Remembering Stanley Kubrick: Steven Spielberg (Paul Joyce 1999)
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ธ.ค. 2024
- [ www.archiviokub... ] An interview with Steven Spielberg about Stanley Kubrick. This is the uncut version of the interview, aired on British television. The interview is excerpted in the Eyes Wide Shut DVD.
[ITA] Un'intervista a Steven Spielberg su Stanley Kubrick. Questa è la versione integrale dell'intervista in estratti sul DVD di Eyes Wide Shut.
This is pure gold. I could listen to Spielberg talk movies all day...
+James Halford Agreed. U can see (and Speilberg hints at here) in the creative/director area, no one was like Kubrick..
This an excellent style of interview. It's very efficient. And Spielberg's enthusiasm for the craft of movie making is infectious. He doesn't come off as pompous and arrogant but down to earth and to the point.
8:01
12:18 :)
I agree 👩🚀
One of the greatest living movie directors talking about the greatest film director of all time
I love how Steven talks about Stanely with such tender fondness... The amount of respect he has for his contemporary is really inspiring.
Spielberg's experience on a Space Odyssey; "That film was the drug, I came out with my mind completely altered." Only film geeks can understand this concept, this is why you are adored Mr. Spielberg.
Film geeks and actors, everything I've ever worked on has changed me to some degree. Even just doing scenes in class day after day; week after week; month after month. It changes you because it has to, if it doesn't you're not learning anything.
I had the same feeling experience with The Clockwork Orange
Saw 2001 when it first came out in wide screen at the Cinerama theatre in LA. Surprisingly it was a small audience of maybe only a couple dozen people watching, and when the psychedelic 'Stargate' scene came on, apparently a couple stoners got out of their seats and tried to get up on the stage, presumably to 'enter' the film. Fortunately the ushers came down and 'escorted' them back to their seats!
not just film geeks. anyone who has seen the movie
2001 was a religious experience for me. I was so shaken up for a kid in 8th grade. It frightened me and raised my consciousness. Still have the original brochure they gave out at its opening days in N.Y.
Great, great interview. So much respect for both of these men.
well that proves one thing mr hooper,you have good taste!!
Let's drink to our legs! (and both of these men).
Unpopular opinion but I think Eyes Wide Shut was his best movie...
Kubrick might be dead but his films will never die
@Rishi yes 2001 was my favorite until his daughter voronica kubrick liked my ig comment saying ews is his best movie. I was in shock.
@Rishi yes I did, and I've always been drawn to both so they are equally my favorites. I know, it's so rare to not only see a director of his eye and creativity in all genres but make the best film in each. Yet he's talked about less than Spielberg.
Eyes Wide Shut very well might be his greatest film. It's a remarkable work of art. I've seen the film probably ten times and it always leaves a mark on me every time I see it.
I agree, I personally feel it was his best, but that is for my point of view. Absolutely love that film, transcends magic.
Still want to see the uncut version but its probably getting closer to oblivion every year.
One of the greatest film geniuses of all time.
Please tell me you're not referring to Spielberg.
@@jeremyfilliavertini2019 'Spielberg is technically more gifted than Kubrick'
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!
You *ABSOLUTE* f*cking be!!end!!!
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!
@@jeremyfilliavertini2019 Hahahahahahaha!!
I love your sense of humour!
Kubrick, pure genius
and the most inoffensive smart man i ever worked for. stew fmj.
Must have been intimidating just to be in the same room with him, despite how nice of a guy he was.
Overrated af director. His movies have horrible pacing and wooden acting.
@@BigBoss7777777 pacing pacing pacing i guess u are a noob and u are talking about 2001 and Barry lyndon.. shove pacing and acting up ur ass😑😑 illogical bitch hater
@@ivana7431 It's probably because he has ADHD & has the attention span of a gnat. Probably never read a book in his life.
Hearing Steve reminisce about Stanley with such affection and respect is moving. You can tell he truly cared about his friend.
Hearing him talk about how dr stranglove made him forget about possibly being drafted to the war almost brought me to tears. Really shows the beauty and power cinema.
I have watched The Shining about 100 times it still haunts me everytime i see it Jack Nicholson was amazing especially the bathroom scene with Delbert Grady and i also loved the scene in the Gold room with Lloyd the bartender!
Jack Nicholson isn't dead. He's 62 years old (and BTW, I've been drunk in that very same room that you're talking about). That bar scene was shot at American Legion Post #43 in Hollywood. I'm there every few months.
The Shining is an amazing film on so many levels, my favorite by Kubrick followed closely by 2001.
@@liquidbraino he was 43 yrs old in 1980 so u gotta add 20 years.
Those are my favorite Shining scenes too. :-)
Stanley Kubrick’s up there next to Sergio Leone as part of my Top 10 favorite directors I admire
Having been fortunate enough to have worked with both Kubrick and Spielberg, what a great find this is!
Hi Chris, it's Filippo Ulivieri here, author of 2001 between Kubrick and Clarke. We met at a Kubrick event in London a few years back. Thanks for your comment. Happy you enjoyed the video. All the best!
I envy you, my two all time favourite directors!!
@@filippoulivieri Hi Filipo…..yes indeed! I must have you sign my copy of your book someday!
@@charmawow with pleasure!
Extreme praise to the interviewer. Who let Steven speak freely, giving us the chance to truly understand how he saw Stanley, and how we saw Stanley. Actually got me a little misty-eyed there at the end. Wonderful interview from Steven Spielberg. Thank you for sharing this.
Kubrick's "The Shining" is one of the most innovative and perfect films ever created. My appreciation of his work grows exponentially with every viewing. there will always only be one Stanley Kubrick, more of an entity than a man
Steven was so right about that movie 2001: A Space Odyssey. The movie WAS the drug!
It was so powerful a film. It took me about 3 or 5 watchings of it to even assimilate the story. First time I looked at it, I was 7 or 8 years old. My father, a keen amateur photographer took my brother and I. We thought it would be a documentary about space travel.
You can tell him and Stanley were great friends, and it was awesome to get some incite into that relationship :)
incite? Insight!
It's only spelled "Insight" if you're not an Incel.
Kubrick was nowhere near as fond of him as Spielberg liked to think.
@@ppuh6tfrz646 What’s your issue with Spielberg?
@@jonp3890 I was referring to *Kubrick's* opinion of Spielberg.
The only recently watched Dr. Strangelove and the Manchurian Candidate (they both came out at around the same time, early 60's). I didn't leave the house for a week, I just kept re-watching both movies. I was totally mesmerized by both films. I'm in my mid fifties and still upset at myself for putting these off for decades. I'm still in awe a both films. I still haven't seen 2001.
Mitchell Leary - (Maybe you’ve seen “2001” now?) 😉
It's never too late to be amazed and moved. And i'd you think you are that's when you are done
manchurian candidate is frankenheimer not kubrick
Kubrick was impressed with Schindlers List. There's no question. He played it off... but he knew it was a masterpiece..
Kubrick slagged Shindler's List in public. He said that it was a success story about the Holocaust, which was actually a failure of mankind in not preventing it.
@@FloydPink23
They are forcing this propoganda
@@duderama6750
👎
A Kubrick movie about the holocaust would have been something interesting.
Kubrick on the Holocaust would probably have been the greatest movie ever made.
I would love to have known Stanley Kubrick RIP
i had the luck to work for stanley on fmj he was always so nice to me and so calm too and i miss him.stew fmj crew. fb and twitter.
@@stewartbloomfield8035 how long ago was that?
@@stuartmiller4363 31 years but i last saw stanley in feb 99.
@@stuartmiller4363 I worked for stanley on full metal jacket. stew fmj crew.
You coming out with a book Stuart about fmj???.
Drugs is for actors and rock stars, a true filmmaker doesn't need drugs.
I absolutely agree. I turned off "A Clockwork Orange" the first time and fell asleep during "2001". Now they are both in my absolute top 5 films of all time. Fascinating how this phenomenon happens to so many others as well.
Spielberg is my second fave director after Kubrick. So this is wonderful to hear his stargated reactions
William friedkin is the best director in history of cinema
I broke down once Steven started speaking of the moment he heard of Stanley's passing.
Seems like Steven really loved Stanley. And I'm sure that Stanley felt the same toward him. He's lucky that he was able to have
a relationship with his hero. Few of us have that luxury.
Although their films and style are so different they both had immense respect for each other; hence the ridiculous amount of time they would spend talking over the phone and Stanley’s decision to choose Steven as the only filmmaker suitable to carry out one of his projects - A.I.
My two favourite directors of all time for different reasons.
Truly enjoyed the whole talk.
Just wonderful
Brilliant.
That scene where the girl sings to the soldiers gets me every time one of the greatest scenes ever
So very true.
I just saw Paths of Glory the other night and it's one of the greatest movies I've ever seen
@@keepgrindingup7661 What Gary Lockwood said.
Possibly my favourite interview on TH-cam.
THE ZOOM INS ON BARRY LYNDON
YES
it took brass balls to say publicly that he "didn't love" *_The Shining._* it sounds sincere, which is rare for hollywood. that comment _reeks_ of honesty to me.
they were not peers
Love Spielberg and Kubrick, two of Hollywood's famous notable legendary directors and my top two favorites.
I didn't know it was possible to rate both so highly.
"Here lies a dry wry guy."
Why wasn't that on his tombstone?
This is really great, thanks for posting.
You're welcome.
The Film Center near me has shown all 13 of his films this month (July of 2024). i did all 13, with the last one being shown is a 4K restoration of 2001: A Space Odyssey on 70mm film. I went and saw it 4 out of the 5 days it was there. I’m not a religious person but this was as close to a religious experience i’ll ever get.
Steven Spielberg, "No documentary, no other movie...has ever really put me in space as much as 2001 did. It made me fear it and made me want it so desperately." !!! Kubrick is the GOAT! RIP you beast!
He's brilliant, this is remarkable. For those of you who are Kubrick fans watch the film The Filmworker, about Leon Vitale. Its troubling, intense, but will take you deeper into his life. I'm going to put this out there, I'm more fascinated with Kubrick as a person than his films. Listening to him think, talk, explain things is one of the high points of human life. His films are gripping, but so disturbing there's a element that turns me away, listening to him?... sensational. Glad to have lived while he was here.
Thanks for the upload, I had never seen this before.
Good insight into both Spielberg and Kubrick, not just their directing techniques, but also their friendship.
Edgar Allan Poe “All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.” 🙏
Thank you very much for giving me this.
You're welcome. Thanks for passing by my channel.
2001? Man I STILL ponder over that film and every time I watch it? I'm still left thinking.................. so! what does that mean? FABULOUS and is definetly my favourite Kubrick film.
Fantastic I could listen to mr. Spielberg talk movies 24/7
Kubrick is the GOAT
Spielberg on Kubrick, one of the best filmakers, talking about one of the best filmakers. THanks for the upload (:
Loved this piece. Thanks for posting:-)
You're very welcome! Thanks for your comment.
I just tripped over this and the Tom Cruise interview about Stanley Kubrick. Both are 20 minutes and are priceless!
The late great brilliant eccentric Stanley Kubrick, I'm still watching your movies in 2019, my personal favorites r Dr strangelove, clockwork orange, eyes wide shut, shining, I've seen each one over a thousand times, never gets old, never ages, still holds up today, in fact I'ma watch one of his movies right now, rip Stanley Kubrick your the master of your craft
This interview made me cry...
The craft, exactly whats lacking in movie making today. To much about the dollar these days.
It's all about the dollar these days, especially with the bigger studios. The only places you're going to see any really decent films these days is at film festivals. Most movies coming out these days suck, I haven't been to a theater in years (except for film festivals and projects I've worked on).
omaghman / There are no new genius’s stepping up to the plate
'Too much about the dollar these days...'
Yeah... And Spielberg had absolutely nothing to do with that, did he?
Movies suck now
He’s up there with The Beatles. Their albums and his movies were always my faves
My 5 favorite Steven Spielberg films
5. Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
4. Raiders Of The Lost Ark
3. Lincoln
2. Schindler's List
1. Jaws
No ET. Come on!
Richard Bain
mine ar
1.- CEOTTK
2.-Jaws
3.-Empre of the sun
4.-Jurassic Park
5.-Crusade
Catch Me If You Can
Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Empire of the Sun
Duel
A.I. Artificial Intelligence
mine . SCHINDLER'S LIST AND PRIVATE RYAN , THE OTHERS ARE FOR KIDS.
This is a great interview!
Thanks for all the nice comments! Glad you found this video interesting!
Strangely enought, I like every Kubrick film the first time I watched it. My fav is The Shining.
Wow. So cool, what a story. Miss Mr. Kubrick indeed.
Spielberg has learned to do good work. He is right to acknowledge Kubrick-s absolute brilliance. It is uplifting to see how a true artist like Kubrick can influence the best of popular culture that Speilberg represents.
Steven! My Homeboy!😃🤘
Everybody seems to have that Kubrick flick they don't like at first but then grows on them. Mine is Barry Lyndon. I went in with low expectations and wasn't too thrilled when I first saw it. Now I love it. One of the most beautiful films ever made. What's yours?
Mr Spielberg! Master craftman talking and praising another Master craftsman sure is a delicat treat.
Paths of Glory was the first Kubrick film I ever watched. He was never an unemotional director to me.
You got that right. I love reading the stories about Kubrick practically destroying cameras to affix extra large lenses to shoot certain scenes with natural light. It pays off in the tent scene with the hundreds of candles and most especially in the balcony scene with the moonlight. Just breathtaking.
Paul Joyce, the guy interviewing Spielberg here, actually directed the classic 1981 Doctor Who serial “Warrior’s Gate”.
Spielberg, a genius of my time 🎬 🤗 ✨ discussing Kubrick, a master filmmaker who broke so many rules in cinematography 👁🤹🏻♂️ Brilliant storytelling 🎯
Spielberg, a genius...
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!
That's a good one!!
Don't know why I thought this would be a boring interview. Spielberg tells these little stories and anecdotes masterfully.
He's a good raconteur, I agree
The Shining Is A Masterpiece!
Barry Lyndon is grossly underrated
Barry lyndon was the stanley Kubrick film that stuck with me the longest. I felt it for a week. Wasn't expecting that kind of effect.
Full Metal Jacket is a movie that rewards multiple viewings. The first time I saw it, the Paris Island scenes with Gunnery Sargeant Hartman were overwhelming, so that the Vietnam part was initially a little confusing. But watching it again, and again, that part has become very moving. I like the way Kubrick lets the characters develop by what they say, till by the end you are pulling for Cowboy, the Joker, Rafterman etc. Kubrick creates a burning hellish inferno for them to move through.
Kubrick:
1. Clockwork Orange
2. Shining
3. 2001:
4. Barry Lyndon
5. Eyes wide shut
Spielbergs:
1. Jaws
2. Raiders of the lost ark
3. Schinlder's List
4. Saving private Ryan
5. Jurassic Park
Eyes wide shut is definitely better than barry Lyndon my friend.Barry lyndon is a monolith in cinematography but eyes wide shut makes up for it in story,atmosphere and everything else
We have the same films in the Kubrick top 5 except mine is 2001, Lyndon, Shining, EWS and Clockwork.
@@Shayor100 just re-watched it and I actually complitly agree👌But those fives are still the top fives tho. They are different but they all are masterpieces!
6. DUEL
No other Director compares to Kubrick. U may like others, but there is no equal. Kubrick had to be different. He cancelled movies if someone was making something similar.
Except Full Metal Jacket.
1. Kubrick
2. Spielberg
3. Cameron
or
1. Kubrick
2. Scorsese
3. Hitchcock
or
1. Kubrick
2. Ridley Scott
3. Coppola
You get the picture... Any list of directors he's numero uno.
shining is everything but a masterpiece like full metal jacket stop considering every Kubrick s movie like an event anyway in the 50s and 60s he Made excellent movies for sure and he certanly deserve to be considered amongst the greatest directors of the cinematic history
He is a thief who steals other people's ideas and gets all the credit.
overrated shit
look at what happens at 19:08 when Spielberg says Kubrick dead at 70 after he's talking about how he felt about the internet, a quick glitch thing w some static just thought was weird.
1. Kubrick
2. Spielberg
3. Cameron
or
1. Kubrick
2. Scorsese
3. Hitchcock
or
1. Kubrick
2. Ridley Scott
3. Coppola
You get the picture... Any list of directors he's numero uno.
Cameron...the fuck outta here.
@@1qwasz12 way better than shit kubrick
I agree that the recent years Spielberg hasn't done his best work. But I must say that I think Catch Me If You Can and Munich were pretty fantastic films. Also, his new film Lincoln has a pretty good chance at being a fantastic film as well seeing as it has a great cast (Lincoln is being played by Daniel Day Lewis) and the screenwriter Paul Webb have written the story for great films like The Aviator, Hugo, Gladiator, and The Last Samurai.
Love his Mind
The death of Brian in Barry Lyndon is one of the most emotionally gut- wrenching sequences I've ever seen.
Truly. Not gonna lie,I cried the first time I saw it. It really hit hard.
I was totally unprepared for the unexpected effect barry lyndon would have on me. I knew it would be beautiful and good but some moments from it hit me harder than any other film he did
I mourn the loss of Kubrick everyday.
It's time to get over it.
@@ppuh6tfrz646 true.
Why?..what did you feed him?!
While watching Clockwork Orange, 2001 and Dr. Strangelove... I wasn't completely convinced, but at the last half-hour of each one I became a fan.
Old Stannie sure was an oomny fella, wasn't he?
Welly, welly, welly, welly, well.
No it's not
Real horrorshow, he was.
tg72211 Yeah, he's a right bolshy yarblocko.
+Alex DeLarge Tortures of the damned, sir. Tortures of the damned.
2001 now has the look of a grand documentary. Love it!
I completely share his feelings about The Shining.
I was pleasantly surprised to hear Spielberg admit he didn't like "The Shining' when he first saw it...then after seeing it many more times, it's now his favorite Kubrick film. It's truly his most complex film, to people with triple digit IQs...IMO
***** Exactly, I didn't like it when I first saw it. But I thought about it for a day and loved it. Now it's one of my favorite films.
his movies are truly impeccable .
Love this man!! Such an artistic soul!!
AI is ahead of it's time. Profound film. He did kubrick proud with that one 👍👍👍👌👌👌🎥
Stanley Kubrick was the best Film Director
Utterly Brilliant.
So nice not to have an interviewer constants interrupting!
My 7 favorite Stanley Kubrick Films
7. Eyes Wide Shut
6. Full Metal Jacket
5. Spartacus
4. Dr. Strangelove (Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb)
3. 2001 A Space Odyssey
2. A Clockwork Orange
1. The Shining
Excellent insights.
Barry Lyndon too... One of Fellini's favorite movies.
That is the love from one filmaker to another
Funny coincidence: When I was a 10-year old kid going to see 'Close Encounters' with my friend we arrived late at the theater and could'nt get in. So we bought tickets for the next showing wich was fully 3 hrs later. Which meant I'd be home way past midnight of which my mom didn't like, to say the least, one bit (being in the center of the big city; quite peaceful Helsinki but still). Anyway, we saw this Spielberg's phenomenal UFO-epic, got home safely (not including the heat I got from my folks) and as for my part haven't been the same since :)
I was just waiting to hear about your dad and the jumper cables.
I wouldn’t say that Stanley Kubrick films are classic but they linger on you. They have presence of both negative & positive. It’s like they are more curious for me than classics.
They are most definitely stone cold classics.
thanks for this
I respect Spielberg more now after seeing the respect and appreciation he had for Kubrick. I felt exactly the same as Steven after seeing the Shinning for the first time for all the same reasons. Now it's a one of my favorites of Kubrick's thirteen masterpieces. Everytime I spot it on cable I end up watching the whole damn thing. I seen it more then any other horror film tenfold.
Thanks Steven.
I love Kubrick
I Love All Kubrick Movies.
What a Great Man..
Cagney, yes. Orson Wells said the same thing of him: the greatest actor , or at least in the top five.
Great documentary but why would the violence of Clockwork Orange make him seek refuge in the british countryside... Most of the more brutal scenes are in the British countryside.
A quick simplification based on the "recluse" myth, I guess. Kubrick moved to England mainly for practical reasons due to his filmmaking career, and I think he bought Childwickbury mostly because it was a big property where he could work and store stuff, and take care of his pets.
They chose the Shostakovich Second as the closing music for the interview, was this in homage to one of Kubrick's films ? I haven't seen them all, by the way. Planning to re-watch Barry Lyndon, and to look at Paths of Glory
You can also really tell that Spielberg has so much fucking respect for Kubrick.
does that mean he appreciates the way Kubrick fucked?
I can listen to Steven Spielberg in great lengths.