Articles about Stanley Kubrick

Famous Films Almost Made by Different Directors
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Steven Spielberg's Harry Potter, Sergio Leone's Godfather, and other movies that could have been.
Added by on 5/23/12
David Lynch Conjures Up "Painting," "Hair" and "Rabbits"
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This is amusing: @rejectnation sees what keywords Google auto-populates in image searches for famous directors
Added by on 4/12/12
"Doctor Doomsday" Just Doesn't Sound the Same
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A good @listsofnote find in one of Stanley Kubrick's old notebooks: Alternate titles for "Dr. Strangelove"
Added by on 4/4/12
Kubrick's "Shining" Copy
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Category: Production
Tagged: Stanley Kubrick, The Shining
This is cool: Images of Stanley Kubrick's personal copy of "The Shining" that he used on set, covered in notes
Added by on 3/22/12
6 Out of 9 Best Picture Nominees Were Based On Novels (Where's My Octavia Butler Adaptation?)
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Hollywood loves book adaptations. In fact, some of the most revered and financially successful films in cinema history were first in literary form before making the transition to celluloid.
Added by on 2/27/12
Stanley Counted His Pennies
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A longtime business associate of Kubrick shares some fascinating details on the late director's attention to film budgets
Added by on 2/21/12
All We Need Now is a Movie to Make
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Category: Production
Tagged: Stanley Kubrick
Stanley Kubrick used to come up with movie titles without a script, and his assistant recorded them all. Here's a sampling
Added by on 2/19/12
Just Sit Back and Try to Relax, Malcolm
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Category: Production
Tagged: A Clockwork Orange, Malcolm Mcdowell, Stanley Kubrick
Four rare set photos of Stanley Kubrick and Malcolm McDowell from "A Clockwork Orange"
Added by on 1/17/12
Look Into My Eyes
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Video: A two-minute montage of creepy character stares from Kubrick films
Added by on 12/27/11
Letters of Note: To Kubrick -"It's just terrific"
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February, 1976. Producer Jan Harlan writes to Stanley Kubrick and speaks passionately about a new piece of technology so impressive that it could lead to "shots which would not enter your mind otherwise." That invention was the now-ubiquitous Steadicam,
Added by on 12/19/11