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#3141 |
Banned
Jan 2013
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I could never really get into the novel, I think it's one of King's more meandering works - definetly prefer the film there.
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#3142 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jun 2016
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I haven't read many King novels but my first is still my favourite - Carrie.
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#3143 |
Banned
Jan 2013
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#3144 | |
Expert Member
Jun 2013
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A writer who affects me the opposite way is D.H. Lawrence. I read one of his novels in college, and just could not get into it--page after page after page of characters virtually thinking at each other. But his short stories are superb. As they say, different strokes... |
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#3145 | |
Expert Member
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#3146 |
Special Member
Oct 2012
Glasgow, Scotland
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I'm definitely a fan of storyline. There are some stories out there where I love the idea so much I could care less about the characters. It's like alien abduction movies or there's a storm and everyone has to survive, I don't care about the lives of the characters, the premise is enough for me to enjoy it. I go for entertainment every time and yes that means I love larger than life characters but you don't need to know every little detail about a character's life to fully enjoy the story. For every Stephen King book that has such attentive detail made to the lives of the characters I can give you a dozen films and TV shows where we are told very little about the characters but just enough for it to make sense in the story.
In the case of The Shining I can see why that would be a good thing, same with The Stand, the big one people seem to gravitate to is IT and that's good too. I could do that too. I'm sure I could come up with a million things people do in a small town, I could dream up some violent things, broken homes, many kinds of sexual situations, I could make every character come from a broken home and have a ton of things going on inside that home but if it doesn't make sense then why have it? I think Carrie is a good example of what you read happening to this character and what she ultimately does makes sense, just enough happens for it to get to that point where she extracts revenge. A million other things aren't piled on in the story, |
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#3147 | |
Expert Member
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So, in an action-oriented movie or story, where the emphasis is on people doing things, lots of flashbacks or interior monologues can slow things down. In The Shining, I guess I loved the backstory portions because I thought they were well-written and because it really isn't an action story - it's a story about a good man being possessed, and I think the best way to show the possession is to show how his mental state deteriorates - his growing resentment, his constant dwelling on his abusive past, etc. |
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#3148 |
Special Member
Oct 2012
Glasgow, Scotland
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I haven't read The Shining but I think it might work well because there isn't a lot of characters, I think you need a lot of backstory to carry it because you need to get into all their heads and why they think and act the way they do. I don't think a basic story of a man going crazy with cabin fever and trying to kill his family would work WITHOUT the backstory. I think Kubrick did enough and showed enough to get away with it for the film and really that's when you see what a spectacle the film is. You look at the hotel, the setting, the quality of acting on screen, the music, the atmosphere, that's when all that stuff really fills in the blanks. With a novel you don't have that. I haven't read every Stephen King book written so I can't really say with confidence but if this is something he does in every book where he gives a lot of detail on every characters' background then maybe the books don't always need it.
A book I haven't read but have seen the film and I think might be in this vein is Cujo. I've been told that in the book he gets you into the mind of Cujo and what he is thinking but when I think of that setting, right away I can think of characters and situations that could happen and for me you could make a decent film on that premise. The book takes it to another level apparently but I think it's an original enough idea and the setting is ideal that you could do a million things with that and put it on screen. I think of Invasion Of the Body Snatchers, House On Haunted Hill, the Romero zombie movies. You have ideas that may seem so simple but if you are a creative person you could come up with a million things that can happen and it would be exciting, I'm not saying those characters don't matter but you don't need to know everything about them to make them exciting but that's just me. Probably a lot of people are the same way with comedies, they just have certain actors they like, they find them funny and it doesn't matter what the storyline is, they'll watch it and laugh regardless. You get a lot of action films in the same way, some innocent guy is locked up, he finds a way out to get retribution,a lot of times you don't need a big name in that role as long as everything else is done well and most people will be rooting for them. I do think it can swing the other way where you can get away with a lot of things on screen that you just couldn't do in a book or if you could it wouldn't be a bestseller. Sometimes you need to really get into the heads of those characters and how they are the way they are, film can be very forgiving. I just think with The Shining the gripe for many people is Kubrick did his own thing for the most part and it came across as disrespect for Stephen King and if it was a one off then the argument could definitely be made that Kubrick was in the wrong and Stephen's screenplay should have been accepted but when you look at the amount of TV shows and films that have been made based on Stephen King's work and how many of them are well liked....there really isn't that many so is it a case of Kubrick being in the wrong and everyone else done a great faithful job or is it a case of Kubrick along with others just couldn't take everything that was written and fit it into 2 hours? And then Stephen did his own version which I'm sure was absolutely 100% faithful to his own book and that's not exactly getting a lot of praise. Maybe the Kubrick version of The Shining was really the first of many that took a King story and didn't follow the book 100%. I think some people either forget that or don't know that, there's a lot of King adaptions out there and they don't have the kind of detail that the books have, many times characters that play a huge part in the books are nowhere to be found in the movies/ TV shows. But of course none of them have the kind of attention on them that The Shining does and if King really has an issue with people not doing his books justice then he needs to look at some of the stuff he himself has signed off on in recent years. Not all of them are exactly faithful to his books. Didn't he say with the recent Mist TV series that he gave his blessing for them to do something different? I think it's just part of The Shining's history now. Last edited by crazybeats; 07-01-2018 at 06:14 PM. |
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#3149 | |
Expert Member
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With The Shining, I think Kubrick was in a tough spot - how could he show in a brief scene or a couple of shots all the stuff that Stephen King spent page after page, chapter after chapter, writing about? It's pretty much impossible, unless you use a lot of flashbacks that slow down the story. (The original story treatment that Kubrick wrote actually had several flashbacks to Jack's past.) |
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#3150 | |
Blu-ray Knight
Apr 2016
Los Angeles
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Here’s a documentary showing some Stanley and Vivian Kubrick interviews. Kubrick explains the ending of 2001 at 49:50 and the ending of The Shining at 52:18.
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Thanks given by: |
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#3151 |
Member
Apr 2011
Charleston, SC
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King’s best novel is by far The Stand. Would say It and Salem’s Lot are the next best.
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#3152 |
Blu-ray Champion
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#3153 | |
Blu-ray Count
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#3154 |
Active Member
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I'm almost done reading The Shining for the first time and I've been enjoying it so far. I'm planning on picking up the DVD for the miniseries when I'm done. It will be interesting to compare it to the book and Kubrick's film. I'm also very interested in the Stephen King commentary on that DVD.
Kubrick's movie is, perhaps, in my top five. It's one of those movies I'm able to watch on repeat again and again without ever getting bored. I absolutely love it. I hope a 4K release is forthcoming and that it fixes the colour issues on the HD master, includes the original mono track, is presented in the intended 1.85:1 aspect ratio, and includes both cuts of the film. Don't let me down, Warner! |
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#3155 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Stanley's explanations are about what I thought he'd say from other things I've read, but the whole backstage visit to Elstree was interesting and revealing. I was more interested in young Vivian Kubrick. Her mind was so busy, and she was so vulnerable at 20. She didn't become the director she said she wanted to be. I wonder how things worked out for Vivian. |
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#3156 |
Blu-ray Guru
Jun 2018
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#3157 | |
Banned
Jan 2013
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Apprently, Kate Bush's "Get Out of My House" is based on The Shining. Not sure how the lion became a donkey though...
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#3159 |
Power Member
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I'm actually tempted to pick this film up on Laserdisc, just because. I already have the special edition on both DVD and blu-ray, US version for the former and European for the latter, and it'd be nice to have the full matte version as well for posterity. The US release is nice and all, but despite it's burnt-in Japanese subtitles, I really like the Japanese covers. I think similar theme was used on some of Warner's VHS releases back in the day.
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#3160 | |
Senior Member
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
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