I recently had a chat with a guy who worked at the Chinese Theatre in LA. Met loads of actors/directors, and he said Spielberg was by far the nicest guy he ever met.
Stanley Kubrick was the best director EVER. He made only THIRTEEN movies, and 6 of them, Spartacus, 2001, Dr Strangelove, The Shining, Barry Lyndon and Clockwork Organge, are truly classics, masterpieces, movies that must be at any top 100 of all time. He was a genius.
I find it so touching that two directors can have so much time for each other - that when Kubrick died Spielberg and his friends talked about him all day, they watched Spielberg's favourite emotional scene of Kubrick's. I think only true artists can have such affection for their peers because for them, it's all about the passion and the craft.
pekbek mkek A fascinating video which wonderfully conveys the unique gift and talents of two brilliant directors and their abilities to illustrate and celebrate both the best and worst qualities of human nature. How it is, that your only contribution to something so positive, is an incredibly weak attempt at belittling someone else, is truly astounding. I feel genuine sorrow for the inner anger and self hatred that clearly lives within the infinitesimally small world you inhabit. How sad and pathetic. Cheers!!
@@pekbekmkek6310 You absolute idiot. Spielberg inherited A I. as a part of Kubrick's legacy, it was a film Kubrick had in the pipeline and wanted to direct, but suddenly died before finishing it. And he gave direct instructions if anyone was to take over Spielberg was the only one that would do. That how much he appreciated Spielberg.
@@pekbekmkek6310 How about you go look up EVERY single interview of Stanley's family and friends where they talk about the long phone calls and reciprocal admiration that he and Steven had for 20 years? How about you go look for the facts yourself before talking?
Just watched Paths of Glory for the first time and that last scene was one of the most powerful scenes I've ever watched.
8 лет назад+153
One directorial genius (Spielberg) giving a rousing exposition of another genius (Kubrick). Folks, enjoy it. These men won't live forever - their art will (hopefully)
Their creations will inspire the future geniuses of cinema. They have provided the foundations on which we now must improve and expand. Their art will live on, in itself and in all art that follows it.
@@withnail-and-i We have been hearing that statement for years and yet nothing has changed. Nothing ever will change because nothing will ever give you that experience in film better than Cinemas. Theartre has been around since Ancient Greece. It is still going very strong today as it did back then.
Spielberg is such a great talker. It's amazing how on-camera he's always so succinct and insightful. How his mind works is a marvel; he's amazing at describing things. He's a story teller on both sides of the camera. Most great directors are I've noticed.
Interesting Spielberg mentions that whole "can't turn it off" ability that Kubrick has. I didn't like Eyes Wide Shut, but I couldn't for the life of me turn it off, and I didn't feel like I wasted my time after finishing it like I do with other films I don't like. Kubrick films have always been "experiences" whether or not you happen to like a given work or not. Brilliant director and a true craftsman.
When I left the movie theater after having seen Eyes Wide Shut, I felt like the movie was okay, nothing more. Two weeks later, I was still thinking about it. That's Kubrick.
Oxmustube EGG FUGGIN ZACTLY, lol. Won't ever forget the first time I watched The Shining..went in unsure what to expect, went out shaking my head not sure what to think...then I went in again. And again. And again. Etc.
+opmike343 I thought Eyes Wide Shut was okay after the first time I saw it, good after the second time. Now I've seen it maybe 5 times and I think it's a masterpiece. That's the Classic Kubrick pattern, at least for me. His films have a magnetic Power but can be very challenging which means that I don't necessarily like them right away.
i used to hate eyes wide shut...but like berg said on kubricks magic craft...now its become my favorite in the collection. That movie haunts me with its damn we really are instinctual humans after all and maybe we shouldnt be living by rules. Questions your relationship hard even if its a super good relationship your in.
Holy crap Spielberg nailed it! When people say Kubrick was a Director it's such an understatement because he was a film maker in every aspect. He shot his own films most of the time, labored over the editing process in both visual and sound, and while many of his movies were mono sound mixes it was deliberate and they came out nicely and that is saying something since I always think a film needs a 4ch or 5.1 mix at minimum. What makes a good film maker is the one that cares about every aspect of the film making process and Kubrick was obsessed with every aspect.
+Vrabo Woody Allen also insists on a mono sound mix. I assume it's puratanical on the auteur's part. As Hollywood eschews serious cinema, I guess Netflix et al will become the filmmaker friendly stables off auteur directors.
Easily? Not a chance. He's in a group of about 20 directors that you'd put as the best. He obsessed about detail, as the scene in the plane with the bombardier about to drop the bomb. It's like you're right there in the cockpit. Part of that obsession were scenes in some of his movies that went on too long (IMO).
@@francescobruno418 What are you talking about? What do you know? The guys were buddies and they loved each other's work. What in the hell are you talking about?
I agree with Steven that even though you know what's coming with each viewing of a Kubrick film, you always get something different. As someone who doesn't revisit the same film too much, it's easy to remember the structure of all Kubrick films and yet, I always experience it from the point of view of a new person.
"We [filmmakers] are all children of D.W. Griffith and Stanley Kubrick." -Martin Scorsese I've said it numerous times before and I'll say it again, Stanley Kubrick is the greatest filmmaker of all time. "Spielberg......on Kubrick". Nothing short of inspiring!
@@HerveBoisde there’s no such as thing as “better” or “the best” in cinema. Arts is not sports. Spielberg does a blockbuster like no one can and Kubrick can make an arthouse film like no one can also. They are incredible filmmakers in their own right and both have an impact on the medium that is immeasurable to this day. Although I have other directors that I adore (Hitchcock, Lynch, Cameron, Scorsese, Coppola, Nolan, Fincher, Leone, Almodovar, Kurosawa, Bergman, Fellini, Tarkovsky, Truffaut, Eisenstein, Lean, Ford to name a few), Kubrick’s and Spielberg’s films shaped my childhood, showed me the ropes and made me love the art of cinema from both sides, the art house and the blockbuster one, both equally important to me.
JESUS i love this dude. him freely admitting he didn't "love" a classic like "the shining" is so totally honest, man. sure, he backtracks and eventually heaps praise on it and all, but in film nerd circles saying you didnt absolutely love a stanley kubrick flick is basically akin to shitting on every film fan's head personally. bravo, mr. spielberg!!
Here’s one of my favorite film directors, Steven Spielberg, reminiscing on my all-time favorite film director, the genius that was Stanley Kubrick. It’s pretty incredible to consider that, in a career spanning nearly half a century, Kubrick only directed 13 feature films and three short documentaries. And yet for a man with such a short list of credits, his massive influence on film and generations of filmmakers is incalculable. Like Chaplin, Stanley is in a category all by himself.
Wow, in my opinion Spielberg nails it every time. I can't think of better verbiage or words to use to describe the genius of Kubrick. I guess it takes someone like Spielberg. Thanks Mr. Spielberg, that was a moving tribute to Stanley Kubrick.
Randomly I've heard the word "kabuki theater" like 10 times today. But in terms of this interview, I love this anecdote about Kubrick's explanation of why Jack Nicholson's performance is great by referencing Jimmy Cagney. And then this idea of Kubrick's craft being perfect and how you can watch his films 25 times and always find something new in them. I think this comes from his experience as a photographer and a true artist looking at every shot and every angle as a unique opportunity to communicate with/thrill/confuse/impress/attract the audience.
When he was talking about which film he showed to his friends I somehow guessed that it was Paths of Glory and the final scene specifically. It's my personal favourite of Kubrick's and I would definitely elect that scene as the most emotional, or perhaps the execution. Such a shame he died so early, I would have loved to see what else he could have created
Stanley is the Pound for Pound, All Around Best Director of all Time. He may not have made the best War, or Horror, or Sci-Fi, or Romance, or Thriller, or Comedy film. But his fipms in every genre are always in the top 3. If someone told me to choose a Director to create a movie of random genre, it would be Stanley.
Stanley Kubrick and Steven Spielberg--2 of the greatest filmakers ever. I have a dream to be a director, and if I had to cite two of the greatest ones that so entice me to make film, it would be them. RIP Stanley Kubrick, one of the greatest filmaker of all time.
i've seen Paths of Glory countless times, and that last scene, seeing it, or describing it, or even thinking about it, makes me weep every. single. Time.
Kubrick was a landmark director! Pretty much every film he did were brilliant but my favourites are A Clockwork Orange, The Shining, Dr. Strangelove and 2001: A Space Odyssey (well, they're probably his best known films).
What a great interview. Spielberg on Kubrick. Perfect combo. As said before, didn't realize I was a film buff, until later in life and cognighted that some of my all time fav flicks were Kubrick. Wonderful stuff, the man behind the curtain.
every story was a slap in the face to the human ego.....last line in Barry Lyndon "It was in the reign of George III that the aforesaid personages lived and quarreled; good or bad, handsome or ugly, rich or poor they are all equal now.”
There have been great directors, famous Oscar-winning directors, all kinds of whatever kind of directors... Ford, Hitchcock, Coppola, Spielberg, etc. But Stanley Kubrick was a true genius. Every facet of his person seemed to scream 'Genius". From his director's "eye", his focus on details, his deep, deep exploration into the psyche of his characters, the way he developed his movies into exposés of humanity itself, the puzzle pieces of his films, his aloofness. I think the guy was a genius right up there with Beethoven, Mozart, Rembrandt, Shakespeare. He explored the human condition as deeply as one dares to go from every angle imaginable, and you could watch one of his movies and ponder for the remainder of the week what it was revealing.
My Top 6 Stanley Kubrick Films 6. Full Metal Jacket 5 Dr. Strangelove (Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb) 4. Paths Of Glory 3. 2001 A Space Odyssey 2. A Clockwork Orange 1. The Shining
For me it's 3 that really stand out: 1) Full Metal Jacket - first half w/R Lee Ermey is *so good* it makes up for a just "good" 2nd half 2) The Shining 3) 2001 All 10/10 classics
I find fantastic to be listening to a gentleman like Spielberg talking about someone who could have been perfectly his master in directing's area. For me Kubrick and Spielberg are two incredible genius and at the same time wise people who can be a great reference if you want to make a cool movie.
@@vargaso No. The lunar surface looks nothing like how Kubrick imagined it. He used Chesley Bonestell's paintings that show a jagged, Rocky Mountain look. The Moon's surface is much more dusty, rocky, eroded and rounded than Kubrick could imagine it.
I won't say The Best. DDL in My left foot is still there, Forrest Gump too. They changed there voice and body language. Forgive me but Jack Nicholson always displayed those masterful wierd faces and expressions.
Kubrick was the Rembrandt of his time. Artistry on screen like we’ve never seen. A Clockwork Orange- where Alex is being tortured by Beethoven up stairs while the camera withdraws slowly away from Mr Alexander’s twisted grin of delight to the man gently rolling billiards balls into the far pocket, oh, it’s absolutely masterful!
Whenever I just started watching Spielberg interview I couldn't let myself to go until I complete whole video or interview Spielberg is so much voice interesting keep you engages nuff said he is indeed a great storyteller for a reason
props to Steven, as he relates the story of showing Paths of Glory to his friends, you can hear his voice crack, it's a powerful moment in a powerful film, and not only that was a powerful moment for him and his friends to rewatch.
In The Shining, I thought Nicolson's irritation towards his wife's simple love was so believable; those furious, restrained, threats, through gritted teeth. I love the old synthesizer soundtrack too.
Its sad how we as a people only appreciate someone or what they do more after they're gone. Im guilty of this myself. Maybe one day, people will hold Spielberg in a high regard, the same way we hold Kubrick. Being a person in my 30s, I just discovered Kubricks movies late last year. I mean I've heard of them, but after watching the Shining, that movie fascinates me so much. I don't know what it is, it just keeps pulling me back. 2001 is having that same effect on me. What Spielberg said is true, you can't just watch his films once. You need multiple viewings to appreciate it. I wish I could have experienced Kubricks movies as they released in theaters. I do this now for Tarantino. When he releases a movie, Im right there day one.
+icebergthegamer Kubrick was always highly regarded. Despite his movies not making huge box office his prestige was such that he could do anything he wanted, and people lined up to work with him. Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman were at the peak of their dollar value when he made them spend a year on Eyes Wide Shut. Think about what they gave up for that - multiple pictures each, millions of dollars. There was never a time when he wasn't considered among the best by pretty much everyone. So I'm not sure what you mean about only appreciating people when they're dead.
What are you talking about? Kubrick, Spielberg, Tarantino, Scorsese, Hitchcock, Cameron, Kurosawa, Jackie Chan, Chaplin, Fincher, Paul Thomas Anderson, Leone, Guillermo del Toro, Miyazaki, Tarkovsky, and countless others were appreciated and celebrated in their time.
I personally loved Dr Strangelove straight away same with 2001 Full Metal Jacket and The Killing Paths Of Glory i think i need to see again also Spielberg mentions Cagney i love Cagney he was great
Spielberg is right. It's impossible to stop watching a Kubrick movie. One time I was watching Eyes Wide Shut (was like the 3rd time I'd seen it), and about 1/4 of the way in my parents walked in. I left the room and told them they could change the channel, but my step-dad was so intrigued by it that he continued watching it after i left.
Kubrick’s films look like moving pictures of art. They’re so esthetically pleasing to look at. The Shining isn’t a very deep film but it is a visual marvel to see. It’s a beautiful looking film. I tend to agree with Stephen King’s criticism but I do consider one of the greatest horror films ever made. It’s a piece of art and there’s very few horror films that could be considered that since they’re usually made very cheap and shot very quickly. Not with Kubrick. He takes the time to craft perfection, and I really wish there were more mainstream filmmakers like him. I’m blame that on modern Hollywood and their lack of respect for the art and desire for turnover above all
@Tigerlily21 Just finished watching A.I I'm so glad Steven carried the film to it's finish line He loved Kubrick like so many people And Steven is still the most wonderful filmmaker
2001, Full Metal Jacket, and The Shining were masterpieces. The Shining is the only movie that ever really disturbed me watching it. Oh I've watched tons of gore movies, but the Shining was downright psychological. 2001 gets better each time I watch it. Full Metal Jacket was really raw.
Yeah Back To The Future is my favorite film of all time, and Forrest Gump is just an absolute masterpiece. I love Speilberg as well, and i have been getting interested in Kubricks works lately.
A.I.: Artificial Intelligence is one of the greatest and misunderstood films of all time. I loved the combination of the two minds and how Spielberg stayed true to his friend's vision and didn't commercialize it. That is why people hated it because Steve didn't conform it to the general public. I can't wait for Napolean.
I feel that once you reach a certain level of talent it all comes down to personal opinion. The top directors are all equal to each other with there own definitive style and all are great. Anyway my list: 1. Fellini 2. Hitchcock 3. Scorsese 4. Kubrick 5. Kurosawa 6. Bergman 7. Tarkovsky 8. Lynch 9. Spielberg 10. Polanski ...and I really like what Nolan is doing is doing with the Hollywood blockbuster, bringing back talent, energy, and intelligence. His new Inception was brilliant.
This is what the great creatives SHOULD do. Nudging other creatives in the right direction. Leaving your impact in the things you love by leaving it better than when you found it.
Stanley Kubrick, is undeniably the most inspirational filmmaker to me personally and is I personally think the best filmmaker of all time. 2. Martin Scorsese 3. Alfred Hitchcock 4. Francis Ford Coppola 5. Paul Thomas Anderson 6. Roman Polanski 7. Sidney Lumet 8. Gus Van Sant 9. Joel & Ethan Coen 10. Spike Lee 11. Tim Burton 12. Christopher Nolan 13. David Fincher 14. Steven Spielberg 15. Woody Allen 16. Darren Aronofsky
6:10 - I do. The one modern director with really original ideas and movies, that are groundbreaking and hold up so well after multiple viewings: Christopher Nolan. Probably the only director that has the potential to reach the level of mastermind of Kubrick.
Why did this guy say no? I agree that Christopher Nolan is a very talented director who had great potential to be the iconic director of our day and age. Just as Kubrick was. Obviously they had different styles and were different people but he is a fantastic filmmaker.
Marcus Aguilar nolan is a very good director but he is a tiny spec of shit compared to kubrick. nolan would be more like spielberg as they both make great movies for the masses. kubrick makes masterpieces that need to be rewatched again and again to be fully understood.
Marcus Aguilar i would watch ya christopher nolan movie with my buddies and have a really good time and maybe even reflect on it once or twice. with kubrick movies i think about them over and over. kubrick movies challenge my beliefs but with christopher nolan movies i get really good entertainment out of them but not much more
This is awesome. It’s so true about Kubrick growing on you. I have no idea why at first I didn’t care for his works but then I would suddenly find myself in love with them.
James Cagney's acting style always had a strong sense of theatrically to it, as those great performers in musicals are skilled in(a lot of his work has an exhuberance over formalism appeal to it ex: "Footlight Parade", "Yankee Doodle Dandy"). and Jack Nicholson's performance in the shining was definitely theatrical/over the top rather than instinctually realistic like the style of actors such as Henry Fonda or Cary Grant. Neither style is better than the other, it's just a matter of preferance.
It's just my opinion, but I think Kubrick would make a great game that is story driven. With enough knowledge of the game development scene, like design and stuff, one can only imagine what he could do with the interactivity and environments.
Both directors are absolutely awesome; but if I have to choose, I would pick Kubrick cause I can watch his films a several times. My fav.movies of Spielberg: 1. Jurassic Park cause of my childhood 2. Indiana Jones 1-3 3. Schindlers List 4. saving Prvt Ryan Fav. kubrick movies: 1.shining 2.clockwork orange 3.eyes wide shut
@mick3251 agreed, some people here are saying they hate tarantino, bu they overlook, he uses reffrences from all other directors/movies, he does it so well, which people tend to overlook.
I'm pretty sure the skin on my body would melt off completely if I was in a room that contained Steven Spielberg and Stanley Kubrick together. Too much awesome for me to handle in one sitting.
@Tigerlily21: Yes, Spielberg is a great director in his own right. There's nothing wrong with making simpler movies as long as they are of high quality, and Spielberg makes high-quality films.
The killing is one of those movies I came into rather cynically, believing most of his films before Dr Strangelove could be that good, and I left it feeling amazed. It's also one I need to rewatch, but I was hooked from the beginning to the end. I came in the same way to paths of glory. A great friend loaned me his DVD and I put it off for months as I didn't think I'd enjoy it that much, and the day that I did, I really didn't want to give it back. That movie I've rewatched a few times and praise it for being ahead of its time in telling an anti war story, and the ending always gets me.
Forgive my ignorance, but why does the fact that Kubrick rated James Cagney so highly mean that Jack Nicholson's performance is a great one? I mean, it IS a great performance, sure, but I don't understand what it has to do with Cagney.
HackneyShark Spielberg only named actors who usually play the hero. Cagney played villains and mostly in an over the top fashion. He was just pointing out that he will never would like villains no matter how good they are, it was just a character examination from Kubrick
Cagney's acting style was always over the top...very expressive and emotive. Lots of heavy facial expression (which is a big part of Japanese Kabuki theater, which Spielberg mentions). This is why Steven said he thought Jacks performance was a great 'Kabuki' performance. Its a style that relies on over the top face expression to show emotion. Jacks performance was very much reliant on that, and very similar to Cagney's style of acting.
The thing is, I'm primarily inspired by American filmmakers due to my culture since I'm an American. I'm just recently getting into Foreign Filmmaking, specifically Jean Godard and Akira Kurosawa.
@malows1234 Did you watch this video? They were good friends, & Spielberg even took up the notes from Kubrick to make A.I., which Kubrick could not make as he died months earlier. He even wanted him to direct it, as he felt he did not have the sentimentality to do so: a Stanley Kubrick production of a Steven Speilberg film. I'll admit Steven was not the innovator that Stanley was, but he's still is a great director. Watch Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan, then tell me he is NOT great.
@skittlesareyum48 he was born in New York, he lived in England for the last fourty years of his life. Yet, his family had continuously stated that throughout the majority of the time he talked about coming back.
My list, with wat i think are their best movies in parenthesis. 1-Stanley Kubrick (Dr. Strangelove) 2-Alfred Hitchcock (Rear Window) 3-Martin Scorcese (Raging Bull) 4-Francis Coppolla (Apocalypse Now) 5-Billy Wilder (Sunset Blvd.) 6-Sidney Lumet (12 Angry Men) 7-the Coen brothers (Fargo) 8-Quentin Tarrantino (Pulp Fiction) 9-Tim Burton (Ed Wood) 10-Brian DePalma (Scarface) note: I'd also set aside room for whoever directed all of the three stooges and laurel and hardy shorts
Art is subjective personally I think Kurosawa is the est director to ever live but I have a great respect for Speilberg the dude was born to tell story's and weather you like his work or not you have to respect a man that loves his job
"Kubrick films tend to grow on you" Best fact ever.
Eyes wide shut is so good and first time I was just kinda ehhh but the Easter eggs and deeper meanings make the movie
No Director like Kubrick. Even guys like Spielberg were awed by him. Man, I miss him.... SO unique
+MrAitraining All directors are different. No director like any of them.
+MrAitraining even legends like Billy Wilder and Orson Welles have praised Kubrick, search on the internet :D
MrAitraining yep, truly the greatest director of all time
H L I’d say Kubrick is my favorite director but Hitchcock is probably the “greatest of all time.”
GREATVDIRECTORS ARE UNIQUE, EVEN SPIELBERG
"Nobody could shoot a film better than Kubrick in history" Amen!
I recently had a chat with a guy who worked at the Chinese Theatre in LA. Met loads of actors/directors, and he said Spielberg was by far the nicest guy he ever met.
he looks like he is very nice indedd
He is, he invited me onto stage with him at 2011 Comic Con when he saw my T-shirt.
Lawn Mower it said on it. If possible I would love to meet Steven Spielberg just to shake his hand and say thank you very much.
id just fanboy over his movies until he tells me to stop lol
@@beanman2206 So would I. I’d just annoy him making a damn fool out of myself, lol.
Stanley Kubrick was the best director EVER. He made only THIRTEEN movies, and 6 of them, Spartacus, 2001, Dr Strangelove, The Shining, Barry Lyndon and Clockwork Organge, are truly classics, masterpieces, movies that must be at any top 100 of all time.
He was a genius.
Yeah every paintings, screens, and pictures
Robson1898vascao Dont forget Full Metal Jacket, Lolita, Eyes Wide Shut, Paths of Glory,
+Robson1898vascao Every single movie of his after The Killing and onwards are all masterpieces
Lt. Col. Frank Slade HOO HAH!
If you like photography, Barry Lyndon is a masterpiece as well.
Spielberg is fascinating, interesting, and articulate how he describes Kubrick. I learned a lot here.
Who wouldn't? If I could have a conversation with the man. I WOULD.
I find it so touching that two directors can have so much time for each other - that when Kubrick died Spielberg and his friends talked about him all day, they watched Spielberg's favourite emotional scene of Kubrick's. I think only true artists can have such affection for their peers because for them, it's all about the passion and the craft.
so could you link me to the place where kubrick shows admiration towards spielbergs work?
"two directors have so much time for EACH OTHER"
@@pekbekmkek6310 It is known that they had long telephone chats
pekbek mkek A fascinating video which wonderfully conveys the unique gift and talents of two brilliant directors and their abilities to illustrate and celebrate both the best and worst qualities of human nature. How it is, that your only contribution to something so positive, is an incredibly weak attempt at belittling someone else, is truly astounding. I feel genuine sorrow for the inner anger and self hatred that clearly lives within the infinitesimally small world you inhabit. How sad and pathetic. Cheers!!
@@pekbekmkek6310 You absolute idiot. Spielberg inherited A I. as a part of Kubrick's legacy, it was a film Kubrick had in the pipeline and wanted to direct, but suddenly died before finishing it. And he gave direct instructions if anyone was to take over Spielberg was the only one that would do. That how much he appreciated Spielberg.
@@pekbekmkek6310 How about you go look up EVERY single interview of Stanley's family and friends where they talk about the long phone calls and reciprocal admiration that he and Steven had for 20 years? How about you go look for the facts yourself before talking?
Just watched Paths of Glory for the first time and that last scene was one of the most powerful scenes I've ever watched.
One directorial genius (Spielberg) giving a rousing exposition of another genius (Kubrick). Folks, enjoy it. These men won't live forever - their art will (hopefully)
Their creations will inspire the future geniuses of cinema. They have provided the foundations on which we now must improve and expand. Their art will live on, in itself and in all art that follows it.
@@connorb.5368 Yeah but cinema won't be around forever, one day it'll be irrelevant
:'( noooooooo!!!!!!
Thank you for specifying which directorial geniuses you were talking about.
@@withnail-and-i We have been hearing that statement for years and yet nothing has changed. Nothing ever will change because nothing will ever give you that experience in film better than Cinemas. Theartre has been around since Ancient Greece. It is still going very strong today as it did back then.
Spielberg is such a great talker. It's amazing how on-camera he's always so succinct and insightful. How his mind works is a marvel; he's amazing at describing things. He's a story teller on both sides of the camera. Most great directors are I've noticed.
jutubaeh I think I'm losing my mind reading the way you type. It makes my head hurt.
Patrick Hebdon A second language is English to him?
as if he couldnt have tried several times, as if he there are no cuts in this interview; if this were live, I'd agree with you though
I mean, you can't be a great storyteller without knowing how to do it in it's most basic form. Around the campfire. That's how it started.
great point, and well put
Interesting Spielberg mentions that whole "can't turn it off" ability that Kubrick has. I didn't like Eyes Wide Shut, but I couldn't for the life of me turn it off, and I didn't feel like I wasted my time after finishing it like I do with other films I don't like. Kubrick films have always been "experiences" whether or not you happen to like a given work or not. Brilliant director and a true craftsman.
When I left the movie theater after having seen Eyes Wide Shut, I felt like the movie was okay, nothing more. Two weeks later, I was still thinking about it. That's Kubrick.
Oxmustube EGG FUGGIN ZACTLY, lol. Won't ever forget the first time I watched The Shining..went in unsure what to expect, went out shaking my head not sure what to think...then I went in again. And again. And again. Etc.
+opmike343 I thought Eyes Wide Shut was okay after the first time I saw it, good after the second time. Now I've seen it maybe 5 times and I think it's a masterpiece. That's the Classic Kubrick pattern, at least for me. His films have a magnetic Power but can be very challenging which means that I don't necessarily like them right away.
i used to hate eyes wide shut...but like berg said on kubricks magic craft...now its become my favorite in the collection. That movie haunts me with its damn we really are instinctual humans after all and maybe we shouldnt be living by rules. Questions your relationship hard even if its a super good relationship your in.
This is exactly how I feel about David Lynch. None of their works are cookie cutter.
This is by far, the best interview that I had seen.
Kubrick was a genius, it has taken me years to even begin to grasp his talent, but it certainly remains intangible, magical.
The amount and depth of detail to EVERYTHING is crazy to watch. The details and points have details and points!
Hey wait. Two HAL’s? Lol!
Holy crap Spielberg nailed it! When people say Kubrick was a Director it's such an understatement because he was a film maker in every aspect. He shot his own films most of the time, labored over the editing process in both visual and sound, and while many of his movies were mono sound mixes it was deliberate and they came out nicely and that is saying something since I always think a film needs a 4ch or 5.1 mix at minimum. What makes a good film maker is the one that cares about every aspect of the film making process and Kubrick was obsessed with every aspect.
+nateo200 Why did he make his movies in mono? What are the benefits to that instead of stereo?
+Vrabo Woody Allen also insists on a mono sound mix. I assume it's puratanical on the auteur's part.
As Hollywood eschews serious cinema, I guess Netflix et al will become the filmmaker friendly stables off auteur directors.
@@PakistaniCult pompous much?
Kubrick is easily the best director to ever live.
No he's not. Spielberg clearly is.
Easily? Not a chance. He's in a group of about 20 directors that you'd put as the best.
He obsessed about detail, as the scene in the plane with the bombardier about to drop the bomb. It's like you're right there in the cockpit. Part of that obsession were scenes in some of his movies that went on too long (IMO).
definitely not easily, but yes, he is the best.
Watch ready player one, Spielberg give a great tribute to the shining.
Nope, that's not a "great tribute" I don't think Kubrick would like it
@@francescobruno418 What are you talking about? What do you know? The guys were buddies and they loved each other's work. What in the hell are you talking about?
@@francescobruno418 oh really when was the last time you talked to him
@@francescobruno418 Kubrick's widow and one of his daughters was on set for it and she said he would have loved it. I'll take her word for it.
@@geg6315 There's countless stories about the friendship between Stanley and Steven. Not sure what's hard to believe.
I agree with Steven that even though you know what's coming with each viewing of a Kubrick film, you always get something different. As someone who doesn't revisit the same film too much, it's easy to remember the structure of all Kubrick films and yet, I always experience it from the point of view of a new person.
"We [filmmakers] are all children of D.W. Griffith and Stanley Kubrick."
-Martin Scorsese
I've said it numerous times before and I'll say it again, Stanley Kubrick is the greatest filmmaker of all time. "Spielberg......on Kubrick". Nothing short of inspiring!
spielberg is my hero and my inspiration as an aspiring director. i could hear him talk for hours. kubrick was a genius...
My friend and I had hours of debate over who was better. I would say Kubrick and he would say Spielberg. It would never get old. ha.
@@HerveBoisde there’s no such as thing as “better” or “the best” in cinema. Arts is not sports. Spielberg does a blockbuster like no one can and Kubrick can make an arthouse film like no one can also. They are incredible filmmakers in their own right and both have an impact on the medium that is immeasurable to this day. Although I have other directors that I adore (Hitchcock, Lynch, Cameron, Scorsese, Coppola, Nolan, Fincher, Leone, Almodovar, Kurosawa, Bergman, Fellini, Tarkovsky, Truffaut, Eisenstein, Lean, Ford to name a few), Kubrick’s and Spielberg’s films shaped my childhood, showed me the ropes and made me love the art of cinema from both sides, the art house and the blockbuster one, both equally important to me.
@@gpapa31 I agree. It’s completely subjective. That’s why these debates were entertaining
@@HerveBoisde hehehe, I call them
Barber shop talks :-)
@@HerveBoisde They are the 2 greatest directors of the 20th century, the legacy they both have is unbeatable
JESUS i love this dude. him freely admitting he didn't "love" a classic like "the shining" is so totally honest, man. sure, he backtracks and eventually heaps praise on it and all, but in film nerd circles saying you didnt absolutely love a stanley kubrick flick is basically akin to shitting on every film fan's head personally. bravo, mr. spielberg!!
@@feralmode well Kubrick did have an odd sense of humour
He's so giddy talking about his hero. Nothing better than watching a master honor a master.
I pray I don't catch Barry Lyndon on the TV by accident as that is 2.5 hours + of my life glued to the box, impossible to look away.
Here’s one of my favorite film directors, Steven Spielberg, reminiscing on my all-time favorite film director, the genius that was Stanley Kubrick. It’s pretty incredible to consider that, in a career spanning nearly half a century, Kubrick only directed 13 feature films and three short documentaries. And yet for a man with such a short list of credits, his massive influence on film and generations of filmmakers is incalculable. Like Chaplin, Stanley is in a category all by himself.
Wow, in my opinion Spielberg nails it every time. I can't think of better verbiage or words to use to describe the genius of Kubrick. I guess it takes someone like Spielberg. Thanks Mr. Spielberg, that was a moving tribute to Stanley Kubrick.
Randomly I've heard the word "kabuki theater" like 10 times today. But in terms of this interview, I love this anecdote about Kubrick's explanation of why Jack Nicholson's performance is great by referencing Jimmy Cagney. And then this idea of Kubrick's craft being perfect and how you can watch his films 25 times and always find something new in them. I think this comes from his experience as a photographer and a true artist looking at every shot and every angle as a unique opportunity to communicate with/thrill/confuse/impress/attract the audience.
Spielberg is absolutely right when he says Kubrick films grow on you. Repeated viewing makes you realise what a genius Stanley was
When he was talking about which film he showed to his friends I somehow guessed that it was Paths of Glory and the final scene specifically. It's my personal favourite of Kubrick's and I would definitely elect that scene as the most emotional, or perhaps the execution. Such a shame he died so early, I would have loved to see what else he could have created
Stanley is the Pound for Pound, All Around Best Director of all Time. He may not have made the best War, or Horror, or Sci-Fi, or Romance, or Thriller, or Comedy film. But his fipms in every genre are always in the top 3. If someone told me to choose a Director to create a movie of random genre, it would be Stanley.
Stanley Kubrick and Steven Spielberg--2 of the greatest filmakers ever. I have a dream to be a director, and if I had to cite two of the greatest ones that so entice me to make film, it would be them.
RIP Stanley Kubrick, one of the greatest filmaker of all time.
there will never be another Kubrick no director could hold a candle to this genius RIP Stanley you are missed
I watched Eyes Wide Shut for the third time, and got so much more from it.
i've seen Paths of Glory countless times, and that last scene, seeing it, or describing it, or even thinking about it, makes me weep every. single. Time.
Kubrick was a landmark director! Pretty much every film he did were brilliant but my favourites are A Clockwork Orange, The Shining, Dr. Strangelove and 2001: A Space Odyssey (well, they're probably his best known films).
What a great interview.
Spielberg on Kubrick. Perfect combo. As said before, didn't realize I was a film buff, until later in life and cognighted that some of my all time fav flicks were Kubrick. Wonderful stuff, the man behind the curtain.
every story was a slap in the face to the human ego.....last line in Barry Lyndon
"It was in the reign of George III that the aforesaid personages lived and quarreled; good or bad, handsome or ugly, rich or poor they are all equal now.”
There have been great directors, famous Oscar-winning directors, all kinds of whatever kind of directors... Ford, Hitchcock, Coppola, Spielberg, etc.
But Stanley Kubrick was a true genius. Every facet of his person seemed to scream 'Genius". From his director's "eye", his focus on details, his deep, deep exploration into the psyche of his characters, the way he developed his movies into exposés of humanity itself, the puzzle pieces of his films, his aloofness. I think the guy was a genius right up there with Beethoven, Mozart, Rembrandt, Shakespeare. He explored the human condition as deeply as one dares to go from every angle imaginable, and you could watch one of his movies and ponder for the remainder of the week what it was revealing.
My Top 6 Stanley Kubrick Films
6. Full Metal Jacket
5 Dr. Strangelove (Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb)
4. Paths Of Glory
3. 2001 A Space Odyssey
2. A Clockwork Orange
1. The Shining
Exactly the same order for me
@@thewhoman3182 but what about dr strangelove?
He had virtually zero input in Spartacus!
He basically just pointed the camera to get himself INTO the big time film industry
For me it's 3 that really stand out:
1) Full Metal Jacket - first half w/R Lee Ermey is *so good* it makes up for a just "good" 2nd half
2) The Shining
3) 2001
All 10/10 classics
Wonderfully insightful commentary by someone who knows how to make lasting films. Thank you, Steven Spielberg.
I find fantastic to be listening to a gentleman like Spielberg talking about someone who could have been perfectly his master in directing's area. For me Kubrick and Spielberg are two incredible genius and at the same time wise people who can be a great reference if you want to make a cool movie.
2001 was more realistic than the actual moon landing around the same time.
+HughieDixon what the fuck does that even mean
+BBBJOT It means it was better than the real thing.
Because they couldn't bring a 70mm camera to the moon
Or...hear me out...it WAS the moon landing!
@@vargaso No. The lunar surface looks nothing like how Kubrick imagined it. He used Chesley Bonestell's paintings that show a jagged, Rocky Mountain look. The Moon's surface is much more dusty, rocky, eroded and rounded than Kubrick could imagine it.
Jack Nicholson in The Shining is the greatest movie performance of all time!
I won't say The Best.
DDL in My left foot is still there,
Forrest Gump too.
They changed there voice and body language.
Forgive me but Jack Nicholson always displayed those masterful wierd faces and expressions.
In my opinion I think Hopkins in the silence of the lambs is the greatest performance of all time
Kubrick was the Rembrandt of his time. Artistry on screen like we’ve never seen. A Clockwork Orange- where Alex is being tortured by Beethoven up stairs while the camera withdraws slowly away from Mr Alexander’s twisted grin of delight to the man gently rolling billiards balls into the far pocket, oh, it’s absolutely masterful!
A Clockwork Orange has to be one of the most deeply disturbing films ever made.
A true masterpiece.. and a hard to watch one at that.
The book is way more disturbing
It's a powerful film, and one that I find myself avoiding revisiting. It's too successful in its disturbing depiction of pathological behavior.
This is so good! love hearing Spielberg talking about Kubrick.
Whenever I just started watching Spielberg interview I couldn't let myself to go until I complete whole video or interview Spielberg is so much voice interesting keep you engages nuff said he is indeed a great storyteller for a reason
It's amazing how much Spielberg could like someone he was so different from.
props to Steven, as he relates the story of showing Paths of Glory to his friends, you can hear his voice crack, it's a powerful moment in a powerful film, and not only that was a powerful moment for him and his friends to rewatch.
In The Shining, I thought Nicolson's irritation towards his wife's simple love was so believable; those furious, restrained, threats, through gritted teeth. I love the old synthesizer soundtrack too.
Its sad how we as a people only appreciate someone or what they do more after they're gone. Im guilty of this myself. Maybe one day, people will hold Spielberg in a high regard, the same way we hold Kubrick. Being a person in my 30s, I just discovered Kubricks movies late last year. I mean I've heard of them, but after watching the Shining, that movie fascinates me so much. I don't know what it is, it just keeps pulling me back. 2001 is having that same effect on me. What Spielberg said is true, you can't just watch his films once. You need multiple viewings to appreciate it. I wish I could have experienced Kubricks movies as they released in theaters. I do this now for Tarantino. When he releases a movie, Im right there day one.
+icebergthegamer Kubrick was always highly regarded. Despite his movies not making huge box office his prestige was such that he could do anything he wanted, and people lined up to work with him. Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman were at the peak of their dollar value when he made them spend a year on Eyes Wide Shut. Think about what they gave up for that - multiple pictures each, millions of dollars. There was never a time when he wasn't considered among the best by pretty much everyone. So I'm not sure what you mean about only appreciating people when they're dead.
What are you talking about? Kubrick, Spielberg, Tarantino, Scorsese, Hitchcock, Cameron, Kurosawa, Jackie Chan, Chaplin, Fincher, Paul Thomas Anderson, Leone, Guillermo del Toro, Miyazaki, Tarkovsky, and countless others were appreciated and celebrated in their time.
one of my favorite directors talking about another, great video!
i think barry lyndon is a great movie its slow true but to look at it its amazing every frame is like a painting
I personally loved Dr Strangelove straight away same with 2001 Full Metal Jacket and The Killing Paths Of Glory i think i need to see again also Spielberg mentions Cagney i love Cagney he was great
Cagney is a great actor he should have been the greatest actors of all time
Spielberg is right. It's impossible to stop watching a Kubrick movie. One time I was watching Eyes Wide Shut (was like the 3rd time I'd seen it), and about 1/4 of the way in my parents walked in. I left the room and told them they could change the channel, but my step-dad was so intrigued by it that he continued watching it after i left.
My Two favorite directors of all time Kubrick and Spielberg.
Kubrick was way ahead of his time... 2001 Space Odyssey. He was the master who taught all else. True Master.
Kubrick’s films look like moving pictures of art. They’re so esthetically pleasing to look at. The Shining isn’t a very deep film but it is a visual marvel to see. It’s a beautiful looking film. I tend to agree with Stephen King’s criticism but I do consider one of the greatest horror films ever made. It’s a piece of art and there’s very few horror films that could be considered that since they’re usually made very cheap and shot very quickly. Not with Kubrick. He takes the time to craft perfection, and I really wish there were more mainstream filmmakers like him. I’m blame that on modern Hollywood and their lack of respect for the art and desire for turnover above all
Parler avec tant d amour, d intelligence d un autre artiste est une sacrée preuve de " hauteur" humaine.
@Tigerlily21
Just finished watching A.I
I'm so glad Steven carried the film to it's finish line
He loved Kubrick like so many people
And Steven is still the most wonderful filmmaker
The Yin and Yang of directors, they were made for each other
2001, Full Metal Jacket, and The Shining were masterpieces. The Shining is the only movie that ever really disturbed me watching it. Oh I've watched tons of gore movies, but the Shining was downright psychological. 2001 gets better each time I watch it. Full Metal Jacket was really raw.
I never pictured that. How some of the most amazing scenes in film have actually taken place in the same space.
Spencer Tracy, Henry Fonda, Jimmy Stewart, Cary Grant, Clark Gable
Kubrick brought us absolutely the best pictures by the purity and essence of his natural fluids.
Yeah Back To The Future is my favorite film of all time, and Forrest Gump is just an absolute masterpiece. I love Speilberg as well, and i have been getting interested in Kubricks works lately.
A.I.: Artificial Intelligence is one of the greatest and misunderstood films of all time. I loved the combination of the two minds and how Spielberg stayed true to his friend's vision and didn't commercialize it. That is why people hated it because Steve didn't conform it to the general public. I can't wait for Napolean.
Speilberg is spot on here , two great artists who obviously had great respect for each other .
The most common thing in all his movies besides the impecable craft would be the topic "man quietly going insane"
Kubrick was the man! I'll never forget when I first saw 2001...
I feel that once you reach a certain level of talent it all comes down to personal opinion. The top directors are all equal to each other with there own definitive style and all are great. Anyway my list:
1. Fellini
2. Hitchcock
3. Scorsese
4. Kubrick
5. Kurosawa
6. Bergman
7. Tarkovsky
8. Lynch
9. Spielberg
10. Polanski
...and I really like what Nolan is doing is doing with the Hollywood blockbuster, bringing back talent, energy, and intelligence. His new Inception was brilliant.
I agree with you but I cannot stand Nolan
This is what the great creatives SHOULD do. Nudging other creatives in the right direction. Leaving your impact in the things you love by leaving it better than when you found it.
I too am in the same boat as some people here who want to be directors, and Kubrick and Spielberg are my two favorites.
Kubrick and spielberg are my favorite directors ever
Stanley Kubrick, is undeniably the most inspirational filmmaker to me personally and is I personally think the best filmmaker of all time.
2. Martin Scorsese
3. Alfred Hitchcock
4. Francis Ford Coppola
5. Paul Thomas Anderson
6. Roman Polanski
7. Sidney Lumet
8. Gus Van Sant
9. Joel & Ethan Coen
10. Spike Lee
11. Tim Burton
12. Christopher Nolan
13. David Fincher
14. Steven Spielberg
15. Woody Allen
16. Darren Aronofsky
6:10 - I do. The one modern director with really original ideas and movies, that are groundbreaking and hold up so well after multiple viewings: Christopher Nolan. Probably the only director that has the potential to reach the level of mastermind of Kubrick.
No. Just no.
Why did this guy say no? I agree that Christopher Nolan is a very talented director who had great potential to be the iconic director of our day and age. Just as Kubrick was. Obviously they had different styles and were different people but he is a fantastic filmmaker.
P.T Anderson is like Kubrick. Nolan is like Spielberg.
Marcus Aguilar nolan is a very good director but he is a tiny spec of shit compared to kubrick. nolan would be more like spielberg as they both make great movies for the masses. kubrick makes masterpieces that need to be rewatched again and again to be fully understood.
Marcus Aguilar i would watch ya christopher nolan movie with my buddies and have a really good time and maybe even reflect on it once or twice. with kubrick movies i think about them over and over. kubrick movies challenge my beliefs but with christopher nolan movies i get really good entertainment out of them but not much more
This is awesome. It’s so true about Kubrick growing on you. I have no idea why at first I didn’t care for his works but then I would suddenly find myself in love with them.
Kubrick and Orson Welles both considered James Cagney the best movie actor of all time.
So does Clint Eastwood.
James Cagney's acting style always had a strong sense of theatrically to it, as those great performers in musicals are skilled in(a lot of his work has an exhuberance over formalism appeal to it ex: "Footlight Parade", "Yankee Doodle Dandy"). and Jack Nicholson's performance in the shining was definitely theatrical/over the top rather than instinctually realistic like the style of actors such as Henry Fonda or Cary Grant. Neither style is better than the other, it's just a matter of preferance.
It's just my opinion, but I think Kubrick would make a great game that is story driven. With enough knowledge of the game development scene, like design and stuff, one can only imagine what he could do with the interactivity and environments.
Both directors are absolutely awesome; but if I have to choose, I would pick Kubrick cause I can watch his films a several times.
My fav.movies of Spielberg:
1. Jurassic Park cause of my childhood
2. Indiana Jones 1-3
3. Schindlers List
4. saving Prvt Ryan
Fav. kubrick movies:
1.shining
2.clockwork orange
3.eyes wide shut
@mick3251 agreed, some people here are saying they hate tarantino, bu they overlook, he uses reffrences from all other directors/movies, he does it so well, which people tend to overlook.
Spielberg and Kubrick are totally different. Kubrick was on a different level and is in my opinion the greatest ever. That's a tough act to follow
I'm pretty sure the skin on my body would melt off completely if I was in a room that contained Steven Spielberg and Stanley Kubrick together. Too much awesome for me to handle in one sitting.
Spielberg, like so many of his films, simply can't focus on the bigger picture, which is to put SK into a précis of precise definition.
@Tigerlily21: Yes, Spielberg is a great director in his own right. There's nothing wrong with making simpler movies as long as they are of high quality, and Spielberg makes high-quality films.
Finally someone who understands movies.
It's true what he says about kubrick films, they grow on you for sure
Paths of Glory, The SHining and Dr. Strangelove is a solid Kubrick top 3 for me. Amazing filmaker ; rank high up there with Alfred Hithcock.
I knew he would pick the last scene in "Paths of Glory." It is a great moment in cinema. Now, explain "The Killing." I love it, but I don't know why.
The killing is one of those movies I came into rather cynically, believing most of his films before Dr Strangelove could be that good, and I left it feeling amazed. It's also one I need to rewatch, but I was hooked from the beginning to the end. I came in the same way to paths of glory. A great friend loaned me his DVD and I put it off for months as I didn't think I'd enjoy it that much, and the day that I did, I really didn't want to give it back. That movie I've rewatched a few times and praise it for being ahead of its time in telling an anti war story, and the ending always gets me.
Forgive my ignorance, but why does the fact that Kubrick rated James Cagney so highly mean that Jack Nicholson's performance is a great one? I mean, it IS a great performance, sure, but I don't understand what it has to do with Cagney.
HackneyShark Spielberg only named actors who usually play the hero. Cagney played villains and mostly in an over the top fashion. He was just pointing out that he will never would like villains no matter how good they are, it was just a character examination from Kubrick
I see. I'll have to take in some Cagney movies.
Trax-3 mate, still don't get it
James Cagney was ugly and played the bad guy.
Besides that, I don't like him.
Cagney's acting style was always over the top...very expressive and emotive. Lots of heavy facial expression (which is a big part of Japanese Kabuki theater, which Spielberg mentions). This is why Steven said he thought Jacks performance was a great 'Kabuki' performance. Its a style that relies on over the top face expression to show emotion. Jacks performance was very much reliant on that, and very similar to Cagney's style of acting.
The thing is, I'm primarily inspired by American filmmakers due to my culture since I'm an American. I'm just recently getting into Foreign Filmmaking, specifically Jean Godard and Akira Kurosawa.
@malows1234 Did you watch this video? They were good friends, & Spielberg even took up the notes from Kubrick to make A.I., which Kubrick could not make as he died months earlier. He even wanted him to direct it, as he felt he did not have the sentimentality to do so: a Stanley Kubrick production of a Steven Speilberg film. I'll admit Steven was not the innovator that Stanley was, but he's still is a great director. Watch Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan, then tell me he is NOT great.
2 of my favorite Cinematography Directors
Steven Spielberg later recruited Philip Pine from the Shining to play the army colonel in one of the Indiana Jones films.
There are lots of better filmmakers than Spielberg by far but Kubrick is indeed one of the ultimate greats.
Kubrick was a great artist, and great artists want to “change the form.” Some of them die trying.
In Kubrick films, the setting is an actor too.
My top 5 favorite Directors
5. Alfred Hitchcock
4. Steven Spielberg
3. Stanley Kubrick
2. Martin Scorsese
1. Quentin Tarantino
5. Peckinpah
4. Raimi
3. Hitchcock
2. Carpenter
1. Spielberg
5. Francis Ford Coppola
4. Stanley Kubrick
3. Alfred Hitchcock
2. Martin Scorsese
1. Steven Spielberg
STANLEY KUBRICK IS LEGEND. 😭😭😭😭😭❤❤❤❤❤
@skittlesareyum48 he was born in New York, he lived in England for the last fourty years of his life. Yet, his family had continuously stated that throughout the majority of the time he talked about coming back.
GREAT. Just great.
My list, with wat i think are their best movies in parenthesis.
1-Stanley Kubrick (Dr. Strangelove)
2-Alfred Hitchcock (Rear Window)
3-Martin Scorcese (Raging Bull)
4-Francis Coppolla (Apocalypse Now)
5-Billy Wilder (Sunset Blvd.)
6-Sidney Lumet (12 Angry Men)
7-the Coen brothers (Fargo)
8-Quentin Tarrantino (Pulp Fiction)
9-Tim Burton (Ed Wood)
10-Brian DePalma (Scarface)
note: I'd also set aside room for whoever directed all of the three stooges and laurel and hardy shorts
Art is subjective personally I think Kurosawa is the est director to ever live but I have a great respect for Speilberg the dude was born to tell story's and weather you like his work or not you have to respect a man that loves his job
Spielberg and Kubrick…genius overload