Skybird |
12-29-08 01:24 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Subnuts
Quote:
Originally Posted by SUBMAN1
A lot was cut out at the last minute in 2001 that explained all that. The director was late for another movie project and just chopped the hell out of it before cutting and running. Mr. Clark was non to happy either.
-S
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Stanley Kubrick never had any intention of including expository scenes to 2001, and none of the scenes edited from the movie after it premiered were really "explanatory" ones. Besides, Arthur C Clarke was heavily involved in the film's production, the book wasn't actually published until six weeks after the movie was released, and Kubrick was too much of a perfectionist to "cut and run." He made only 14 movies from 1953 to 1999 - hardly someone in a hurry. He'd film 50 takes of someone opening a door. Not exactly a careless director who'd run wild in the editing room before skedaddling off to his next production.
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Correct. Kubrick was a hardcore perfectionist, who did not evade a single confrontation with anyone about how he wnated things being done - and getting it done exactly the way he wanted it. This director took no prisoners, and accepted no compromise - even to the consequence of not doing a film he knew he had not the technical means to make it real, or to competently direct it himself himself - like "A.I.", which he offered to Spielberg instead, after having delayed the project for many years until technology was capable to fulfill the visions he had on his mind - and then running out of time, and knowing he could not competently direct these technologies himself.
If there is one totally uncompromising filmmaker ever - Kubrick is it. And he was like that already in hios very first work ever, where he indicated to a famous cameraman who used a different optic than Kubrick wanted that if he ever questioned Kubricks technical and optical understanding again he could go looking for a new job. Since Kubrick was a nobody at that time and that cameraman was famous in business, this was remarkable. The result proved Kubrick right, and his choice of lenses and visual compositions is never careless or not delivering the effect Kubrick was after, which shows a deep and thorough insight in and understanding of what different lenses do and do not for a given perspective.
The cameraman never dared to question Kubrick again.
there is a interesting 2-hour documentation that was published after Eyes Wide Shut, which treats all his films and the hostory behind their making. It was very entertaining and insightful at the same time. If one is interested in Kubrick's pefectionism and work, this is a good start. Maybe someone knows the film I mean and can give the title.
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