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Reviews
Eyes Wide Shut (1999)
Just shut your eyes.
Leave this one at the end, and I finally finished watching all Kubrick's movies.
The continuous G5 in the soundtrack and the melody of F Gb Gb F F Gb are really scary. The opera Fidelio (about a wife disguised to save her husband)
PS: 2 hours and 05 minutes, the newspaper says lucky to be alive.
The name Alice & her dream, the Nutcracker her daughter is reading, and the so-called "End of the Rainbow" - are another world she has built subconsciously. And Alice's dream (smiling in the dream, waking up crying) well explains that her marriage relationship with Bill oppresses her desire for desires. In marriage, she is ashamed of her desires, longs to indulge in her heart, and resists the imprisonment of marriage.
Hey, no matter how big the outside world is, why don't you go home, blind your head and close your eyes to deceive yourself and continue?
Full Metal Jacket (1987)
Sir, Yes Sir.
I only remembered Sir, Yes Sir in the first half an hour...& The music in 103 minutes was really amazing. If I want to comment, this is Mount Everest in the Vietnam War movie and even the war movie.
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Great, indescribable greatness.
After several years of intermittentness, I finally finished watching it. It's so advanced! First feeling: Every later space science fiction movie has been more or less influenced by it, but... it's so picky. PS: I have always adhered to the theory that "knowledge & ideas cannot be output". If you really want to output, it should also let the audience understand rather than give the answer directly to gain approval. This movie is the best example.
Spartacus (1960)
Although it was Kubrick's abandoned kid...
Although it was Kubrick's abandoned kid, everybody stood up collectively and shouted "I am Spartacus" at the end of the film, which was very touching. PS: The dispute with photographer Russell Metty is interesting.
Paths of Glory (1957)
Materpiece.
Patriotism is the last refuge for scoundrels.
Three long-lens depth movement (three trenches)
PS: The floor of the trial was set up as a chessboard, which is self-evident.
The Killing (1956)
Perfect, noir lovers are ecstatic!
Kubrick's work at the age of 28 saw the shadow of this one in too many later movies. The box of money flying all over the sky is like his talent that can no longer be hidden.
Day of the Fight (1951)
This is Kubrick's starting point.
At a cost of $3,900, Kubrick alone contracted the screenwriter, photography, editing and dubbing, and finally sold it to Radio Keith Orpheum for $4,000, and received a commitment of $1,500 for the next short film.