I have formal education and when I entered the workforce, only 10% of what I learned in school was able to use. The rest I had to learn a lot on the job.
U're not supposed to know what it is, maybe invited. Why would they need a weirdos at the White House ? It's really better for ur beliefs he's got a school or university degree. Sure some go to schools for real purposes & nerver go too far in the Jeopardy... Mums & dads pray u to go to school... make ur own idea.
@@randywhite3947 wasn't barry lyndon done because he wasn't able to do napoleon so instead he did a film in a similar sort of period piece/character study vein?
Kubrick is my all-time hero, his work is like a wonderful puzzle box, stressful and hard to access, but once you solve it you feel fulfilled. His voice was so soothing, imagine taking direction from such a soothing voice. RIP Stanley, we miss you.
Low marks in education? Prime example how self-awareness triumphs over higher leaning or useless certification. Great interview for prospective students to learn from.
I am a lowly drummer trying to make it in this world 🌎. I now want to write and I can see Stanley Kubrick helping me a lot. This age and era has become harder for a lot of people but nothing has changed. I hope I have the courage to write my novels 📚 great as he creates movies 🎬 🎞 🎥
Jeremy Bernstein did a great job interviewing Kubrick. You learn so much through this interview. In this single interview you can probably find more on his life than in pretty much every other article, excluding the ones that directly quote from this said interview.
@@rebeccaparker3046 yeah I’m listening to it for the second or so time now. It’s great that this interview happened because not much of Kubrick himself really exists. At least not on the level of this interview
I met the cinematographer on The shining, full metal jacket and eyes wide shut yesterday at a film festival. He was the one who told me to listen to this interview. So glad he did. My God Kubrick comes across as someone who is extremely sharp and ultra intelligent. He actually seems like he has a great sense of humour too, which I wouldn't have thought.
Autism is a beautiful gift. I was diagnosed at 29 and I am diving deep to use as a guide to channel my brain. Imagine your mind as separate and it tortures the host with over stimulation of all information. As if it is a cancer or black hole. Constantly feeding on anything the eyes can see.
@@masterkief628 Nice non sequitur. Perhaps next people will claim he suffered from Bipolar Disorder, as well as ADHD and a whole list of " flavour of the day" psychological maladies.
jutubaeh yes.... your dialect is influenced more by your peers than your parents. For example the cliche in movies of Asian parents with heavy accents but the kids voices sound like a suburban white child
I knew he was American, but wow... I didn't expect him to sound like this. I always imagined him being much more stern and deep-voiced, as befitting his infamously cold and demanding nature.
actually his "cold and demanding" nature was very misinterpreted. With most to his actors he was extremely giving and open to them bringing ideas to the table. What he was most rigid about was the camera department, the art department and his ritual rehearsals. He was a firm believer in giving actors TIME to absorb the sets he creates for them and allows them to ACT. He just believed that religious rehearsing was a way to achieve that. Actors like Malcom Macdowell had nothing but wonderful words to say about him as a director and how he's more than giving and nice. Shelly Duvall may have had a different experience on the Set of the Shining but there are always people we don't get along with...
@@user-ql6cy3cg8r turns to every other actor he worked with and anyone who knows anything about the situation with Duval, who'd know that the whole point was that it was completely opposite of how he was normally.
I was a young woman as I saw Eyes Wide Shut. This movie kept on mezmerizing me through the life that one might have. A Great Film, it is a pity he could not hear the applause.
That casually derisive "You probably haven't seen the picture" at 31:57. And then proceeds to tell the interviewer how his own life went down. Kubrick is amazing.
When I was 8 or 9 years old my brother showed me Full Metal Jacket and I was so amazed by it's strenght! He is definitely one of the main reasons why I am so fascinated by movies!
I felt the same way when I saw The Shining when I was maybe 12 or 13. I was fixed to the screen in a way I had never been before and intuitively I knew it was because of the decisions of the director. The compositions, his famous one point perspective, the steadicam follow shot of Danny riding the tricycle Big Wheel through the halls, the way the camera moved with the swings of the ax into the bathroom door. The photography was profoundly unique and striking. I had always been interested in movies.But after I saw The Shining, even at such a young age, I began to see the art of film.
cat listening I feel/felt the exact same way. Congratulations on discovering Kubrick's films! You may also enjoy the distinct styles of directors like Pasolini or Ingmar Bergman.
Get the book : A very interesting book to you all about Stanley Kubrick & my father : Stanley Kubrick & Me by Filippo Ulivieri www.amazon.co.uk/Stanley-Kubrick-Me-Emilio-DAlessandro/dp/1628726695/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1467537879&sr=8-1&keywords=stanley+kubrick+%26+me
Marisa D'Alessandro Thanks Marisa! I listened to an interview with your father before,, that book looks like it would be very insightful. Did you ever see or meet Kubrick yourself?
Wait wasn't Peter sellers in the movie Being There? or had some part in it i heard somewhere that movie dabbles on Secret Societies Cabal shit etc. Just these can't be coincidences considering Stanley seemed to want to reveal these groups to the masses. Especially with his finale Eyes Wide Shut.
Kinda weird It was the last movie Peter Sellers released before he died as well Just like Stanley Kubrick mysteriously Dying after Eyes wide shut. this shit just cant be coincidences.
So right! Few people pick up on that! (most notably, specifically, in the scene on the veranda of the hotel Humbert takes Lolita before she's aware her mother is dead, where Humbert has an encounter with a stranger... Quilty... in the dark)
I just listened to this on the blu-ray of 2001. For some reason, I always pictured him speaking very refined. This interview also brought him down to earth a bit more for me.
+Stormy Molnjavichen Yeah, so much so that he let another guy go around for years impersonating him and talking to reporters and people using his name and he didn't care. He liked it.
Stormy Molnjavichen He didn't officially use a double, but there was a guy walking around claiming to be Stanley Kubrick and when Kubrick found out about it he liked it and let him continue
it is not overstating the fact, that this guy's creative art sparked all that logical thinking my dad tried to embed in me for years. His films hit a certain vibration that kind of catches your reasoning off guard. It causes you to have to use that problem solving part of your brain. Grateful.
I find it interesting reading about how many of these directors got started. I feel like back in the 60s it was so difficult to make a movie, that if you could actually make a feature you pretty much got noticed by the studios. Where as today, everyone can make films with the widely available cheap tech. I wonder if these directors would have "made it" in todays world ~ getting started that is. It seems most up and coming directors today were born into hollywood.
I believe you're right. On the other hand, making it to Hollywood seems overrated and no longer relevant today. In a way, if you self-publish truly high quality stuff you could earn a more dedicated following than in the mainstream, where people mostly go to forgettable movies for a quick thrill and to kill time. Assuming you don't need a tremendous budget to get started that is. If you're a talented and well-practiced writer, and you have a basic inexpensive camera (from eBay), and decent actors...well what was I getting at...
But movies are so much more like a product now than before. Everything is. Music, any art. Not that it wasn't a problem in Kubrick's time. But now, it's the absolute norm.
I interviewed Arthur C. Clarke, Gary Lockwood and Keir Dullea. I attended the opening night screening of `2001` at the old Astor Cinema in New York. This is the screening where 250 Warner Bros executives walked out after which Kubrick trimmed the film.
Kubrick’s works are of such a monumental nature that literally anything he’d hoped to make but didn’t (the Napoleon film in particular), it feels like a huge loss they weren’t made! This of course could be said of any great artist though. The Napoleon thing would almost definitely have been a truly great film, likely standing out even among his own films, because it was so deeply researched and so close to his heart. I believe it was one of his greatest interests and passions to make it and it would have been off the charts epic. Barry Lyndon was awesome though and of a similar genre.
Peter Sellers is totally doing Kubrick in Lolita as Claire Quilty. It's amazing. He sounds like him (Kubrick) again in Dr. Strangelove as President Merkin Muffly.
This is an excellent interview. For me, the Dr. Strangelove discussion at 46:47 is my favorite part, mainly because it’s my favorite Kubrick film and favorite comedy of all time.
Imagine being on the receiving end of it like Lucien Ballard was on the set of "The Killing." "Put the camera where I told you, with the lens that I asked for or get off the set and don't come back."
Thank you so much for this video. I watch/listen to it every day (its normally in the background when im studying haha), I love Kubrick's voice and the way he talks, he's so interesting
Cheers! Always good to listen to this again. Kubrick's outlook will never grow old 👍 Also, LOOK magazine never had an 'apprentice photographer' before - or after - Stanley Kubrick.
STANLEY KUBRICK WAS A GENIUS !!! sorry Mike Nichols, sorry Martin Scorcese, sorry William Friedkin, sorry Milos Forman, sorry Francis Ford Copolla, sorry Ridley Scott, and sorry Robert Zemeckis , but Stanley Kubrick was the real big boss of the Hollywood directors !!!
people say his movies are too long, maybe their lives aren't long enough for long movies. Maybe nobody in the world has time left. As life goes on people beleive that time is running out more.
I knew Stanley almost all my life. And yes this is him speaking in his younger years, but his voice 'matured' as he got older & had the same distinct intonations & accent. Please see the note poreviously written & you will understand how I know it is Stanley's voice. A very interesting book to you all about Stanley Kubrick & my father : Stanley Kubrick & Me by Filippo Ulivieri www.amazon.co.uk/Stanley-Kubrick-Me-Emilio-DAlessandro/dp/1628726695/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1467537879&sr=8-1&keywords=stanley+kubrick+%26+me
what's even stranger and equally interesting - regarding his accent and cadence - is you will notice on the Making of The Shining directed by Vivian Kubrick, Danny Torrance / Danny Lloyd also shares a virtually identical child-version of this vocal inflection. VERY cool.
The ideas that are currently percolating to the surface of human understanding among people who are not trained experts in current orthodox fields are going to radically shift humanity for a new and hopeful future.
listen to an interview from her about it she says that was the best thing that happened to her as an actor and she will always thank him because it made her give the best performance of her life
I didn't picture him as being someone who would speak so clearly. I guess I pictured him muttering intellectually or something. There's also a brightness to his voice , I pictured him sounding a little darker
if you listen .. think about how much his speech sounds like the president character in Dr Strangelove. I think Sellers may have been doing an impression of Kubrick when doing the president character.
Stanley Kubrick movies get better every time you watch them. You play one of his movies 5-10 years later and appreciate it so much more. What’s you’re favorite Kubrick movie?
I'd argue that his films aren't 'over-cooked' but merely very deliberate. Instead of dismissing or criticizing his films on that merit, it's more interesting to dissect his films as meticulously as he designed them.
Wow he didnt read a book for pleasure after higschool i got into reading at about 17. And here i was feeling bad because of that. Kubrick is such an inspiration for me wanting to make one great film, Clockwork to me being one of the greatest films ever. Kubrick's 9th Symphony, no pun. RIP Hero.
Saul Cifuentes Jazz I didnt read a book for pleasure until i was 22. It was a A Clockwork Orange. Blew me away. You should definitely read it if you get the chance.
@@jp6166 the world is heading for Orwell 1984 despite the countless warnings from history. We never learn from real history not the watered down official narratives taught in school
I love how he is not afraid to offer an assessment of his own films. No problem saying that his early films were lousy and not (like some Brits would be) ashamed to say he was very pleased with his accomplishment on Strangelove.
Eyes Wide Shut was billed by the studios as "the sexiest movies ever" It's almost as if Kubrick was mocking them from beyond the grave when he shows kidman, naked, in the first scene. Then we cut back to the title. Like he was saying "here you go, you horny people, now lets watch my movie"
Listening to this and realizing that not only are my favorite films all produced between 1968 and 1978 but so are many of my favorite albums. Would love to see that topic (the blossoming of cinema its halcyon days from the late 60s to late 70s) explored in film if anyone has any suggestions for viewing.
When he find out the journalist hasn't seen "The Killing" and has mistaken it for another movie and says "If you want to see it they have a print at the Museum of modern art!" - Then he is a bit pissed off.
Kubrick rarely gave audio interviews, and he is such a fierce intellectual...but I have to say I thought this interviewer did a pretty good job and didn't patronize him for the most part.
Did (or didn't) most of that media-manufactured reputation start with The Shining , and the way he tried to get a very frightened performance out of Shelley Duval by directing her harshly ? Or did it pre-date that ? Because the shining was pretty late in his career...... I really wish there were more interviews.
"Schools don't teach you problem solving". Stanley Kubrick, 1966.
I seriously live by that quote.
I have formal education and when I entered the workforce, only 10% of what I learned in school was able to use. The rest I had to learn a lot on the job.
School prepares you for Jeopardy.
U're not supposed to know what it is, maybe invited. Why would they need a weirdos at the White House ? It's really better for ur beliefs he's got a school or university degree. Sure some go to schools for real purposes & nerver go too far in the Jeopardy... Mums & dads pray u to go to school... make ur own idea.
Domkratos Liked until I saw your profile picture.
Great guy, and an artistic genius, he died way too soon -- would have loved to have seen his Napoleon movie.
You've read the screenplay? Excellent is it not?
That's true, but if he had of done Napoleon, he probably wouldn't have done Barry Lyndon. Its a catch 22. 😉
webproductions28 I think he would have still directed Barry Lyndon but at a later date
@@randywhite3947 wasn't barry lyndon done because he wasn't able to do napoleon so instead he did a film in a similar sort of period piece/character study vein?
@@giorgio4806 yes
Kubrick is my all-time hero, his work is like a wonderful puzzle box, stressful and hard to access, but once you solve it you feel fulfilled. His voice was so soothing, imagine taking direction from such a soothing voice. RIP Stanley, we miss you.
Very soothing czcams.com/video/9qRuo1lbEIU/video.html
@@remotefaith gotta love the trolls. 😀😀
Do you really think his work is stressful?
It's intense
Is the puzzle solving lead to subliminal history that isn’t obvious to most
Low marks in education? Prime example how self-awareness triumphs over
higher leaning or useless certification. Great interview for prospective students
to learn from.
I am a lowly drummer trying to make it in this world 🌎. I now want to write and I can see Stanley Kubrick helping me a lot. This age and era has become harder for a lot of people but nothing has changed.
I hope I have the courage to write my novels 📚 great as he creates movies 🎬 🎞 🎥
Jeremy Bernstein did a great job interviewing Kubrick. You learn so much through this interview. In this single interview you can probably find more on his life than in pretty much every other article, excluding the ones that directly quote from this said interview.
I listen to this as I fall asleep sometimes lol
This is probably the most telling interview
@@rebeccaparker3046 yeah I’m listening to it for the second or so time now. It’s great that this interview happened because not much of Kubrick himself really exists. At least not on the level of this interview
I met the cinematographer on The shining, full metal jacket and eyes wide shut yesterday at a film festival. He was the one who told me to listen to this interview. So glad he did. My God Kubrick comes across as someone who is extremely sharp and ultra intelligent. He actually seems like he has a great sense of humour too, which I wouldn't have thought.
John Alcott did The Shining and he died in 1986.
Larry Smith?
So maybe he Mets him in 86 jee,
@@KrolKaz you krak your head? 1986 is not "yesterday".
When you realized one of Peter Sellers' disguises in Lolita was actually a Kubric impression.
Sounds like Quilty lol
He also duplicated Kubrick’s voice for President Merkin Muffley in Dr. Strangelove.
@19:35 "I didn't really know....what I didn't know".
Such a simple but far-reaching concept.
Words of wisdom Lloyd, words of wisdom.
After listening a short while it becomes obvious that Kubrick was extremely sharp.
Autism is a beautiful gift. I was diagnosed at 29 and I am diving deep to use as a guide to channel my brain. Imagine your mind as separate and it tortures the host with over stimulation of all information. As if it is a cancer or black hole. Constantly feeding on anything the eyes can see.
@@masterkief628 Sorry to “disappoint” you, Kubrick was not Autistic.
@@masterkief628 Nice non sequitur. Perhaps next people will claim he suffered from Bipolar Disorder, as well as ADHD and a whole list of " flavour of the day" psychological maladies.
@@ssmith5048 You're being silly. Completely overreacting. Nobody really does this 'flavour of the week' type stuff besides an extreme minority.
@@vittoriostoraro @Master Kief sorry to disappoint you both, but he had a pretty notorious case of aspergers.
Ive always known he was american but for some reason in my head his voice was british lol
Dude me too, same thing for Tim Burton.
dodmoful I agree but with Tim Burton I think its because he associates himself with a lot of british actors and films
his daughter speaks with an english accent though
YouKnowThatYouDont yes because they were raised in England
jutubaeh yes.... your dialect is influenced more by your peers than your parents. For example the cliche in movies of Asian parents with heavy accents but the kids voices sound like a suburban white child
I knew he was American, but wow... I didn't expect him to sound like this. I always imagined him being much more stern and deep-voiced, as befitting his infamously cold and demanding nature.
actually his "cold and demanding" nature was very misinterpreted. With most to his actors he was extremely giving and open to them bringing ideas to the table. What he was most rigid about was the camera department, the art department and his ritual rehearsals. He was a firm believer in giving actors TIME to absorb the sets he creates for them and allows them to ACT. He just believed that religious rehearsing was a way to achieve that. Actors like Malcom Macdowell had nothing but wonderful words to say about him as a director and how he's more than giving and nice. Shelly Duvall may have had a different experience on the Set of the Shining but there are always people we don't get along with...
*turns to shelley duval*
He kind of has a normal, rather down to earth sounding voice, not sure if that's a good or bad thing
@@user-ql6cy3cg8r turns to every other actor he worked with and anyone who knows anything about the situation with Duval, who'd know that the whole point was that it was completely opposite of how he was normally.
@@Archetype77 you know I don't imagine me ever saying what I had said.
I was a young woman as I saw Eyes Wide Shut. This movie kept on mezmerizing me through the life that one might have. A Great Film, it is a pity he could not hear the applause.
Sorry to disappoint you but "Eyes Wide Shut" was not his greatest productions in his anthology of films. He made way better films in the past
Pavlo Ivanchenko she never said it was his greatest production.
This is wild, this was recorded the day I was born.
Okay gramps
I'm only 50, I'm not 80.
Okay pops
I was 2 months old. 1966 was a good year.
That IS WILD Bro!! Awesome how the harmony of the spheres plays out around all of our Lives!🌊 💖🌊
That casually derisive "You probably haven't seen the picture" at 31:57. And then proceeds to tell the interviewer how his own life went down. Kubrick is amazing.
Although there is a print available at MOMA, should Bernstein actually want to see the film...
This is gold dust. Fascinating insights from arguably the greatest American director. Man was he great.
man I wish I could've met this genius
When I was 8 or 9 years old my brother showed me Full Metal Jacket and I was so amazed by it's strenght! He is definitely one of the main reasons why I am so fascinated by movies!
I felt the same way when I saw The Shining when I was maybe 12 or 13. I was fixed to the screen in a way I had never been before and intuitively I knew it was because of the decisions of the director. The compositions, his famous one point perspective, the steadicam follow shot of Danny riding the tricycle Big Wheel through the halls, the way the camera moved with the swings of the ax into the bathroom door. The photography was profoundly unique and striking. I had always been interested in movies.But after I saw The Shining, even at such a young age, I began to see the art of film.
cat listening I feel/felt the exact same way. Congratulations on discovering Kubrick's films! You may also enjoy the distinct styles of directors like Pasolini or Ingmar Bergman.
Get the book :
A very interesting book to you all about Stanley Kubrick & my father : Stanley Kubrick & Me by Filippo Ulivieri
www.amazon.co.uk/Stanley-Kubrick-Me-Emilio-DAlessandro/dp/1628726695/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1467537879&sr=8-1&keywords=stanley+kubrick+%26+me
Marisa D'Alessandro Thanks Marisa! I listened to an interview with your father before,, that book looks like it would be very insightful. Did you ever see or meet Kubrick yourself?
Checkout, The Killing, of you have not.
Dang, I expected him to be one of those guys who're really serious and carry deep, deep voices. He kind of sounds like Paul Thomas Anderson.
***** I was just thinking that, PTA does have a sailor mouth though
This interview seals it for me: Peter Sellers used Stanley Kubrick's voice for the Claire Quilty character in "Lolita."
Wait wasn't Peter sellers in the movie Being There? or had some part in it i heard somewhere that movie dabbles on Secret Societies Cabal shit etc. Just these can't be coincidences considering Stanley seemed to want to reveal these groups to the masses. Especially with his finale Eyes Wide Shut.
Kinda weird It was the last movie Peter Sellers released before he died as well Just like Stanley Kubrick mysteriously Dying after Eyes wide shut. this shit just cant be coincidences.
he also used his voice as the President of the United States in Dr. Strangelove ;)
So right! Few people pick up on that! (most notably, specifically, in
the scene on the veranda of the hotel Humbert takes Lolita before she's aware her mother is dead, where Humbert has an encounter with a stranger... Quilty... in the dark)
Ron Drake God damn it,....
he talks so much like "HAL" from "2001 a space odyssey" :) :D
youssef x Not at fucking all
kubrick was a sort of a human computer , his home plenty of documentation and files like the red brain of hal.
His voice sounds identical to Clare Quilty (Peter Sellers) from his film Lolita
He actually was the voice of breath of the astronauts.
This is absolutely brilliant. Such a rarity - a detailed interview with Kubrick.
I just listened to this on the blu-ray of 2001. For some reason, I always pictured him speaking very refined. This interview also brought him down to earth a bit more for me.
pun inteded?
Damn, this is the only interview of Kubrick i could find on the internet...
This guy really hated giving interviews.
+Stormy Molnjavichen
Yeah, so much so that he let another guy go around for years impersonating him and talking to reporters and people using his name and he didn't care. He liked it.
EGarrett01 He used a double eh? Maybe its a double in this interview to.
Stormy Molnjavichen
He didn't officially use a double, but there was a guy walking around claiming to be Stanley Kubrick and when Kubrick found out about it he liked it and let him continue
EGarrett01 Ah, right.
+EGarrett01 That's hilarious. If that's true, then to me, Kubrick just became much more likable.
"Boy, am I getting fucked up on that one." - Stanley Kubrick (47:30 - 48:00)
the way he laughs after he says that made me think of Dim in a clockwork orange
"A termific extent. A tremendous a-lot"
hahahaha. Well heard. I didn't pick it up the first time.
They were smoking a joint.
it is not overstating the fact, that this guy's creative art sparked all that logical thinking my dad tried to embed in me for years. His films hit a certain vibration that kind of catches your reasoning off guard. It causes you to have to use that problem solving part of your brain.
Grateful.
I find it interesting reading about how many of these directors got started. I feel like back in the 60s it was so difficult to make a movie, that if you could actually make a feature you pretty much got noticed by the studios. Where as today, everyone can make films with the widely available cheap tech. I wonder if these directors would have "made it" in todays world ~ getting started that is. It seems most up and coming directors today were born into hollywood.
I believe you're right. On the other hand, making it to Hollywood seems overrated and no longer relevant today. In a way, if you self-publish truly high quality stuff you could earn a more dedicated following than in the mainstream, where people mostly go to forgettable movies for a quick thrill and to kill time.
Assuming you don't need a tremendous budget to get started that is. If you're a talented and well-practiced writer, and you have a basic inexpensive camera (from eBay), and decent actors...well what was I getting at...
Digital Cameras have made Upcoming directors lazy
But movies are so much more like a product now than before. Everything is. Music, any art. Not that it wasn't a problem in Kubrick's time. But now, it's the absolute norm.
I interviewed Arthur C. Clarke, Gary Lockwood and Keir Dullea. I attended the opening night screening of `2001` at the old Astor Cinema in New York. This is the screening where 250 Warner Bros executives walked out after which Kubrick trimmed the film.
Kubrick never lost his Bronx accent, even after living in England for decades...
This was before he moved there, mate.
Its called being jewish
This interview happened today, 48 years ago!!!
what a youthful voice, such grit and determination, such a loss, still missed, never forgotten '-'
Kubrick’s works are of such a monumental nature that literally anything he’d hoped to make but didn’t (the Napoleon film in particular), it feels like a huge loss they weren’t made! This of course could be said of any great artist though. The Napoleon thing would almost definitely have been a truly great film, likely standing out even among his own films, because it was so deeply researched and so close to his heart. I believe it was one of his greatest interests and passions to make it and it would have been off the charts epic. Barry Lyndon was awesome though and of a similar genre.
Peter Sellers is totally doing Kubrick in Lolita as Claire Quilty. It's amazing. He sounds like him (Kubrick) again in Dr. Strangelove as President Merkin Muffly.
David Echols Lol, shit. Just put the same comment a couple minutes ago.
Brilliant bit of mimicry on the part of that Sellers chap -- particularly in the earlier *Lolita.
An amazing interview. I had to listen to it twice, back to back
The rare voice
Ty for posting !
This is an excellent interview. For me, the Dr. Strangelove discussion at 46:47 is my favorite part, mainly because it’s my favorite Kubrick film and favorite comedy of all time.
He kinda sounds like HAL (but with a New Yawk accent.)
Imagine being on the receiving end of it like Lucien Ballard was on the set of "The Killing."
"Put the camera where I told you, with the lens that I asked for or get off the set and don't come back."
@@TheSnowballEarth Good.
This is absolutely amazing!!! Thanks a lot!
Great director! Thanks for uploading this interview.
This is solid gold. Great upload!
Thank you so much for this video. I watch/listen to it every day (its normally in the background when im studying haha), I love Kubrick's voice and the way he talks, he's so interesting
Interesting to hear the master himself divulge personal information being a good story teller to boot.
Cheers! Always good to listen to this again. Kubrick's outlook will never grow old 👍 Also, LOOK magazine never had an 'apprentice photographer' before - or after - Stanley Kubrick.
thanks for posting this
I love when kubrick calls out the interviewer 32:00
Thank you I will be enjoying the vids, it may be the closest I can get to the precious material.
Fascinating interview thanks for posting it,
He has a very calming and thoughtful voice. Something about his monotone way of speaking puts you in a trance.
That was amazing! Thanks for sharing
Thanks for sharing!
Great interview... thanks for posting
STANLEY KUBRICK WAS A GENIUS !!!
sorry Mike Nichols, sorry Martin Scorcese, sorry William Friedkin, sorry Milos Forman, sorry Francis Ford Copolla, sorry Ridley Scott, and sorry Robert Zemeckis , but Stanley Kubrick was the real big boss of the Hollywood directors !!!
Enzo R. Castillo it's impressive how he is above all of those monsters.
Cor Tadew Did you just call fucking Mike Nichols a monster? Get help
Flantastic Monsters in the sense how insanely talented they are/were.
Flantastic Stupid jackass !
Mike Nichols was a wonderful director and is a monster for that !
Cor Tadew Ahhhhh, I see. I misinterpreted what you said.
people say his movies are too long, maybe their lives aren't long enough for long movies. Maybe nobody in the world has time left. As life goes on people beleive that time is running out more.
He was so ahead of his time. Great interview!
I love how he spells things out.
Yes this is young Stanley's voice. I know that voice so well.
How do you know this voice so well? Also - so when you see 40 year olds, you refer to them as young men/women?
I knew Stanley almost all my life. And yes this is him speaking in his younger years, but his voice 'matured' as he got older & had the same distinct intonations & accent. Please see the note poreviously written & you will understand how I know it is Stanley's voice.
A very interesting book to you all about Stanley Kubrick & my father : Stanley Kubrick & Me by Filippo Ulivieri
www.amazon.co.uk/Stanley-Kubrick-Me-Emilio-DAlessandro/dp/1628726695/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1467537879&sr=8-1&keywords=stanley+kubrick+%26+me
+Marisa D'Alessandro Didn't see your previous comment - sorry Marisa. Well that's interesting.
No problem. But I can guarantee that it IS Stanley's voice. It is a genuine interview.
+Marisa D'Alessandro I believed it was genuine, I was just confused at how you would know the voice. But I understand now :).
Peter Sellers perfectly mimicked Kubrick's voice when Sellers played the character Claire Quilty in "Lolita."
WoW! Awesome upload!
what's even stranger and equally interesting - regarding his accent and cadence - is you will notice on the Making of The Shining directed by Vivian Kubrick, Danny Torrance / Danny Lloyd also shares a virtually identical child-version of this vocal inflection. VERY cool.
does anyone else think he sounds exactly like paul giamatti? not just the new york accent but rather the tenor of his voice
The ideas that are currently percolating to the surface of human understanding among people who are not trained experts in current orthodox fields are going to radically shift humanity for a new and hopeful future.
I love this man.
listen to an interview from her about it she says that was the best thing that happened to her as an actor and she will always thank him because it made her give the best performance of her life
Thanks to the journalist!
I didn't picture him as being someone who would speak so clearly. I guess I pictured him muttering intellectually or something. There's also a brightness to his voice , I pictured him sounding a little darker
Inspirational!
Haha, "You're thinking of Asphalt Jungle, you haven't seen the picture."
Gotta love the part where he caught the interviewer for not seeing one of his films haha.
A great filmmaker all time master.
if you listen .. think about how much his speech sounds like the president character in Dr Strangelove. I think Sellers may have been doing an impression of Kubrick when doing the president character.
Eyes wide shut took a couple of watches before I could really appreciate it. I love it now. Have to not watch it to save it for special occasions
dope, Man was exceedingly consistent and perpetually dedicated.
Stanley Kubrick movies get better every time you watch them. You play one of his movies 5-10 years later and appreciate it so much more. What’s you’re favorite Kubrick movie?
Add a little accelerant certain places, and he sounds like Martin Scorsese in 1970.
the man is brilliant
I'd argue that his films aren't 'over-cooked' but merely very deliberate. Instead of dismissing or criticizing his films on that merit, it's more interesting to dissect his films as meticulously as he designed them.
i would of liked to see this man work.. genius. FMJ is my favourite kubrick film..
Very humble. Very smart. I miss this guy.
Wow he didnt read a book for pleasure after higschool
i got into reading at about 17. And here i was feeling bad because of that. Kubrick is such an inspiration for me wanting to make one great film, Clockwork to me being one of the greatest films ever. Kubrick's 9th Symphony, no pun. RIP Hero.
Saul Cifuentes Jazz I didnt read a book for pleasure until i was 22. It was a A Clockwork Orange. Blew me away. You should definitely read it if you get the chance.
Brilliant!
''The only thing you can learn about History is that you cannot learn from History.''
Patricia N of course you can learn from history
@@jp6166 the world is heading for Orwell 1984 despite the countless warnings from history. We never learn from real history not the watered down official narratives taught in school
If anyone has Stanley Kubrick's Boxes documentary, please upload. Thanks
(Found it on Vimeo)
ask his family
Hi can you edit the video settings to enable automatic captions for this video interview please? It’s very important for me as a student. Thx!
This was soooo long ago :)
LOL "a tremendous alot." Norman Bates says that in Psycho.
What a cheering and soothing voice !
He sounds more jovial than I would've thought, it sounds like he's on the verge of laughing half the time
I love how he is not afraid to offer an assessment of his own films. No problem saying that his early films were lousy and not (like some Brits would be) ashamed to say he was very pleased with his accomplishment on Strangelove.
love it
Eyes Wide Shut was billed by the studios as "the sexiest movies ever"
It's almost as if Kubrick was mocking them from beyond the grave when he shows kidman, naked, in the first scene. Then we cut back to the title.
Like he was saying "here you go, you horny people, now lets watch my movie"
Amen i love film conversations, and i think Kubrick is in the top 5 directors
Where's the "distraction" quote that Channel Criswell used in his video on Kubrick?
Listening to this and realizing that not only are my favorite films all produced between 1968 and 1978 but so are many of my favorite albums. Would love to see that topic (the blossoming of cinema its halcyon days from the late 60s to late 70s) explored in film if anyone has any suggestions for viewing.
Have you read Easy Riders, Raging Bulls by Peter Bishkin? There's an accompanying documentary available on CZcams.
When he find out the journalist hasn't seen "The Killing" and has mistaken it for another movie and says "If you want to see it they have a print at the Museum of modern art!" - Then he is a bit pissed off.
Nice drawing of him too.
I would have loved to share a game of stickball with Kubrick
Kubrick rarely gave audio interviews, and he is such a fierce intellectual...but I have to say I thought this interviewer did a pretty good job and didn't patronize him for the most part.
He says "you know" a lot you know
He's a great interview. Why did he do so little of these?
Did (or didn't) most of that media-manufactured reputation start with The Shining , and the way he tried to get a very frightened performance out of Shelley Duval by directing her harshly ? Or did it pre-date that ? Because the shining was pretty late in his career......
I really wish there were more interviews.
@Noah White ask Shelley Duvall.
Do you know where can I found text version of this interview?