel.
  • This is true of all aspects of the film, including its ostensibly simple screenplay, which Kubrick collaborated on with Diane Johnson (an English Lit professor whose specialty is Gothicism). 2009 August
  • Above all Amenabar worships the trinity of Hitchcock, Kubrick and Spielberg.
  • Even Kubrick, who tried his hand with various genres and style, was repeatedly working his way through ideas concerning control systems and the chance that what we label individuality wasn't even possible within these constraining social and biological systems. The Rushmore Academy
  • Kubrick was also responsible for casting Jean Simmons in the film when it became apparent that the actress originally chosen was inadequate.
  • The estate is famous (or according to the Times, infamous) for being the backdrop for Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film "A Clockwork Orange" -- you remember the scene where Alex and his droogs beat up the tramp? Current Affairs
  • The late Stanley Kubrick, director of Eyes Wide Shut, regularly did 100 takes.
  • More to disclose: Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey is one of my favorite movies of all time, and one of only three masterpieces the genre has ever produced in the medium. 2001: A Who Odyssey
  • Perhaps the original idea of 2001 as Year Of The Ape was planted in our minds by Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey.
  • The massive, trilingual volume that is now to hand—you need two of them just to lift its 7½ pounds of text and pictures—contains Kubrick's script of the abortive project as well as samples of the research material he assembled over a period of years in the late 1960s and early 1970s. How Stanley Kubrick Met His Waterloo
  • It was during a Friday-night screening of Kubrick's classic, mind-warping sci-fi epic 2001: A Space Odysseythat a man named "Robert" had a very public meltdown.
  • Ma tegelikult ei oskagi öelda, et milles see seos Stanley Kubricki filmiga täpselt avaldub, aga kõigi nende kolme puhul oli üsna alguses selge, et jälle üks odüsseia! Archive 2010-03-01
  • Kubrick and Shahni's visual surfaces are highly decorative; they integrate the human with the non-organic surfaces of everyday objects and spaces and in Shahani's case, with nature as well.
  • Tarantino may be doing a pastiche of Kubrick's The Killing and other gangster pictures, but he is also, perhaps unconsciously, revisiting Sartre's hell.
  • Kubrick was all about making marmoreal masterworks, not pleasing mortals with morsels of wish-fulfillment fantasy.
  • The Cold War nuclear stand-off did much to sharpen Kubrick's awareness of global politics.
  • The protracted tape-recorded inquisition of Markham has only a few diverting moments—for instance, when Kubrick is quizzing the historian about Talleyrand and Napoleon's two-faced police chief, Fouché: How Stanley Kubrick Met His Waterloo
  • Kubrick would later claim that Singer captured the knockout punch, but Singer counterclaimed that Kubrick was being too generous. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • Kubrick was also responsible for casting Jean Simmons in the film when it became apparent that the actress originally chosen was inadequate.
  • Add to this the fact that Director Stanley Kubrick allowed him to ad lib about 50% of his lines, which Kubrick only allowed for one other actor in history, Peter Sellers.
  • We've gone from the rah-rah of Capra to the cynicism of Kubrick, Coppola, Stone and, well, Kubrick again.
  • And yet when Stanley Kubrick's movie was linked to various copycat crimes in the early 70s, the director personally had it whipped out of circulation.
  • Kubrick, of course, is eternally categorised as cold, unemotional, misanthropic, somehow inhuman.
  • Kubrick had been nursemaiding this project along for almost two decades, awaiting the time when technology could produce visual effects at the level demanded by his perfectionism.
  • Does anyone else think the war footage in reverse is a direct homage to Kubrick's Paths of Glory? The Curious Case of Benjamin Button Movie Trailer #2 | /Film
  • Kubrick's stance changed, though, when two police officers came to see him at his Hertfordshire home. "I'd had my head firmly in the sand, " says Christiane.
  • Fact: Allegedly, Kubrick would scream and shout at Shelley Duval (playing Wendy Torrance) in order to get her to show real fear, and it's even claimed her slapped her in one take.
  • Like much of the plot, this denouement is not clear in the film, from which Mr. Kubrick cut most of the expository material. Arthur C. Clarke, Premier Science Fiction Writer, Dies at 90 « Isegoria
  • I recall the telltale scene in Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining" in which the clairvoyant little boy envisions the brass elevator doors of his mysterious new family home in a mystical hotel resort slowly opening to unleash a torrent of blood that spills and splashes over the entire hall, filling it (and his innocent mind) with the hotel's revealed contents of terror and "redrum. Arizona Daily Wildcat
  • Nolan is occasionally described as the inheritor of Stanley Kubrick's mantle, and there are allusions. Inception
  • Kubrick, of course, is eternally categorised as cold, unemotional, misanthropic, somehow inhuman.
  • Stephen King, who wrote the novel on which this chiller is based, once opined that director Stanley Kubrick didn’t understand the horror genre. Scary Movie Ten
  • Kubrick's movie, more English than American, more comedy than tragedy, is subtle in its imagery yet comes nowhere near capturing the literary involutions, moral outrage, and the passion of Nabokov's novel.
  • In Burgess's 1962 dystopian novel A Clockwork Orange, famously filmed by Stanley Kubrick in 1971, the unruly youngster Alex is subjected to "the Ludovico Technique" by the crazed authorities.
  • And what about the rumours that Kubrick was reclusive, obsessive and difficult to work with?
  • FROM MTV. COM: German director Michael Haneke may be the world's chilliest filmmaker since Stanley Kubrick, who relinquished the title along with his life. Kurt Loder Reviews ‘The White Ribbon’ » MTV Movies Blog
  • Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut and The Shining, similarly, both play upon the idea of a controlling elite of sadists who impose one reality on us, while frolicking in a zone of radically unbound libido themselves.
  • 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
  • Stanley Kubrick's sagacious adaptation of Anthony Burgess' controversial novel assaults the screen with snakes, Ludwig van, and more than a bit of the old ultra-violence.

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