NP: Kubrick Bio Rec
Steven Koteff
steviekoteff at gmail.com
Tue Dec 1 16:50:37 CST 2015
Thanks so much for that.
That's a great reading of the movie for anyone, let alone a fifteen year
old. Even if the teacher earns a ghostwriter credit, it's well done.
The one part of that where she shows her youth even a little is, I think,
in taking the film so literally (e.g. she needs to identify a particular
causal event, with a particular perpetrator, that triggers the monolith's
appearance).
On Tue, Dec 1, 2015 at 4:11 PM, Mark Thibodeau <jerkyleboeuf at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Yeah. It was actually Stackhouse's TEACHER that forwarded her theories to
> Kubrick, who was very much impressed by Margaret's "first rate mind".
>
> J
>
> On Tue, Dec 1, 2015 at 4:38 PM, Jochen Stremmel <jstremmel at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> You were right, Johnny: http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0009.html.
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>> 2015-12-01 22:20 GMT+01:00 Johnny Marr <marrja at gmail.com>:
>>
>>> It's by Margaret Stackhouse. I'm struggling to send links (or to type
>>> competently for that matter) on this phone, but a bit of Googling will dig
>>> it up soon enough for anybody interested.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, December 1, 2015, Johnny Marr <marrja at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I think Eyes Wide Shut is major Kubrick - it's his defining statement
>>>> on sexual identity, societal secrecy and individual reputation. Always find
>>>> something new in that film.
>>>>
>>>> David Thomson claims that Kubrick locked Tom Cruise out of Nicole
>>>> Kidman's cuckolding scene, demanding a strictly closed set, that the actor
>>>> credited with playing the cicisbeo has no other recognised film or acting
>>>> credits, and that Kubrick spent an entire day filming them copulate, only
>>>> to use about five seconds worth of footage in the final cut.
>>>>
>>>> I do have a loose theory that the final scene in 2001 is something of a
>>>> collation of mankind's greatest achievements throughout history gathered
>>>> together in a space-time continuum warp, as a final testament to mankind as
>>>> he (we?) begin to die out and find ourselves replaced (much like the apes
>>>> at the start of the film) by 'superior' beings.
>>>>
>>>> Kubrick said the best and most intellectually rigorous analysis of 2001
>>>> he had ever read was from a 15 year old girl who wrote to him privately
>>>> with his theories. I've read that letter and from distant memory it is very
>>>> impressive - I'll try to dig it out soon.
>>>>
>>>> On Sunday, November 29, 2015, Steven Koteff <steviekoteff at gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Thanks for the recommendations, Mark. Agreed on all counts, really.
>>>>> Spent yesterday trying to find car floor mats in the pattern of the carpet
>>>>> from *The Shining *but no luck. The blog is very cool--I'm glad
>>>>> people like you are out there, keeping blogs like these.
>>>>>
>>>>> And John, yes, *Eyes Wide Shut *has grown on me lately as well, even
>>>>> if it's not, what, Major Kubrick? The whole thing's fascinating, anyway.
>>>>> All of it elevated by what became of Cruise in the years after that movie
>>>>> (which you almost sense Kubrick playing with, ahead of time, way
>>>>> prescient).
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Sat, Nov 28, 2015 at 5:57 PM, Steven Koteff <steviekoteff at gmail.com
>>>>> > wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Sis loved it, was deeply absorbed/moved. She's moderately-to-severely
>>>>>> bipolar, and so had a really rough teenagerhood. Dropped out of high
>>>>>> school, few hospital stays, etc. She is very, very smart but is so
>>>>>> sensitive and has spent much of her life in so emotionally precarious a
>>>>>> state that she has spent a lot of time shying away from art that is at all
>>>>>> high-stakes. She's been a voracious reader, but much of that has been,
>>>>>> like, harlequins.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But lately she's been stable enough that I've been able to recommend
>>>>>> things to her, and she's been able to follow through. I'm sort of her
>>>>>> cultural gatekeeper so I'm basically trying my best to give her a
>>>>>> trajectory that probably apexes with her being able to appreciate something
>>>>>> like *GR*, to extract some of its wonders, etc. She can probably
>>>>>> handle it from there.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Sat, Nov 28, 2015 at 5:43 PM, Paul Mackin <mackin.paul at gmail.com>
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> what did Sis think about it?☺
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> P
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Sat, Nov 28, 2015 at 5:51 PM, Steven Koteff <
>>>>>>> steviekoteff at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Yesterday I got my sister very stoned and took her to see 2001. It
>>>>>>>> was playing at the Logan Theatre here in Chicago. Her first time seeing it
>>>>>>>> (she's 21) and the first time I'd seen it in theaters.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> I'm sure the movie and the director have been talked about ad
>>>>>>>> mortem on here but if anybody had anything to say about it I am all ears. I
>>>>>>>> will personally confess that I consider it an important part of my life, a
>>>>>>>> work of art that elicits genuine awe from me. Sometimes I put the scene of
>>>>>>>> Hal's deactivation on in the background on a loop while I work.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Realized I've never actually read a Kubrick bio. Or anything about
>>>>>>>> him/his movies. Anybody have any recommendations? -
>>>>>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>
>
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