Which . . . I don't know. Just indicates to me that the story aspect of filmmaking really didn't interest him much.
I think that's why he always adapted someone else's story. Maybe he had no interest in thinking up original stories, but he recognized how important it was to start with a good one. But on the other hand he wrote or co-wrote all or most of his screenplays. That's generally not something I'd expect from someone uninterested in the story. I think his interest in story and character was sophisticated enough, but it didn't conform to how others developed stories. While we think of Stanley Kubrick as a visual artist, I have to concede that those who worked with him appreciated his writing talent.
Much of contemporary western cinema sort of slaps you in the face with the typical elements of plot, conflict, and characterizations. I think Kubrick wanted to leave a lot of that ambiguous so that each viewer would find it in his own way. So you can consider a Kubrick film to be a meticulously crafted exercise in ambiguity. He scrupulously avoided interpreting his own films.
I'm just saying, you know, Shelley Duvall praises him now, but she was actually losing her hair from stress during The Shining.
Yeah, some of the behind-the-scenes stuff has her dropping f-bombs all over. But see, that was just more of Kubrick's genius (wink, wink). Her character was supposed to be coming unraveled, so why not unravel her for real?
I think that's why some of the actors think more kindly of him in retrospect. Part of it is likely just the nostalgia of remembering their collaboration with a celebrated director, especially now that he's passed away. And part of it may be realizing what he did in order to extract from them a performance worthy of their talent and of his film, even if it involved animosity and drove them nuts.
I think, despite his abusive approach, Kubrick genuinely respected his actors. For some scenes in
Dr. Strangelove, Kubrick knew that all he had to do was point the camera at Peter Sellers and hold on for dear life. Especially in the Dr. Strangelove character, Sellers would deliver these brilliantly eccentric performances, probably partly improvised. That's why you see the rest of the cast basically doing nothing in those scenes. Their job was to be human props and avoid interfering with the magic that Kubrick and Sellers were casting. Kubrick wrote his screenplays but didn't always stick to them. I think he believed that no matter how much you wrote and rehearsed, the real work happened with the camera rolling. One other interpretation of his infamous shooting ratio is that he wanted his actors to get bored enough with the rote elements of the scene that they were motivated towards spontaneity.
I think Kubrick trusted people, but only after you proved that you were on his wavelength. Kubrick gave Douglas Trumbull
carte blanche for the stargate sequences in
2001, which probably led to more LSD consumption worldwide than any other single factor. And as I said earlier, he didn't give a lot of specific direction to his actors; he worked out general themes and concepts with them in collaboration prior to rehearsals, but he didn't direct the final performance in detail. He hired and fired actors as the production developed. I'd interpret that as an ensemble-theater approach to story and character. But more importantly it establishes that if he was yelling at you, then he knew the performance he wanted from you was somewhere inside you. If he didn't think you could deliver what he wanted, he just fired you.
And for "somebody," I'd suggest "probably Buzz." Or "quite a lot of people."
...or everyone. At least every astronaut. All the astronauts I've met are ruthlessly pragmatic people who have little tolerance for mind games and foofaraw. The image of Buzz slugging Stanley Kubrick instead of Bart Sibrel does make me smile a bit. But I'd have to single out Pete Conrad as the astronaut most likely to respond to 70 takes for a scene with an entirely uncensored tirade of f-bombs and similarly well-articulated profanity. I honestly cannot see Conrad getting along
at all with Stanley Kubrick, and probably coming to blows with him.
My correspondence with Anthony Frewin, Kubrick's long-time assistant, has been most enlightening. Frewin's general take on the whole idea of Kubrick directing the hoaxed Moon landing films is exactly that those people obviously don't know Kubrick very well at all. And that's not surprising. Many people clearly know
of him, but only a comparative few knew him and worked with him.
NASA was enthusiastic about
2001. But there's a difference between enthusiasm over the finished product and tolerance of the means by which Kubrick produced it. I don't see NASA being especially tolerant of Kubrick's maverick style and controlling personality.
Besides, the filming style of Apollo doesn't feel like Kubrick!
Agreed, but what does Kubrick feel like? Even Kubrick didn't know what his style was. He simply approached each project with a sort of intuition. This is something I debate endlessly with other film fans. Kubrick is very much "I know it when I see it," but you can't easily list the characteristics of a prototypical Kubrick film. In practically every category of ways in which you can talk about film, Kubrick exhibited surprising variation.
We should probably ask LunarOrbit to move this to a less Apollo-hoax-related section of the forum since we've ventured ever so far afield. Interesting discussion, but probably off-topic.