Without Shelley, this movie would not be nearly as creepy as it is. Her desperation and vulnerability are contagious. It's such a credible, sincere performance which complements Nicholsons descent into madness perfectly. That uncomfortable tension we all feel while watching this film is created and fueled by Shelley Duvall.
@@mohanicus I think this video is just clips from Vivian Kubrick's featurette on the DVD of the movie, at least the one I had in early 2000s. She also narrates it, and it is about an hour long.
Umay don’t be ridiculous. He’s a dedicated filmmaker and director trying to put his actors in the environment and state necessary for the camera to capture. They’re all professionals and clearly committed to the film. To act like the final product of The Shining isn’t brilliant is ridiculously This type of dedication to filmmaking is what Hollywood is missing so much nowadays.
We all know Jack Nicholson is brilliant but Shelly Duvall, wow!!!! she was utterly terrific in this role, she is such a talented actress, she is so perfect in every acting scenes. I loved her very much in shinning!
Whenever I see Shelley Duvall I wanna protect her from I don't even know what. She seems so fragile, vulnerable, kind-hearted and also a little lost and alone in this world. I couldn't think of a more perfect Wendy.
Shelley’s performance is key to the trajectory of Jack’s psychosis. When their stay begins she’s well-mannered, optimistic, asks how the writing is going. and you can tell Jack is immediately frustrated that he has no ideas, and he’s secretly regretting the venture. And he doesn’t know how to convey this to his wife who just wants to check on him. Jack is constantly lying about his feelings the whole movie, and you can feel this tension whenever she cheerfully reappears at the typewriter, prompting Jack to lie again
Nothing you said in this post is correct. Shelley is not the key to Jack's Psychosis. Jack was psychotic to begin with. You can see it in the car when they are driving to the hotel. In the hotel, the ghosts that are haunting the place are the key to his psychosis getting worse, not Shelley. As far as Jack writing, he was not frustrated because he had no ideas. He was upset because as his psychosis worsened, he had OCD like obsessive thoughts, He was wring the same thing over and over again, and she interrupted that pattern. You can see that the ghosts are working on his psychosis because of the nightmare he had about killing them.
8 месяцев назад+3
@@Michael-jw6et Wow. So wrong and yet so arrogant. Shelley was tortured by Kubrick on set to become unsure of herself, so she would be annoying on screen, making the audience hate her. If the audience sided with her, Jack would just be another psycho in a horror movie. But by Kubrick making her unease, Kubrick makes her acting suffer and the audience to side with Jack. And that`s the whole idea. We need to have empathy with Jack to understand his psychosis. It`s a mind game. A plot to manipulate the audience. Brilliant.
Shelley is perfect and beautiful here. She was comforting and I could relate to her and Danny’s relationship. I was his age when this movie came out . It’s still one of my favorite films . I honestly never cared for the book but love the moods and shots of Kubrick. A Skeleton of a novel to get his vision going , it’s a beautiful picture. All the actors did an amazing job. Wendy Carlos also did a great score .
As a musician, I LOVE the fact that Kubrick used Igor Stravinsky's _The Rite of Spring_ to motivate the actors! And not only that, but the actual _score_ had the same musical elements! AGGH! Genius!
Shelley just made the film for me. You can tell she’s not acting in some parts, it’s literally just anxiety and exhaustion from working with Kubrick. She knew what he was doing though, trying to get the absolute best performance he could from her, and he succeeded. She said she doesn’t regret it at all.
@@ShawnLamont1997 Not defending Kubrick - he could have been considerably more sympathetic - but you can easily tell Duval wasn't cut out for that world... not a personal criticism - just didn't have the disposition.
Doug styles It just seems that way because he’s so damn particular. This was a big budget movie, you think they’re gonna hire people who don’t know what they’re doing?
Did Stanley smoke weed do a LSD or anything because if not he looks like me after my 10th bong hit lol blowed away you ever watched 2001 stoned your life will change seriously it’s hard to even explain but try it you’ll no what I mean
Well I would agree that he knew wtf was going on set in terms of making his craft. But I don’t think he knew wtf was going on set in terms of how the people working with him felt. But I don’t think he would have cared.
Jack was amazing but Shelly's performance is extremely underrated and under appreciated. She really conveyed what her character was meant to be in a way where I can't imagine any other actress doing anything even remotely close to as good as she did and the impact of jacks performance totally hinges on how she delivered hers.
@@adamcade604 How does it demolish how great of a director he was? it only enhances that, it demolishes the idea (that if for some reason you had) that he was a good person perhaps, but the fact that he was willing to do these things to make a good movie does anything but take away how good and dedicated he was to directing, do you think that how good a director is is judged from how good a person he is? Becouse I'm pretty sure that literally just speaking in the most basic definitions the only thing that matters when saying how great a director someone is, is how good they are at directing. is your brain incapable of comprehending words, language, nuance, or are you just dumb?
to me she was as great as Jack...she did an outstanding job. If I love that movie is especially because of her realistic performance. She didn't get half the credits she really deserved. I think the mass often tend to critisize shy, introvert and modest people. A few start (usually journalists), and then a conspicuous number repeat after them without really analyzing the art included in someone's work.
@@ProlificThreadworm in the novel, Wendy is actually a strong, minimally damaged woman who leans towards holding grudges and being a ball buster to her husband. She becomes incredibly strong saving her son and herself from Jack & the Overlook. So Kubrick's version probably wasn't the version Duvall was expecting. Mistaking kindness for weakness is a mistake.
Kubrick personally told the staff to alienate and treat Shelly Duval terribly. He wanted to have her really look stressed and crazy for the film. That scene where is is angry with her is an example. She said many times "I felt like I couldnt do anything right"
What is your source that he "ordered cast and crew to ignore" Shelly? This has been thrown around, I have looked for it myself but I there seems to be no substance to these claims. In this video he simply says "don't sympathize with Shelly" when from what i can see, she's halting production bc she's tired or just 'not feeling it' that day, claims she's losing her hair and gives Kubrick like two hairs that he holds up to the camera to illustrate she's being silly. From that one thing, the internet has built the entire narrative of him abusing her and trying to isolate her. 😂
I was goddamn 16 when I saw that scene in 1980. I thought 'WTF', was glued to the screen. And been a Kubrick aficionado ever since. The 'green room' scene helped, too. I just knew that these scenes were burned into my memory forever.
Love the last shot of Kubrick on the dolly! Very memorable image of him. He looks so exhausted there but nothing will stop him from getting the perfect shot! Special shout out to all the crew members who had to try to keep up with the man. They all deserve an award for their amazing efforts!
Can’t tell how ecstatic I was to discover this video with all this behind the scenes footage. This is my favorite horror films and it’s amazing to see how everything is built, shot and so on. Also the bit with Kubrick’s mom visiting the set is so hilariously wholesome.
@@maliya1501 2001, a space odyssey, Dr Strangelove, Fulle metal jacket, clockwork orange, Lolita, Spartacus, and paths of glory are his most famous movies.
It's so amazing to watch one of the greatest directors (if not THE greatest) work! You can tell that everything revolves around the film for him. He would crawl in the dirt in front of people to get the perfect shot, that's dedication. And he's right about that! Everything that happened on set is fleeting, but the film is forever. And that's why that moment when he said "don't sympathize with Shelley" is so important! Most would see this as a lack of empathy but in reality Kubrick knew that what was happening behind the scene was just as important as in front of the camera! He shaped the actors into what they needed to be for the film, and he didn't let anyone corrupt them. That's exactly how he wanted Shelley. Absolutely morally neutral because he didn't do it for money but to create art, and true art always takes a toll! Kubrick always reminds me of the old artists and philosophers from antiquity. They create art, they do whatever it takes to do it, and that art will only be truly appreciated and respected for thousands of years after the artist's death. Furthermore, the actors knew that with Kubrick they were making art and not just any blockbuster. If you have a bigger goal you can't let ANYTHING distract you, and certainly not by feelings. I would never in my life dare to think for a millisecond of comparing myself to Stanley Kubrick, but when I made my own short films I learned first hand how important it is to only have the goal in mind! Thanks to uncut footage, I can see how I direct the short films, and whenever I look at them I can imagine what an asshole my friends (the actors in my films) think I am while filming. I give clear instructions, sharp tone, and every little detail is tweaked until I think it's right and if it doesn't go the way I want, I start belittling the actors and even become insulting and harsh. But it's all about creating my vision. AFTER the film, the actors get all the recognition they deserve!
@@Doomreb For 37 years into his life, he discovered the woman he’d been calling “sis” was actually his mother. In June 1974 the mystery of Jack’s birth came to light, just as his movie Chinatown was scheduled to open in theaters. In preparation for a cover story on Nicholson, a Time magazine reporter phoned Nicholson to check on the extraordinary information that had been unearthed: Jack’s “sister” June was in fact Jack’s mother, and a man claiming to be his father was alive and well in Ocean Grove, New Jersey. The news about Nicholson’s parentage turned out to be true: Jack, born on 22 April 1937, had been the illegitimate child of 17-year-old June Nicholson. Nicholson had spent his life up to age 37 assuming that his biological mother, June, was his sister, and that his maternal grandmother, Ethel May, was his mother. Even on their deathbeds, neither June nor Ethel May had offered up the truth.
Shelley was treated horribly by her husband on screen and horribly by the director off screen - that must have been the longest/hardest year of her life.
My God our family has the exact same typewriter but it was blue. I know it by it's sound. You can see how demanding and powerful Kubrick is in this. Thats whats needed when your striving for perfection. Being nice to people just doesn't cut it.
I honestly found Shelley Duvalls performance the most amazing in this movie. Everyone's great, sure, but Wendys panic and confusion really struck a chord with me.
Idk if you know this, but it's probably because she was actually terrified. She was extremely ill treated by Kubrick deliberately to try and get the best out of her.
Well the movie starts out that she already has a bit of the abused wife syndrome she talks about how he broke Dannys arm but she makes excuses for him just an accident etc. So she was a bit desensitized already and then she thinks it's just cabin fever and if she is just a good little housewife all will be well she doesn't have the second sight like Danny so she is not sure what is going on and he speaks to her as if she is the crazy one.
Something is only truly scary if you see someone react like it is. Otherwise it's just up to the viewer to feel however they feel, you might think Jack is pretty intense, but not be really scared yet. A director will SHOW the viewer what they should be feeling, and by normal human empathy the feeling will transfer. If you want to make your audience cry, show someone breaking down in tears. If you want something to be actually scary, show someone scared. Without Shelley Duvall it's just Jack Nicholson stalking around a house talking to himself. With Shelley it's a whole other thing.
simply wonderful, I have seen this film dozens of times and seeing how the actions are prepared and shot makes you understand all the professionalism necessary to create such masterpieces
8 месяцев назад
The way Kubrick tortures Shelley on set is just brilliant. She is on edge the whole time and that shows on screen. To me, she over acts because of it, but I believe Kubricks idea was to manipulate us to side with Jack and not Shelley. So we can understand his psychosis.
Kubrick wanted it that way - He hated to be interviewed. The only treasures are from the behind the scenes of his movies. We can thank Vivian and Stanley's daughter for making those possible. Go watch the Full Metal Jacket behind the scenes now before YT takes it off the site.
@@whynot7802 That's just an old cliché, and it's not true at all. It's expensive, it takes loads of time and professionals, and it's harder for the actors, too. Technology allows directors to reach unexpected levels of realism (look at GOT!). Have you ever seen how special effects are being made, today? Nowadays make-up artists are capable of doing wonderful things, and when it's possible to avoid using CGI, directors count on models, set buildings and make-up. But that being said, technology is irreplaceable for many things and effects, if you want them to be credible.
@@24Lorn Wtf ? Technology has made the job so much easier. Digital is easier and more convenient to shoot and you can direct from a video village which wasn't possible back then. If you fuck up a shot here, for ex having a the sound guy walk in the shot, you can't fix it in post using CGI. Everything has to be planned ahead of time, all the shots choreographed, the whole studio perfectly built. The opening shots have to be filmed with a heli not a drone etc etc... Space Odyssey has no CGI, it's a fucking marvel. That's why the piece is timeless, because you can always remaster the 70 mm and will always look incredible because all the visual effects are pratical unlike cgi.
It's appalling that some people are focusing on her looks. She's not playing the part of a beauty or a fashion model. What about Nicholson's unattractive, balding head? No one seems to take issue with his looks. Some are bitching about her acting, as if she cast herself in the role. Presumably she had something the director was looking for, or he would have chosen a different actress.
Shelley carried this movie. Iroinicly she was treaten badly but SHE MADE the movie, yes Jack played à Huge part but the parts were she gets scared is actually one of the reasons this movie is a cinema masterpiece
He is the quintessential actor. He's the actors actor. I heard him in an interview once and shared the intimate details of what acting is and how to achieve great performances. He crazy like a fox.
He's an award winning actor and one of the best ever. That's basically his job. Everybody who got to know him personally said the opposite of 'crazy'. Even in this video, when he's shown talking outside the set & meeting other people, you can see that he's more than fine. To make it even more interesting, he's one of the biggest womanizers in the industry, and yet you can't find one of hi ex-es talking bad about him or saying weird things about him.
Shelley Duvall, oh. Lovely. Her performance in this film is so underrated. It is the perfect complement to Nicholson’s madness. Brilliant. Heartbreaking seeing her so unwell a few years ago. I hope, wherever she is, she’s getting the help she needs. We love you, Shelley, wherever you are.
the first time I saw it I thought she was unbelievably bad, but I like her performance better every time I watch the movie. Still, unsure whether it was a good performance or not.
I love how Nicholson and Duvall are practicing their lines for a scene together, and even though they're both in the same room, they're each practicing with some rando filling in for the other. Kubrick's probably keeping them fresh so when they actually do the scene, they're alienated from each other and unsure. And then he probably filmed it again 88 times just to be sure.
12:23 I saw this years ago on DVD, and ever since I heard Kubrick direct the extras to not nod their heads while fake talking I can’t help but notice other extras nodding their heads like maniacs in nearly every single production. Such a master…
This is what true film making used to look like. Kubrick was brilliant and it's all because he cared about the story he was telling and didn't take shortcuts.
for me it allways looks that most famous actors play that "myself" rolljust to find out that acting is just that. Playing yourself the mood the director want's to. Another thing is an imitation of something and that s another dimension, is Jim Carrey's dimension :)
Kubrick was a genius with detail. For example, in the ballroom party scene, he told the extras not to nod their heads as they conversed which is super effective at giving that scene a sombre and eerie mood.
In a natural conversation, people only "nod" when they are being told a command, or recognizing authority, etc., and relaying an understanding by gesticulation. People just conversing freely would not "nod" at each other, and that action would make the extras seem unnatural. It would stand out, and take away from the fluid of the scene. Also, by telling the room of extras to mouth, not speak - it would kick in an instinct of non-vocalization that without speaking, they would unknowingly be trying to understand each other, and may nod at each other in a simple reflex. Kubrick knew that.
Amen to this, FB - Stanley just such an incredible director. Once, when working at the WB (mailroom only like all wanna-be's)? I snuck into Steven Speilberg's set for A.I. Haley Joel Osmont had been on the WB set all of the time, i.e. playing soccer with the crew, other cast - WB people. Anyway, on a day they WEREN'T scheduled to shoot? I snuck in, and was literally DUMB FOUNDED at the DETAIL of the A.I. sets they had built. You don't understand how great, how hard-working - how specific - how detail-oriented these great directors are. I remembered some of my lame film school-shoots - instantly became ASHAMED of myself. Vowed to work harder, harder, harder. Cuz the Speilberg's and Kubrick's - they literally work themselves to death. Drive themselves as hard (or harder) than their cast/crew. Made a lame joke to Haley Joel as I bopped-by - "Haley Joel am I still HERE?" Weak smile - that's about the fourteen-millionth bad-SIXTH SENSE joke HJO'd heard. But what a great kid - what a great impression Haley Joel'd had made on the WB lot. Everyone loved the kid. .
Wow! This was great to see! A real treat! I haven’t seen Stanley in action like this! Just to hear him speak. It’s rare. He looks like he was definitely a perfectionist. I had heard he made Tom Cruise do a take in Eyes Wide Shut over 90 times! For one scene! But he was a genius in filmmaking. Whoever posted this video Thank You!!!
I think Stanley Kubrick intentionally treated the two of them differently. Jack is supposed to be full of himself and self confident while Shelley is supposed to be insecure. These are just my thoughts. I still feel bad for her for what she had to go through but hey, her performance was amazing and I hope that she's proud of it in retrospect.
@@emxlioe That's very sad to hear. I wish her all the best. Kubrick was a special guy though and had a very special vision when making his movies. I couldn't say whether he disliked Shelley Duvall or if it was an act to accentuate the performances is all I'm saying.
I'm not an actor, but it's always seemed to me that acting scared -- and not looking like a bad B actor in a bad B horror movie -- isn't easy. Duvall has to spiral into greater and greater terror during at least half the movie, and I bought every minute of her performance. That's all you can really ask of an actor -- to be convincing in a fairly one-dimensional role and resist the audience's tendency to make the snap judgment "that looks fake."
carl wikström A part of me wants to believe Kubrick did it to actually get her to play the best of her character but maybe he was just being a jerk lol. Either way this movie is a master piece and that’s the genius of Kubrick.
Well done Vivian. I wonder if all the people who worked on the set of this movie realized just how many layers to this story there are. Still one of the best movies made, to this day 2021.
Jack gets all the credit for this movie and no question he his pretty fucking scary.... but Shelly deserves much more credit then she gets. She truly seemed terrified in those scenes and her terror is what made the movie. You didn't want to care about her much because she had such a blah personality... but in the end you got over that. which made it seem more realistic. Fantasy and Reality joined and she saw it happen.... as did we.
See I agree, because people just assume that all acting has to be over the top. So I think Shelly is just being more real than some other actors which adds to the fear, you know normal changing to fear!
That's true. But the real reason the audience doesn't care to much about her character is because the movie is told from Jack's perspective, he's insane and he hates her. But that almost goes over everyone's head, because the way the movie is told, we empathise with Jack. Thus we are being utterly manipulated by Kubrick.
Chris Martino you can't fake what she was suppose to do.. In order to appear distraught, crying, scared shitless, you really have to be. Every actor in that position has to make themselves cry and scared as well. I mean you can't ACT those pats
I loved the film but I disagree. His acting was very flat. His role was flat. Unexceptional. Exactly the way Kubrick wanted it I guess. Regardless, it's a lot to ask of a child.
Kubrick drove her to the EDGE of insanity - as the role simply REQUIRED such. (everyone else, as well) Kubrick was GOING for blood-coming-out-of-Shelley's-eyeballs. -the greatest directors, IMHO? Are all anal - anal is a GOOD thing. .
@@immaterialboy6806 IF this is the case, let me ask you, do you delight in saying that? If not, it surely sounded like you did. If so, then you're a gigantic asshole.
Shelley Duvall seems to be playing the same character on and off camera. I heard a rumour that Kubrick deliberately treated her cold and abruptly to _"enhance"_ her performance.
No, he was horrible to her while filming, the crew and other cast members even admitted it he would scream at her and treat her like crap but would be nice to Jack.
Which probably helped shape her character a lot and wear her down emotionally so he could get what he wanted. I was under the impression that she isn't that great an actor, and if you can't act being yourself, alas worn down, would probably get the director closer to the character.
if they are difficult people. my boss tells me what to do I don't react I do it because I'm getting paid to do it. Kubrick is the Boss. The film is his not the writer or actor. Always the director. If Duvall didn't like it too bad - be a professional
I'm sorry, but in longevity it's shelly's performance that carried the film. she deserved way more credit than she was given. ----- UPDATE - Kubrick & Nicholson’s work/talent were never in question. Your rush to vindicate them simply proves my point. Duvall deserves recognition & praise for her performance/work, just as they’ve always received.
Yeah honestly. let's be honest. She did fine. But Jack is the one person that carried the movie acting wise. He's one of the best and this performance shows.
Yeah, apart from the writing, the cinematography, the eerie music and sound design, Danny Lloyd and this Kubrick fella, she pretty much carried the film!
Wow amazing talent on everyone’s part. We should see more of this to appreciate the hard work that’s involved. So much detail for Kubrick, I don’t know how directors do it.
@@lukaguigas6681 rofl... definitely not overrated, but maybe you just weren't ready to really get the depth and layers of the story as there are so many...
@Anon Inconnu There are many ways a genius's work can be worth without envolving abuse. Im sure Mozart didnt abuse anyone when he wrote his masterpieces
Shelley Duval deserved so much praise for this role. I've heard so many people make fun of her acting, but here are some facts. Those tears are real. 1. Shelley was emotionally abused by Stanley Kubrick, the director, the whole time while filming. He constantly belittled her and yelled. 2. She had to cry in scenes for 12 hours, each day for over a year of filming. 3. The scene where she is swinging the bat at Jack going backward up the stairs, she had to shoot 127 times....127 times! The last shot is the one they used, where she could hardly hold onto the bat and her tears were real from weakness and pain. Her hands were bloodied from the bat, and she ended up dehydrated from crying. 4. It was a written rule on the set that no one was to praise her. 5. They would make her rehearse a scene 30 times before even filming it. 6. He purposely said and did cruel things to her, to make her cry and put anger into her character. 7. Stanley and Jack would laugh and joke about Shelly together. He loved and praised Jack. 8. She was Nominated "Worst Actress". 9. Shelley Duval was on Dr. Phil where he exploited her mental health on national TV and never followed up with help for her like he claimed he would. He used her for ratings. She makes this film and put her all into it. Next time you watch The Shining, look at it with a different perspective.
The kid who played Danny didn’t even know that it was a horror movie because Kubrick shielded him. That’s cool, but if you look back at the stuff Danny did how did he not realize it was a horror movie?
Christian Raines what I’m thinking is maybe he just saw the two girls together but then when the scene after you see them with blood all over them he didn’t see that it was just us the saw it
Unfortunantly,while he WAS content and on the direct point of how he wanted his work to be done,he was pushing too far. For every film,he worked on,he pretty much reshot his own takes and casted actors for roles which he thought would suit their personality,all because of ONE simple purpous: Reality. And here`s the proof. 9:31
Not quite. He was a man who knew what the hell he wanted, and yes, he knew how to get it, but at the expense of those who worked for him. Then he was baffled/exasperated when some couldn't handle the working conditions.
This is one of the films that you may not find scary at all in your 20s, but it certainly is one film that gets more disturbing and scary with age. Stanley Kubrick knew what he was doing; he knew this. He is one of the best directors ever
Without Shelley, this movie would not be nearly as creepy as it is. Her desperation and vulnerability are contagious. It's such a credible, sincere performance which complements Nicholsons descent into madness perfectly. That uncomfortable tension we all feel while watching this film is created and fueled by Shelley Duvall.
Seth Stine while very true, please learn the difference between compliment and complement. Also descent and decent.
Kubrick would literally scare the fuck out of her and not let her sleep so she was on edge. Man was a brilliant director
@@rooster12345678910 He probably scared the crap out of "Danny" too!
Yet, she was nominated for a Razzie as worst actress.....
I disagree. She was the worst thing in the movie. Not easy on the eye and she continually overacted. These two would never have been a couple.
I love how Nicholson can flip from being such a nice guy to a psychopath in like 10 seconds
B2S3 actors man, gotta freaking love them. So damn talented
I don't think he's acting...
Even when Nicholson's being normal, you can still feel a subtext of something.
Good morning..
FUCK YOU~!!!!!
@Moon Watcher
Whacky Jack~
Kubrick was such a perfectionist that he forced the guy who filmed this Behind the scene to take 50 takes for certain shots
Lmfao
Who are those kids meeting the cast?
the person behind the camera was kubrick's daughter.
@@mohanicus yeah. Jack even says "viv"
@@mohanicus I think this video is just clips from Vivian Kubrick's featurette on the DVD of the movie, at least the one I had in early 2000s. She also narrates it, and it is about an hour long.
Everytime I watch this movie I learn to appreciate Shelly Duvalls performance even more. You rock Shelly!!
Actually Jack Nicholson made this movie a classic. Nice try tho
@@thetawave2473all they said was they appreciate shelly more after each rewatch LOL u hatin bad
@@thetawave2473nah every actor played a crucial role in making this film a classic. Jack couldn’t have done it alone
@@thetawave2473for people that can't see more than the principal character probably lol
1:30 Kubrick discovering one of the most iconic shots in horror movie history, "...well thats not bad."
Jackson Langford Exactly.
Jackson Langford wat is Stanley using
?
Mercy Cain He's using a director's viewfinder
@@mercycain5347 Sort of just a handheld mount where you can put whatever lens you're using in the scene to easily find and get the best shot
Mercy Cain wide lens I think
Watching the lead actors struggling on set to remember their lines while Kubrick types new lines...This really is fascinating.
No it's not stanley kubrick is a big jerk to the actors n actresses
Umay don’t be ridiculous. He’s a dedicated filmmaker and director trying to put his actors in the environment and state necessary for the camera to capture.
They’re all professionals and clearly committed to the film.
To act like the final product of The Shining isn’t brilliant is ridiculously
This type of dedication to filmmaking is what Hollywood is missing so much nowadays.
@@SuperMisteryMan01 The movie is brilliant, but how he treated Shelley is ABUSE.
@Renacimiento I agree
@GENERAL DISARRAY'S BOSS 83 Calm down edgelord
We all know Jack Nicholson is brilliant but Shelly Duvall, wow!!!! she was utterly terrific in this role, she is such a talented actress, she is so perfect in every acting scenes. I loved her very much in shinning!
Are you sure lol?
She was terrible, but I guess it's Kubrik's fault.
@@djo-dji6018 Yeah, so let's not criticize her only.
Spot on
No she wasn't.
The ballroom scene is heavenly. Disembodied apparitions barely communicating, from another time and place, was captured in all its ethereal beauty.
Would probably be CGI generated today. Amazing scene!
Great comment Steve
Whenever I see Shelley Duvall I wanna protect her from I don't even know what. She seems so fragile,
vulnerable, kind-hearted and also a little lost and alone in this world. I couldn't think of a more perfect Wendy.
RoLorenz For this reason she had a mental breakdown and she is mentally ill now unfortunately.
it was real, it wasn't acting. these predators broke her. i don't care that they got "a good performance" when it cost her her sanity.
@@hakancevikel7368 She didn't have a mental breakdown from this movie. She was just fine mentally for decades after.
RoLorenz you said it all, right there!
"protect her from I don't even know what": mental health issues, probably.
Danny is now a 43 year old father of six... That really puts time into perspective.
He also loves his wife. A lot.
46 now
I don't think so. He has a niece Abra and half-sister but he never got married. He may have eventually, but he was single in Doctor Sleep
@@thepiperreport8198 Why are you doing this?
Can he still talk with Scatman, with his mind...?
Shelley’s performance is key to the trajectory of Jack’s psychosis. When their stay begins she’s well-mannered, optimistic, asks how the writing is going. and you can tell Jack is immediately frustrated that he has no ideas, and he’s secretly regretting the venture. And he doesn’t know how to convey this to his wife who just wants to check on him. Jack is constantly lying about his feelings the whole movie, and you can feel this tension whenever she cheerfully reappears at the typewriter, prompting Jack to lie again
Nothing you said in this post is correct. Shelley is not the key to Jack's Psychosis. Jack was psychotic to begin with. You can see it in the car when they are driving to the hotel. In the hotel, the ghosts that are haunting the place are the key to his psychosis getting worse, not Shelley. As far as Jack writing, he was not frustrated because he had no ideas. He was upset because as his psychosis worsened, he had OCD like obsessive thoughts, He was wring the same thing over and over again, and she interrupted that pattern. You can see that the ghosts are working on his psychosis because of the nightmare he had about killing them.
@@Michael-jw6et Wow. So wrong and yet so arrogant.
Shelley was tortured by Kubrick on set to become unsure of herself, so she would be annoying on screen, making the audience hate her. If the audience sided with her, Jack would just be another psycho in a horror movie. But by Kubrick making her unease, Kubrick makes her acting suffer and the audience to side with Jack. And that`s the whole idea. We need to have empathy with Jack to understand his psychosis. It`s a mind game. A plot to manipulate the audience. Brilliant.
@ It obviously failed with me. I only saw a pshycho and a scared mousy wife trying to safe her life.
Shelley is perfect and beautiful here. She was comforting and I could relate to her and Danny’s relationship. I was his age when this movie came out . It’s still one of my favorite films . I honestly never cared for the book but love the moods and shots of Kubrick. A Skeleton of a novel to get his vision going , it’s a beautiful picture. All the actors did an amazing job. Wendy Carlos also did a great score .
The book was terrifying imo
It's okay to say that you prefer Kubrick's Shining to King's, but to call the book a "skeleton of a novel" is just objectively plain wrong 🤷♂
@@TRUEGRIMEYes. The movie is good, but the book is - as always - even so much better.
@@TRUEGRIMEHe was referring to the movie…
@@kaka-wk8ic no he wasn’t, go read it again. They were talking about how good the movie was despite being based on a “skeleton of a novel.”
Jack Torrence did a fabulous job playing Jack Nicholson in this movie.
John Smith wait a minute
Jack didn't have to change too much for this role lol.
Between this and the Coo Coo, don't know which is my favorite?? Then there is Missouri Breaks......
Ha ha...u mean the other way around !! I like the way u put it .
Nice. I get it.
It’s so weird seeing Kubrick talk and move
Especially hearing him talk without an English accent
No shit. He's dead. That's what we call "film" or "video" or "taped" or "recorded".
I always imagined his voice to be high pitched.
@@jmitterii2 Bruh....
It seems like there’s more footage of him on set than in interviews.
As a musician, I LOVE the fact that Kubrick used Igor Stravinsky's _The Rite of Spring_ to motivate the actors! And not only that, but the actual _score_ had the same musical elements! AGGH! Genius!
The Rite of Spring sounded like a modern film score long before they existed.
Very innovative to say the least.
@@kevinscott59 Definitely!
when did he use that
Do you know what song he used in 11:12
@@recordprefect4284 7:27 - 8:23
Shelley just made the film for me. You can tell she’s not acting in some parts, it’s literally just anxiety and exhaustion from working with Kubrick. She knew what he was doing though, trying to get the absolute best performance he could from her, and he succeeded. She said she doesn’t regret it at all.
She shouldn’t .. she made this damn movie iconic along with jack what was done to her was completely wrong but she aced her role
@@ShawnLamont1997 Not defending Kubrick - he could have been considerably more sympathetic - but you can easily tell Duval wasn't cut out for that world... not a personal criticism - just didn't have the disposition.
Jack Nicholson made this movie but nice try with your feminist gaslighting
@@thetawave2473 No, I’m just going by actually facts instead of “woman = bad and if say otherwise FEMINIST” mindset you have.
Exactly, you saw through the feminist nonsens.@@thetawave2473
I honestly believe nobody but Stanley knew wtf was going on on set .
Doug styles It just seems that way because he’s so damn particular. This was a big budget movie, you think they’re gonna hire people who don’t know what they’re doing?
You genuinely think even Stanley knew wtf was going on on set?
Did Stanley smoke weed do a LSD or anything because if not he looks like me after my 10th bong hit lol blowed away you ever watched 2001 stoned your life will change seriously it’s hard to even explain but try it you’ll no what I mean
MrBlackghost34 I don’t think so. Genuinely creative people don’t need drugs to make great art, always remember that.
Well I would agree that he knew wtf was going on set in terms of making his craft. But I don’t think he knew wtf was going on set in terms of how the people working with him felt. But I don’t think he would have cared.
Jack was amazing but Shelly's performance is extremely underrated and under appreciated. She really conveyed what her character was meant to be in a way where I can't imagine any other actress doing anything even remotely close to as good as she did and the impact of jacks performance totally hinges on how she delivered hers.
Pretty sure these days it's very highly rated and everyone is aware of the sad story.
@@GlennDavey not enough
She is the image of extreme fear. No actress can do what she sucessfully done.
I agree 100% but in the end she's known for her amazing performance.
And regardless she got nominated as a bad actor in the raspberries. Unless that was relevant, must have been really sad for her
Imagine if Kubrick was typing "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy" @1:22
The type writing is so insistent haha
Someone actually did. I wonder who?
@@JackTorrance333 Me. That's how I spent seven years in grad school without ever writing a PhD thesis.
The way Kubrick smiles when Shelley says she’s losing hair because of the stress from the film is absolutely killing me
ONE strand turned into "clumps". DramaQueen 101
@@trawlins396 she said more was on the window sill her literal words were "it's on the window sill". She also said "it just comes out".
It's uncomfortable to watch his mistreatment, for and it demonishes how great of a director he was
@@adamcade604 How does it demolish how great of a director he was? it only enhances that, it demolishes the idea (that if for some reason you had) that he was a good person perhaps, but the fact that he was willing to do these things to make a good movie does anything but take away how good and dedicated he was to directing, do you think that how good a director is is judged from how good a person he is? Becouse I'm pretty sure that literally just speaking in the most basic definitions the only thing that matters when saying how great a director someone is, is how good they are at directing. is your brain incapable of comprehending words, language, nuance, or are you just dumb?
That's because you're a fool@@adamcade604
I thought Mr. Kubrick was typing "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy"...
*makes Stanley a dull boy
+Johan Delvare Haha good one.
Hahaha Yes, you crazy fucker, Hahahahaha!
+Johan Delvare *make Stanford a dull boy.
Wouldn't surprise me if he did or had someone else do it. No photocopies!
For all the crap Shelley got, she did a great job on this film. She is a fine actress.
The role was quite a weak, damaged woman, she was perfect. Not kubrick's fault she fitted that role in the first place.
to me she was as great as Jack...she did an outstanding job. If I love that movie is especially because of her realistic performance. She didn't get half the credits she really deserved.
I think the mass often tend to critisize shy, introvert and modest people. A few start (usually journalists), and then a conspicuous number repeat after them without really analyzing the art included in someone's work.
@@ProlificThreadworm in the novel, Wendy is actually a strong, minimally damaged woman who leans towards holding grudges and being a ball buster to her husband. She becomes incredibly strong saving her son and herself from Jack & the Overlook. So Kubrick's version probably wasn't the version Duvall was expecting. Mistaking kindness for weakness is a mistake.
She is more psycho in real life then jack
Agree, out standing performance from Duvall
Jack’s facial expressions were absolutely epic in this masterpiece
Kubrick personally told the staff to alienate and treat Shelly Duval terribly. He wanted to have her really look stressed and crazy for the film. That scene where is is angry with her is an example. She said many times "I felt like I couldnt do anything right"
What is your source that he "ordered cast and crew to ignore" Shelly? This has been thrown around, I have looked for it myself but I there seems to be no substance to these claims. In this video he simply says "don't sympathize with Shelly" when from what i can see, she's halting production bc she's tired or just 'not feeling it' that day, claims she's losing her hair and gives Kubrick like two hairs that he holds up to the camera to illustrate she's being silly. From that one thing, the internet has built the entire narrative of him abusing her and trying to isolate her. 😂
Well, she sure couldn't use an apostrophe right, if that's an accurate quote
Dude, the way Jack switches from psycho to just being himself is wow.
3:27
I used to be able to do this kind of thing in school plays. That's what acting is, playing. Jack was just having fun all day long.
Like my crazy boss.
That’s what makes him great
guys idk, it seems like he never fully snapped out of it here, especially when they were talking about the scripts.
kubrick: finds an iconic shot
also kubrick: well thats not bad
@yumpladukfoo past couple years been really getting into film, I think its an iconic shot
“Very good Jack”
@yumpladukfoo don’t be an asshole. It’s a good shot whether it’s been done before or not.
@yumpladukfoo Not in 70s it wasn't. Don't forget we all been here not long.
ALL cinema history? Really?
For Shelley this was an Oscar winning performance no doubt! She killed this role!! This footage is gold love it!!!
That moment when Kubrick asked Jack to say his lines while facing downward. That was a stroke of genius from Kubrick.
I've always loved that scene pretty cool to see it being conceived
Unbelievable
Classical Music11 : He had quite a few of those strokes!
I was goddamn 16 when I saw that scene in 1980. I thought 'WTF', was glued to the screen. And been a Kubrick aficionado ever since.
The 'green room' scene helped, too. I just knew that these scenes were burned into my memory forever.
YEP.
"Don't sympathize with Shelley." This is haunting to hear in retrospect.
I heard that too, but did he say "don't sympathize with Shelley" or "I don't sympathize with Shelley"?
Egret Song don’t sympathize
when did he say that?
6:38
@@cand4014 thanks m8
Love the last shot of Kubrick on the dolly! Very memorable image of him. He looks so exhausted there but nothing will stop him from getting the perfect shot! Special shout out to all the crew members who had to try to keep up with the man. They all deserve an award for their amazing efforts!
Yeah but why are there plants on it?
Can’t tell how ecstatic I was to discover this video with all this behind the scenes footage. This is my favorite horror films and it’s amazing to see how everything is built, shot and so on. Also the bit with Kubrick’s mom visiting the set is so hilariously wholesome.
very good , jack, lets do that again for the 120th time.
Oh yeah. What Kubrick did best: Reshooting the same scene 100 times to get the better.
'that was perfect jack! now lets do that again'
It's t get the actors get worn out and start acting strangly, so its more unnerving
Kubrick was a perfectionist.
Lol!!!
Stanley Kubrick might be the most terrifying director I've ever seen.
But he also was on of the most talented of all times.
And a really big perfectionist.
@@maliya1501 2001, a space odyssey, Dr Strangelove, Fulle metal jacket, clockwork orange, Lolita, Spartacus, and paths of glory are his most famous movies.
@@maliya1501 Watch clock work orange if you really wanna see how terrifying it can be
He also might be the best director
@@diegochatard-caraballo5848 let us not forget about his highly provocative finale..eyes wide shut.
It's so amazing to watch one of the greatest directors (if not THE greatest) work! You can tell that everything revolves around the film for him. He would crawl in the dirt in front of people to get the perfect shot, that's dedication. And he's right about that! Everything that happened on set is fleeting, but the film is forever. And that's why that moment when he said "don't sympathize with Shelley" is so important! Most would see this as a lack of empathy but in reality Kubrick knew that what was happening behind the scene was just as important as in front of the camera! He shaped the actors into what they needed to be for the film, and he didn't let anyone corrupt them. That's exactly how he wanted Shelley. Absolutely morally neutral because he didn't do it for money but to create art, and true art always takes a toll! Kubrick always reminds me of the old artists and philosophers from antiquity. They create art, they do whatever it takes to do it, and that art will only be truly appreciated and respected for thousands of years after the artist's death. Furthermore, the actors knew that with Kubrick they were making art and not just any blockbuster. If you have a bigger goal you can't let ANYTHING distract you, and certainly not by feelings.
I would never in my life dare to think for a millisecond of comparing myself to Stanley Kubrick, but when I made my own short films I learned first hand how important it is to only have the goal in mind! Thanks to uncut footage, I can see how I direct the short films, and whenever I look at them I can imagine what an asshole my friends (the actors in my films) think I am while filming. I give clear instructions, sharp tone, and every little detail is tweaked until I think it's right and if it doesn't go the way I want, I start belittling the actors and even become insulting and harsh. But it's all about creating my vision. AFTER the film, the actors get all the recognition they deserve!
Kubrick “don’t show her any sympathy”. Knowing how terrified Shelly was makes the movie so much scarier
Jack Nicholson is a very, *very* naturally creepy guy.
His sister is his mom. He gets a pass.
@@Doomreb For 37 years into his life, he discovered the woman he’d been calling “sis” was actually his mother.
In June 1974 the mystery of Jack’s birth came to light, just as his movie Chinatown was scheduled to open in theaters. In preparation for a cover story on Nicholson, a Time magazine reporter phoned Nicholson to check on the extraordinary information that had been unearthed: Jack’s “sister” June was in fact Jack’s mother, and a man claiming to be his father was alive and well in Ocean Grove, New Jersey. The news about Nicholson’s parentage turned out to be true: Jack, born on 22 April 1937, had been the illegitimate child of 17-year-old June Nicholson. Nicholson had spent his life up to age 37 assuming that his biological mother, June, was his sister, and that his maternal grandmother, Ethel May, was his mother. Even on their deathbeds, neither June nor Ethel May had offered up the truth.
@@Doomreb LOL
@@ngc6603 yep
Um.. ouch
Shelley was treated horribly by her husband on screen and horribly by the director off screen - that must have been the longest/hardest year of her life.
Yeah, He made her shoot the scene on the stairs with the bat over 60 times, Till she nearly was dehydrated from crying.
K.
no nick...Stan just wore her out to get that result.
Dr. Phil exploited her mental illness on his show
Nick Jasper she’s a horrible actress
My God our family has the exact same typewriter but it was blue. I know it by it's sound. You can see how demanding and powerful Kubrick is in this. Thats whats needed when your striving for perfection. Being nice to people just doesn't cut it.
LEOKIM!?
Triumph Tippa vintage
You can be both strict and maintain basic humility which this guy didn't unfortunately
Exactly. No wonder the movies released now are garbage. Lowest common denominator and bare minimum work being done. Kubrick is the best.
What was writring Kubrick ?
The making of a masterpiece
there is just something so cute and goofy about shelly duvall that is impossible not to love
Sverre Tysl yeah I feel you. What other movies has she done? I’ve never seen her anywhere else
@@isaacster5027 the live action popeye starring robin williams, she plays olive in it
@@isaacster5027 here you go ruclips.net/video/QrVoJgQ7u8w/видео.html
@@isaacster5027 Popeye with Robin Williams.
@@BatMan-ke4ov wow she looks different
I honestly found Shelley Duvalls performance the most amazing in this movie. Everyone's great, sure, but Wendys panic and confusion really struck a chord with me.
Idk if you know this, but it's probably because she was actually terrified. She was extremely ill treated by Kubrick deliberately to try and get the best out of her.
agreed
Well the movie starts out that she already has a bit of the abused wife syndrome she talks about how he broke Dannys arm but she makes excuses for him just an accident etc. So she was a bit desensitized already and then she thinks it's just cabin fever and if she is just a good little housewife all will be well she doesn't have the second sight like Danny so she is not sure what is going on and he speaks to her as if she is the crazy one.
Pump the brakes their. Shelley was great but Jacks performance in this movie is one of the best ever.
Something is only truly scary if you see someone react like it is. Otherwise it's just up to the viewer to feel however they feel, you might think Jack is pretty intense, but not be really scared yet. A director will SHOW the viewer what they should be feeling, and by normal human empathy the feeling will transfer. If you want to make your audience cry, show someone breaking down in tears. If you want something to be actually scary, show someone scared. Without Shelley Duvall it's just Jack Nicholson stalking around a house talking to himself. With Shelley it's a whole other thing.
simply wonderful, I have seen this film dozens of times and seeing how the actions are prepared and shot makes you understand all the professionalism necessary to create such masterpieces
The way Kubrick tortures Shelley on set is just brilliant. She is on edge the whole time and that shows on screen. To me, she over acts because of it, but I believe Kubricks idea was to manipulate us to side with Jack and not Shelley. So we can understand his psychosis.
@bro are you being serious right now???? 🤦🏽♂️
What a huge amount of work for a masterpiece. Amazing it turned out so perfect.
First time I've seen Stanley Kubrick moving.
Isn't that kinda weird? I have seen this guy's movies since I was 15, yet I have never watched a behind the scenes or seen him talk or move either...
Kubrick wanted it that way - He hated to be interviewed. The only treasures are from the behind the scenes of his movies. We can thank Vivian and Stanley's daughter for making those possible. Go watch the Full Metal Jacket behind the scenes now before YT takes it off the site.
That Full Metal Jacket movie scared the shit out of me when Gomer shoots himself.
cracked up readin this
He was American. He was born and grew up in New York. You can tell by his very thick Brooklyn accent.
When you see older films being made it make you appricate the art even more.
I apricot it, too!
Totally! Cause technology wasnt as today.which means today its so much easier to fillm a movie
@@whynot7802 That's just an old cliché, and it's not true at all. It's expensive, it takes loads of time and professionals, and it's harder for the actors, too. Technology allows directors to reach unexpected levels of realism (look at GOT!). Have you ever seen how special effects are being made, today? Nowadays make-up artists are capable of doing wonderful things, and when it's possible to avoid using CGI, directors count on models, set buildings and make-up. But that being said, technology is irreplaceable for many things and effects, if you want them to be credible.
it's as challenging as before if not more
@@24Lorn Wtf ? Technology has made the job so much easier. Digital is easier and more convenient to shoot and you can direct from a video village which wasn't possible back then. If you fuck up a shot here, for ex having a the sound guy walk in the shot, you can't fix it in post using CGI. Everything has to be planned ahead of time, all the shots choreographed, the whole studio perfectly built. The opening shots have to be filmed with a heli not a drone etc etc...
Space Odyssey has no CGI, it's a fucking marvel. That's why the piece is timeless, because you can always remaster the 70 mm and will always look incredible because all the visual effects are pratical unlike cgi.
Why does everyone keep saying Shelley is ugly?? She's adorable. Just because she isn't big chested and blonde doesn't mean she's ugly.
It's appalling that some people are focusing on her looks. She's not playing the part of
a beauty or a fashion model. What about Nicholson's unattractive, balding head? No one seems to take issue with his looks. Some are bitching about her acting, as if she cast herself in the role. Presumably she had something the director was looking for, or he would have chosen a different actress.
She was very cute in her youth.😊
Shelley carried this movie.
Iroinicly she was treaten badly but SHE MADE the movie, yes Jack played à Huge part but the parts were she gets scared is actually one of the reasons this movie is a cinema masterpiece
I think carried is a little bit of a stretch. Great performance, but most would agree this movie is nothing without Nicholson.
Man .. cmon … Jack Nicholson is the man here
I get Jack Nicholson is huge in this movie, but when I actually think of the movie, the first thought to my mind is Shelly Duval.
You must be kidding. Jack carried this film
Jack Nicholson is already crazy. The movie just allowed him to express it.
He is the quintessential actor. He's the actors actor. I heard him in an interview once and shared the intimate details of what acting is and how to achieve great performances.
He crazy like a fox.
He's an award winning actor and one of the best ever. That's basically his job. Everybody who got to know him personally said the opposite of 'crazy'. Even in this video, when he's shown talking outside the set & meeting other people, you can see that he's more than fine. To make it even more interesting, he's one of the biggest womanizers in the industry, and yet you can't find one of hi ex-es talking bad about him or saying weird things about him.
@@jamesbrooks354 do you have a link to this interview I'm really interested
Well he did play The Joker
@@shaklla369 lol, he's the only letch I've ever loved
Shelley Duvall, oh. Lovely. Her performance in this film is so underrated. It is the perfect complement to Nicholson’s madness. Brilliant. Heartbreaking seeing her so unwell a few years ago. I hope, wherever she is, she’s getting the help she needs. We love you, Shelley, wherever you are.
"Don't sympathize with Shelley." 6:39
@JEFFREY ADLER Her acting is one of the reasons, why I strugled with watching the movie. It wasn't good at all.
HardCR0W it was great, and it was kubricks vision to make her so desperate. He even said her line was too strong
the first time I saw it I thought she was unbelievably bad, but I like her performance better every time I watch the movie. Still, unsure whether it was a good performance or not.
@Jim A Capital BULLSHIT!!!
I love how Nicholson and Duvall are practicing their lines for a scene together, and even though they're both in the same room, they're each practicing with some rando filling in for the other. Kubrick's probably keeping them fresh so when they actually do the scene, they're alienated from each other and unsure. And then he probably filmed it again 88 times just to be sure.
This movie aged very well. Just watched it for the 20 time and it's still just as chilling.
Shelly Duval: my hair’s falling out because I’m so stressed.
Kubrick: yeah but did I ask tho
Probably exactly what he was thinking lmao
She seemed to be handling it well to me
Kubrick: & don’t sympathize with her.
and then he tells people not to sympathize with Shelley.
@Cheek Chaser You hate women? Why?
Jack seems so cool to work with
Indeed! I bet you him and Michael Keaton had a ball in Tim Burton's Batman! Those two are delightfully cray-cray! XD
Stanley Kubrick...one of the most genius directors the world has ever seen. Love all of his work
and most abusive, he is a loser
You mean an asshole, fuck that dude...if you cant get results from your actors without abusing them, then are you really a good director? So stupid
Stanley made us truly feel for Shelley’s character, even her as a person.
12:23
I saw this years ago on DVD, and ever since I heard Kubrick direct the extras to not nod their heads while fake talking I can’t help but notice other extras nodding their heads like maniacs in nearly every single production. Such a master…
Who else thinks that Shelly is a unique beauty?
cosmo_rebeljdal97 Mia Goth looks like her. Definitely a throwback to that same kind of beauty. Too bad things ended up so sad for her.
Only in the same way that every mother thinks their child is beautiful.
Absolutely
Not many Italian girls around, but she was def a textbook example.
@Mooky Blaylock because of her mental illness? :(
crazy how they were able to film the whole movie without danny realizing it’s a horror film and not a drama. he didn’t even find out until years later
Yrs. We know. It's in the trivia
That’s insane
@@trawlins396 I didn't know
They kept his sanity. Why Shelly's sanity took a huge dent.
I had read the book and watched the movie 🎥 4x and today I stumbled upon this 💎 gem! Thank you for posting!!👌☺️
This is what true film making used to look like. Kubrick was brilliant and it's all because he cared about the story he was telling and didn't take shortcuts.
Jack Nicholson getting paid to be Jack Nicholson.
Zombitious ( lmao so true
per usual
xD
You have to admit that you know you've made it when you have gotten rich by being paid for being yourself
for me it allways looks that most famous actors play that "myself" rolljust to find out that acting is just that. Playing yourself the mood the director want's to. Another thing is an imitation of something and that s another dimension, is Jim Carrey's dimension :)
Its incredible how you can see Stanley Kubrick casually typing the "All work and no play" lines on the typewriter.
Amazing
Eduardo Vazquez makes jack a dull boy
"So, what's the next line?..."
*looking on the left*
"...oh, the same again, right."
Two fingered typer too. --- i meant to type it that way.
Wrong. He had his secretary type it
No actually he had a helper so those
15:04 I feel so sorry for Shelley Duvall. She didn’t deserve any of the treatment she got while filming the movie
I love the behind the takes it help the viewer to understand the filming process -- Love it!!
Kubrick was a genius with detail. For example, in the ballroom party scene, he told the extras not to nod their heads as they conversed which is super effective at giving that scene a sombre and eerie mood.
Yep
He told them not to nod their heads because that looks phony.
but if you watch the scene on the first table someine dose nod
In a natural conversation, people only "nod" when they are being told a command, or recognizing authority, etc., and relaying an understanding by gesticulation. People just conversing freely would not "nod" at each other, and that action would make the extras seem unnatural. It would stand out, and take away from the fluid of the scene. Also, by telling the room of extras to mouth, not speak - it would kick in an instinct of non-vocalization that without speaking, they would unknowingly be trying to understand each other, and may nod at each other in a simple reflex. Kubrick knew that.
Amen to this, FB - Stanley just such an incredible director. Once, when working
at the WB (mailroom only like all wanna-be's)? I snuck into Steven Speilberg's set
for A.I. Haley Joel Osmont had been on the WB set all of the time, i.e. playing
soccer with the crew, other cast - WB people. Anyway, on a day they WEREN'T
scheduled to shoot? I snuck in, and was literally DUMB FOUNDED at the DETAIL
of the A.I. sets they had built. You don't understand how great, how hard-working -
how specific - how detail-oriented these great directors are. I remembered some of
my lame film school-shoots - instantly became ASHAMED of myself. Vowed to work
harder, harder, harder. Cuz the Speilberg's and Kubrick's - they literally work themselves
to death. Drive themselves as hard (or harder) than their cast/crew. Made a lame joke
to Haley Joel as I bopped-by - "Haley Joel am I still HERE?" Weak smile - that's about the
fourteen-millionth bad-SIXTH SENSE joke HJO'd heard. But what a great kid - what a great
impression Haley Joel'd had made on the WB lot. Everyone loved the kid.
.
It's even scary behind the scenes!
Hahahahahaha
@GENERAL DISARRAY'S BOSS 83 you mean your dad who killed you
Wow! This was great to see! A real treat! I haven’t seen Stanley in action like this! Just to hear him speak. It’s rare. He looks like he was definitely a perfectionist. I had heard he made Tom Cruise do a take in Eyes Wide Shut over 90 times! For one scene! But he was a genius in filmmaking. Whoever posted this video Thank You!!!
I can imagine Cruise losing his shit over those 90 takes. I'd love to see that footage.
This is SO MUCH FUN, I am so happy seeing this. WOW! If only they had filmed every minute of the filming...
I think Stanley Kubrick intentionally treated the two of them differently. Jack is supposed to be full of himself and self confident while Shelley is supposed to be insecure. These are just my thoughts. I still feel bad for her for what she had to go through but hey, her performance was amazing and I hope that she's proud of it in retrospect.
carl wikström she's mentally ill now and that can be mainly attributed to how bad she was treated in the making of the film. It drove her crazy
@@emxlioe That's very sad to hear. I wish her all the best. Kubrick was a special guy though and had a very special vision when making his movies. I couldn't say whether he disliked Shelley Duvall or if it was an act to accentuate the performances is all I'm saying.
She “won” the Razzie for worst actress that year to add insult to injury.
I'm not an actor, but it's always seemed to me that acting scared -- and not looking like a bad B actor in a bad B horror movie -- isn't easy. Duvall has to spiral into greater and greater terror during at least half the movie, and I bought every minute of her performance. That's all you can really ask of an actor -- to be convincing in a fairly one-dimensional role and resist the audience's tendency to make the snap judgment "that looks fake."
carl wikström A part of me wants to believe Kubrick did it to actually get her to play the best of her character but maybe he was just being a jerk lol. Either way this movie is a master piece and that’s the genius of Kubrick.
So she was not scared of Jack in the movie, But actually Stanley Kubrick!
E
@@ComplexFantasiesIndustries A
@@mojo6112 I
@@mojo6112 sports
@@utkarshpandey6424 it's in the game
Well done Vivian.
I wonder if all the people who worked on the set of this movie realized just how many layers to this story there are. Still one of the best movies made, to this day 2021.
This is One Of the Greatest Video
Clips I have Ever Seen!!! Fantastic!!! Thank you very much For Posting!!!
Jack gets all the credit for this movie and no question he his pretty fucking scary.... but Shelly deserves much more credit then she gets. She truly seemed terrified in those scenes and her terror is what made the movie. You didn't want to care about her much because she had such a blah personality... but in the end you got over that. which made it seem more realistic. Fantasy and Reality joined and she saw it happen.... as did we.
See I agree, because people just assume that all acting has to be over the top. So I think Shelly is just being more real than some other actors which adds to the fear, you know normal changing to fear!
That's true. But the real reason the audience doesn't care to much about her character is because the movie is told from Jack's perspective, he's insane and he hates her. But that almost goes over everyone's head, because the way the movie is told, we empathise with Jack. Thus we are being utterly manipulated by Kubrick.
3:41 She was probably talking about "Here`s Johnny!"
Uh...after watching this, especially the segment around 6:15, I'm not surprised that she never worked in Hollywood again.
Chris Martino you can't fake what she was suppose to do.. In order to appear distraught, crying, scared shitless, you really have to be. Every actor in that position has to make themselves cry and scared as well. I mean you can't ACT those pats
We all know Jack Nicholson is a phenomenal talent, but that little Danny Lloyd was OUTSTANDING
He was so young and completely convincing!
'REDRUM!!! REDRUM!!!'
That's what I'm saying, for a child actor he did a brilliant job I'm sure he would be a bigger actor by now if just he continue the acting business
I loved the film but I disagree. His acting was very flat. His role was flat. Unexceptional. Exactly the way Kubrick wanted it I guess. Regardless, it's a lot to ask of a child.
BRK A exceptional acting
Look for his cameo in the baseball scene in Doctor Sleep
Kubrick was a genius. The Shining is one of my favorite films of all time. Masterful work by all involved.
The amount of abuse that freakin Kubrick did to Shelly was seriously unnecessary... I give heavy props to her...
I thought her acting was crap
@@carlosvacos yeah but it made the movie more weird
3:30 love his hmm after he finishes laughing LOL
Lmao, he's so cute
It reminds me of heath ledger as the joker
ehhhmm LSKSKSJSMSKS
@@mads2668 Let’s not forget Jack played the joker in the 80s
Shelly Duvall was a cool person. I enjoy hearing her talk
She’s barely alive anymore, she’s crazy as fuck, watch her interview with dr.phil
Kubrick drove her to the EDGE of insanity - as the role simply REQUIRED such.
(everyone else, as well)
Kubrick was GOING for blood-coming-out-of-Shelley's-eyeballs.
-the greatest directors, IMHO?
Are all anal - anal is a GOOD thing.
.
@@immaterialboy6806 IF this is the case, let me ask you, do you delight in saying that? If not, it surely sounded like you did. If so, then you're a gigantic asshole.
This video is so rare they had to put it on every DVD and blu ray edition as an extra, to keep its rareiness even rarer.
Let people enjoy things.
an absolute masterpiece of a movie, and this is a gem of a clip that needs to be enshrined with it.
It’s on every dvd and blue ray ever produced. So, someone agreed wholeheartedly with your opinion.
Shelley Duvall seems to be playing the same character on and off camera. I heard a rumour that Kubrick deliberately treated her cold and abruptly to _"enhance"_ her performance.
Yes this very very true.
+BPLNothingChannel yes, clearly telling people what you want ALWAYS elicits a negative, difficult reaction from the person you're dealing with
No, he was horrible to her while filming, the crew and other cast members even admitted it he would scream at her and treat her like crap but would be nice to Jack.
Which probably helped shape her character a lot and wear her down emotionally so he could get what he wanted. I was under the impression that she isn't that great an actor, and if you can't act being yourself, alas worn down, would probably get the director closer to the character.
if they are difficult people. my boss tells me what to do I don't react I do it because I'm getting paid to do it. Kubrick is the Boss. The film is his not the writer or actor. Always the director. If Duvall didn't like it too bad - be a professional
I'm sorry, but in longevity it's shelly's performance that carried the film. she deserved way more credit than she was given.
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UPDATE - Kubrick & Nicholson’s work/talent were never in question. Your rush to vindicate them simply proves my point. Duvall deserves recognition & praise for her performance/work, just as they’ve always received.
Jack was in my opinion the most crucial performance to the entire film.
Yeah honestly. let's be honest. She did fine. But Jack is the one person that carried the movie acting wise. He's one of the best and this performance shows.
Jack is laughing at your comment
Yeah, apart from the writing, the cinematography, the eerie music and sound design, Danny Lloyd and this Kubrick fella, she pretty much carried the film!
Jack stole the show, and it wasn't because he had better lines than her. His presence and charisma is too powerful.
Wow amazing talent on everyone’s part. We should see more of this to appreciate the hard work that’s involved. So much detail for Kubrick, I don’t know how directors do it.
Shelley Duvall is absolutely amazing in this and so beautiful!
You know movie's great when people still talk about it in 2017,18 , 19, 20 ....
IMO that was an overrated movie(boring) just like all popular movies before the 80s
Pretty much. Those that don’t know will try to undermine it.
@@lukaguigas6681 rofl... definitely not overrated, but maybe you just weren't ready to really get the depth and layers of the story as there are so many...
@@jmbwithcats well it's still better than the mediocre unoriginal movies of the past few years
that's not true. people still talk about batman & robin and it's a garbage movie.
shelley: my hairs falling out
stanley: don’t sympathize with shelley
oh
I noticed that too. kubrick was a cruel narcissistic genius.
@@chrissikora8097 more like an asshole
@Anon Inconnu being genius doesnt give you the right to abuse people
Driada Troplini but she said it all paid off.
@Anon Inconnu There are many ways a genius's work can be worth without envolving abuse. Im sure Mozart didnt abuse anyone when he wrote his masterpieces
I love seeing this. Thank you 🖤
I have been watching this for years. Amazing
Shelley Duval deserved so much praise for this role. I've heard so many people make fun of her acting, but here are some facts. Those tears are real.
1. Shelley was emotionally abused by Stanley Kubrick, the director, the whole time while filming. He constantly belittled her and yelled.
2. She had to cry in scenes for 12 hours, each day for over a year of filming.
3. The scene where she is swinging the bat at Jack going backward up the stairs, she had to shoot 127 times....127 times! The last shot is the one they used, where she could hardly hold onto the bat and her tears were real from weakness and pain. Her hands were bloodied from the bat, and she ended up dehydrated from crying.
4. It was a written rule on the set that no one was to praise her.
5. They would make her rehearse a scene 30 times before even filming it.
6. He purposely said and did cruel things to her, to make her cry and put anger into her character.
7. Stanley and Jack would laugh and joke about Shelly together. He loved and praised Jack.
8. She was Nominated "Worst Actress".
9. Shelley Duval was on Dr. Phil where he exploited her mental health on national TV and never followed up with help for her like he claimed he would. He used her for ratings.
She makes this film and put her all into it. Next time you watch The Shining, look at it with a different perspective.
@Jolly Wyrm I didnt copy? Some people think a like I guess. That kinda hurt my feelings.
So sad what the news said about her
No director is a human, for him or her art precedes humanity. Hollyweird apathy is best example of that.
Thankfully this type of behavior would never fly today.
#BelieveWomen
The kid who played Danny didn’t even know that it was a horror movie because Kubrick shielded him. That’s cool, but if you look back at the stuff Danny did how did he not realize it was a horror movie?
Right like the scene with the girls laid out in blood 😒😣
Christian Raines what I’m thinking is maybe he just saw the two girls together but then when the scene after you see them with blood all over them he didn’t see that it was just us the saw it
@@MiiZzJ0kEr yeah tbat makes sense. But what about the other scenes?
Christian Raines like when he has to run through the maze being chased by his dad with an ax
@@bugthebeloved lol right
Still one of the best psycho-thriller films ever made.
THE best.
This is astonishing. To see it all happen in the moment. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen this much footage of Kubrick actually at work.
The way Stanley smiles when he finds one of the most iconic shots of movie. You can tell he knew he struck gold
time stamp. please
@@patrickdwyer320I think the freezer shot, when he came up with the medium shot, angle from below.
@@patrickdwyer3201:50
@@jacquelinedara8606 holy sh*t, you are on top of it, thanks Jaqueline!
@@patrickdwyer320 I do what I can. ✊🏻
Stanley Kubrick was a man who knew what the hell he was doing.
He wasn't a good man.
Unfortunantly,while he WAS content and on the direct point of how he wanted his work to be done,he was pushing too far. For every film,he worked on,he pretty much reshot his own takes and casted actors for roles which he thought would suit their personality,all because of ONE simple purpous: Reality. And here`s the proof. 9:31
Not quite. He was a man who knew what the hell he wanted, and yes, he knew how to get it, but at the expense of those who worked for him. Then he was baffled/exasperated when some couldn't handle the working conditions.
But all he ever did was look too far. Or better yet,saw reality in a different light,too much.
And now he's a worm crawling through the fires of hell. Fuck Kubrick.
I wish I could have met Kubrick more than meet any actor. A true master at his craft.
poor Shelley, gave it her all and got the least out of it. at least she gets the recognition she deserves nowadays
Ya know what drove Jack crazy? The sound of that goddamn typewriter! Holy shit, that's a mind melting noise!
KingKook to a writer, it's the sound of inspiration
I love that sound
That’s a great sound!
JD Bond ikr I love that sound
@@tomatohead8943 I love how he types two fingered, "hunt and peck," as I do. 10-fingered typing would have been too slick for our Stan. Cool!
What a fucking classic movie, and this behind the scenes was more entertaining and scarier than most horrors today
This is one of the films that you may not find scary at all in your 20s, but it certainly is one film that gets more disturbing and scary with age. Stanley Kubrick knew what he was doing; he knew this. He is one of the best directors ever
Hey Great job Vivian Kubrick, excellent presentation!