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#4961 | |
Special Member
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#4964 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118460...ref_=ttfc_ql_6 Chris |
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Thanks given by: | geomon (06-14-2022) |
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#4965 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Chris Last edited by Christian Muth; 06-14-2022 at 03:08 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | philthehip (06-14-2022) |
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#4966 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thanks given by: | Christian Muth (06-14-2022) |
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#4967 |
Special Member
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#4968 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Yeah, There's a Semi-Truck / Tractor-Trailer that crushes a RED Volkswagon (the color of Jack's car in the book) when Halloran is going back to the Overlook Hotel (in Stanley Kubrick's film) due to the terrible winter storms. Jack and his family drive a Yellow VW in the film. SK didn't put up with Shelly Duval's shit or Stephen King's shit either. It was his movie and script now. Everyone was a pawn for him to create his masterpiece basically, he paid them and if you got in his way he ran your butt over literally and symbolically if necessary.
Last edited by KubrickKurasawa; 06-14-2022 at 12:40 PM. |
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#4971 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Yeah, Stanley Kubrick treated Shelley Duvall like garbage and exacerbated her mental health issues that have continued throughout the rest of her life. You can even see his mistreatment of Duvall in parts of Vivian Kubrick's doc on the making of the film. It's also widely known and well-documented that Kubrick was difficult to work with.
I respect Stanley Kubrick as an artist and filmmaker, but the guy was a f*cking assh*le. ~Matt |
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Thanks given by: | Killer Meteor (06-15-2022) |
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#4972 |
Blu-ray Count
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Shelley herself doesn’t seem to agree with that. https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/fe...g-4130256/amp/
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#4973 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Yet, she doesn't exactly disagree with it either:
"Asked whether she felt Kubrick had been unusually cruel or abusive to her in order to elicit her performance, as has been written, Duvall replies: “He’s got that streak in him. He definitely has that. But I think mostly because people have been that way to him at some time in the past." She does go on to say, "He was very warm and friendly to me", but the next paragraph says this: "But as [Anjelica] Huston remembers it, the director — and Nicholson — could be unduly rough on Duvall. “I got the feeling, certainly through what Jack was saying at the time, that Shelley was having a hard time just dealing with the emotional content of the piece,” she says. “And they didn’t seem to be all that sympathetic. It seemed to be a little bit like the boys were ganging up. That might have been completely my misread on the situation, but I just felt it. And when I saw her during those days, she seemed generally a bit tortured, shook up. I don’t think anyone was being particularly careful of her.” The end of the article actually mentions how while watching the scene of Wendy and Jack on the stairs where he taunts her and she hits him with a baseball bat brought her to tears over how hard it was to shoot and the fact that many women likely go through similar instances of abuse. There's clearly some trauma there. I think the role itself certainly took a lot out of her, having to constantly be in hysterics, but there's no doubt that Kubrick's particular filmmaking style, demanding literally hundreds of (unnecessary) takes, ended up taking a psychological and emotional toll on the actress. You can see it in the documentary. It's quite well-documented that he mistreated her on set. Kubrick was also known for being very hard to work with lol it's one of the most well-known things about the director. Nicholson even talks about her mistreatment in Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures and said that Kubrick acted like a different director when it came to Duvall. ~Matt |
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#4974 |
Blu-ray Knight
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I do think Kubrick was an incredible filmmaker and a master at his craft. I don't think he ever made a bad film. However, his techniques and methods of getting a particular type of performance out of his actors was at the very least questionable.
He was a great filmmaker for sure, one of the greatest, but that doesn't mean he wasn't also a dick lol. And anyway, the original claim was that "Kubrick didn't put up with Shelley Duvall's shit", when it's pretty clear that most people had to put up with his. ~Matt Last edited by Matt89; 06-15-2022 at 05:43 AM. |
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#4975 | |
Senior Member
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And the movie's outcome is...pretty much the same, other than that the possessed dad doesn't get a brief moment of redemption, and the epilogue with the survivors was left on the cutting room floor. |
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#4976 |
Blu-ray Count
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Kubrick treated Duvall a certain way to get the performance he needed...and he succeeded. Her mental health before or after is not his responsibility.
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Thanks given by: | d3nt0n (06-16-2022), RyanMatthew (06-18-2022) |
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#4977 | |
Special Member
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Was Kubrick a care bear? No of course not. But the suggestion that he was abusive to Shelley has only become a thing since her interview. Actors come away from some roles having had a torrid time of it, that is the nature of acting, especially in roles that require you commit and really become the character. I have seen some arguments that her having to be in that constant hysterical state, or being forced to do lots of takes is somehow responsible for her mental health issues. Well, they are not. She has mental health issues, and I am very sorry for her, but blaming Kubrick or The Shining for that only serves to demonstrate how overdramatic we have become as a species. |
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Thanks given by: | clifford finch (06-18-2022), CreasyBear (06-16-2022), RyanMatthew (06-18-2022), yoshinobu (06-19-2022) |
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#4978 |
Blu-ray Count
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You know what else we’ve become as a species? Armchair quarterbacks who pass judgment on people and situations with which we have no direct knowledge or experience. Hell, I’m guilty of it, too—look no further than my vehement conviction in a couple of threads here about the film that POLTERGEIST is far more a Spielberg film than a Hooper one—but everyone has to recognize that they’re never really gonna know the truth of a situation they didn’t directly observe, and the truth is usually somewhere in middle of two competing versions.
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Thanks given by: | Mystic (06-18-2022) |
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#4979 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Thanks given by: | Kyle15 (06-17-2022) |
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#4980 |
Blu-ray Champion
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I wonder if Kubrick even knew she had mental health issues.
A lot of actors and directors don't get along during filming yet turn out incredible films. I thought Shelley was really good in The Shining. The actress who plays her in Doctor Sleep must have really studied that performance because I thought I was actually seeing Duvall. There has always been something very sympathetic about Shelley in all of her performances. It's really hard to dislike her. |
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