A chance to see
The Shining as it’s meant to be seen
Stanley Kubrick has done a lot to elevate movies’ status to
that of an art, which is partly due to him really being a photographer at
heart. This association isn’t solely down to his films’ ability to push the
boundaries in cinematography, editing and visual metaphor but also for their
initially mild receptions before they are gradually recognised as classics.
The Shining is
probably the best example of this; with the Academy Awards and BAFTA taking Kubrick
off their list of nominees for the first time in 25 years, so the Golden
Raspberries offered him a nomination as a condolence that at least he was one
of the best of the bad. Audiences didn’t immediately avoid the film, it was a
Stephen King novel directed by Stanley Kubrick so how could it be bad? Well
Stephen King hated it for starters, the Kubrick faithful thought it was an
uncharacteristically straightforward story, while horror fans weren’t doing
their usual screaming at stuff catching them off guard. The Shining will not
have you jumping out of your skin; in fact it will do the opposite by creeping
under it to disturb you to the very core. This film is frightening and it will
haunt you for some time.
The setting is the essence of the effect; the labyrinths of
rooms, corridors and mirrors at the Overlook Hotel disorientates the audience’s
grip on perspective, distant noises echo around the vast emptiness of its walls
and the eerie music fills you with pure dread. Kubrick used every trick in his
book to create a unique experience,
that’ll certainly put one off mountain resorts for a while. There are
also moments and characters that will amplify your anxiety, with Jack Nicholson
managing to horrify not one but two seemingly innocent popular catchphrases
forever. The feeling of watching The
Shining at home or on an iphone or on whatever-gizmo will not be as intense
as watching it in a cinema, where you intimately share the trepidation of the
characters and feel overwhelmed by the sheer nothingness of the Overlook. I
feel slightly cheated that I was unable to awe at some of my favourite films on
the big screen due to not being born, which is why I’ll jump at any opportunity
to see a Kubrick, Leone or Coppola when it is redistributed. These revivals are
exceedingly rare and temporary, so it would be a shame not to take advantage of
them.
I am trying to avoid SPOILERS but what’s the point? The
film’s been out for 30 years and you’ve probably already seen it or at least
seen it parodied in brilliant episodes of The
Simpsons. Yet Stanley’s favourite TV show contained a feature that he
directly inspired, to hide messages in his works. While The Simpsons usually does this to add another joke to a scene,
Kubrick utilised it to reinforce obvious or suggest alternative themes. There
is a clichéd assessment of Kubrick films which is that his reputation as a
perfectionist means no mistake or continuity error was overlooked but was
deliberate and is there for a reason. This has been overstated somewhat, for
instance the shadow of the helicopter in the first shot is most likely a
mistake (although to be fair Stanley didn’t shoot this due to his fear of
flying, despite having a pilot licence. Peculiar fella, yet an intriguing one
who knew how to make enduring films). Kubrick put a lot of detail into the
visual because he wanted a lot to be left unsaid so the audience could reach
their own conclusions. There is no one way to watch a Kubrick film.
People have obsessed over Kubrick films, in fact the
interpretations of The Shining-enthusiasts
even warranted its own film Room 237,
which was released this Autumn. These Kubrickites are academics, playwrights,
conspiracy theorists and respected news correspondents, who have hypotheses
ranging from plausible metaphors for the deliberately forgotten plight of the
Native Americans to the more subtle Holocaust interpretations to the flat-out
denied conspiracies that Kubrick was secretly apologising for faking the moon
landing. I found another outlandish analysis on YouTube by Kubrick fanatic Rob Ager, who suggests the decline of
the Gold Standard in the 1920s and 1930s is a central theme. While they may
sound bonkers they do vindicate themselves with the film and they are doing as
the director intended by developing their own thoughts rather than being
spoon-fed somebody else’s. So be warned, this film can drive you a little mad,
not with a murderous lust but with the multiple ways you can make sense of the
film. Usually it takes a few views to clear your ideas but remember not to go
too far into the maze of details or you’ll struggle to get out.
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