He appears to be talking to his reflection at first. Then he hallucinates "Lloyd", making his confession easier. And then drinking to mirror the day he swore off drinking that night
0:00 to 0:15 1972 1/2 Cadilac AKA known as the boat. 4 door leather interior upholstery use Baby oil to prevent from heat exposure on a hot sunny day. wipe clean with cloth then wake up the Employer- After his siesta.
This movie was a visual masterpiece, my wife gets mad at me because i just don't want to watch any of the movies made these days, and it's because there is no artistry anymore...
Your're right. Movies today are pretty much crap.....very little originality and way too much "homage" so to speak....in other words...lack of talent. I will say that the special effects and technology today is quite impressive but it scripts are pretty much low brow garbage.
@@Charles-Grady Nicholson plays the same psychopathic personality -- fundamentally they are all the same. He plays the same narcissit/psychopath in different circumstances .
I wish Kubrick hadn't passed before the final edits were made to Eyes Wide Shut. Though still a great film I believe that his vision for it would have far surpassed the final product we ended up getting.
I met Lloyd while buying a hotdog at Pink's in LA many years ago. I kept staring at him, wondering where I'd seen him before, then realized he was the guy who invented the replicants in Bladerunner. A nicer man you'll never meet. I bought him a chili dog, just to say I bought Tyrell a hot dog.
Wait a minute. Jack orders a bourbon, but gets poured a Jack Daniels, which of course is a Tennessee whiskey, not a bourbon. How did I miss this until now?!
Jack Daniels is not bourbon. This whole scene was a lie! My entire childhood was a lie! What else was a lie! My mother? An aardvark. My father? A rusty oil can! DAMN YOU, KUBRICK! DAMN YOU!
This movie aged like fine wine for me; I used to find this movie plodding and would fall asleep sometimes. But after I’ve seen it more than a few times now, I’ve grown to appreciate it so much. Probably cause I’m getting older now too 😊. Jack Nicholson was fantastically psychotic. RIP Shelley Duvall.
I adore this scene. Note that, aside from a slow eye close as he turns to the liquor shelf, Lloyd doesnt blink once, despite the pressure in what is a pivotal sequence for this movie masterpiece
Kubrick staged some really artificial feeling scenes, and this was one. He really missed the mark quite often, in my opinion. Like he needed someone to tell his 'genius' "No!", sometimes.
So many layers. Read a movie critic who proposed that the movie is, subliminally at least, about the genocide of the American Indian, and that view definitely holds water. Witness: the Calumet Baking Soda Indian behind Jack in the freezer, the elevators spilling a flood of blood, the twin girls in the hall representing the duplicity of the white man, Jack winds up in a picture dated July 4, birth of the nation-and right here in this clip Jack says, “White man’s burden, white man’s burden” , well that clinches it for me. The Tom Toms pounding in the background speak to this interpretation, too. Every detail meticulously contrived. Kubrick was a genius, and fabricated a magic lantern, a multidimensional masterpiece.
He’s supposed to be an alcoholic yet he hasn’t drank in months. And admitted his mistakes and that it was a accident. I think madness should forgive him
Well, after some hefty wiki'ing i realize that Lloyd was actually American! He puts on a great English accent. Also, it turns out he played Eldon Tyrell in Bladerunner. So he was in two of my favourite films of all time.
When he first walks into the ballroom and the place is dark and barely lit by all those small lights it's Barry Lyndon. When he reaches the bar all geometricalky glowing an eery white/yellow it's 2001. So this scene starts out as Barry Lyndon meets 2001!
On one hand I can see why Stephen King said he never liked this film -- it diverges too much from the central point of KIng's novel. On the other hand, it's a brilliant piece of cinema in its own right if you can accept it as a different entity altogether from the book. Both King and Kubrick kicked ass on this story in their own ways.
Kubrick was a genius in light, effect, scenery. Unfortunately he had no respect for the original author’s story. He seemed to have not agreed with themes of either King or Burgess. Burgess went along but King was disappointed and upset.
I’m not a Jack Nicholson fan. I just don’t really like the guy but this little piece of acting is completely brilliant!! Holy crap he was good in this masterpiece. I loved every second of the shining.
This part of the movie where he goes into this unstocked(dry as a desert gulch) and all of a sudden there is the bartender and a full stocked bar(and some) and then goes back to the former has a real "thud" to it🤔
He asked for bourbon and Lloyd gave him Tennessee whiskey, worst goddamn bartender from timbuck too to Portland Maine or Portland Oregon for that matter. Thank you for saying so sir. I love the little son of a bitch.
Best godamn bartender from timbuktoo to Portland Maine. Rip Lloyd :(
or Portland Oregon for that matter
Lloyd ... WANTS ... MORE LIFE FUCKER
Thank you for saying so....@@keith6591
He appears to be talking to his reflection at first. Then he hallucinates "Lloyd", making his confession easier. And then drinking to mirror the day he swore off drinking that night
@@augopen Just like his son, Jack Torrance has his own imaginary friend.
The piano becoming more erratic as he goes into his rant was a nice touch
Completely missed that.
Completely caught that.
It's not erratic. It's jazz.
Also a brief reaction shot of Lloyd with a smirk of barely concealed contempt while Jack rants.
A deep dark place hidden within the confines of one’s intellect. Ascending humanity perhaps 🤔. Evolution maybe.
Lol everyone from Kentucky freaking out here. 😂
Stefanie great choice this movie is a classic 👌
Epic! It always makes me drink a glass of whiskey. lol
0:00 to 0:15 1972 1/2 Cadilac AKA known as the boat. 4 door leather interior upholstery use Baby oil to prevent from heat exposure on a hot sunny day. wipe clean with cloth then wake up the Employer- After his siesta.
That pointless, happy banter right before you get to finally taste your DOC from your supplier after a long wait.
I just realized that Lloyd is the Dr. Eldon Tyrell in Blade Runner (1982)!
RIP Joe Turkel, you were wonderful in both these iconic movies.
Damn! Great catch.
Welly, welly, welly, welly well!
Right, right, right!
He was also in a much earlier Kubrick film, "Paths of Glory" 1957
He was also in a lot of cheezy Bert I Gordon movies like Tormented. Heh a good Mystery Science Theatre episode.
The star that burns twice as bright burns half as long. And you have burned so very bright.
This movie was a visual masterpiece, my wife gets mad at me because i just don't want to watch any of the movies made these days, and it's because there is no artistry anymore...
Your're right. Movies today are pretty much crap.....very little originality and way too much "homage" so to speak....in other words...lack of talent. I will say that the special effects and technology today is quite impressive but it scripts are pretty much low brow garbage.
have you seen ⊃∪∩⪽
You must correct her
The new blade runner is AMAZING
I’d say around 5% of movies that are made these days are praiseworthy. Dune and Elvis are good examples.
This film is so hypnotic.
The shift in personality and affect is stunning. Wow. Nicholson's acting is brilliant in this scene. Nuanced. Perfect.
on the other hand, that's just about how he plays all of his (semi)psychotic characters. For example, his Joker in Batman is pretty much the same
@@Charles-Grady Nicholson plays the same psychopathic personality -- fundamentally they are all the same. He plays the same narcissit/psychopath in different circumstances .
But the best line is missing here: "I'd give my soul for a goddamn beer!"
too on the nose
Drink not beer
@@johnspinelli9396 I believe you. Thanks!
I wonder why they left that out.
Yep, but not an American beer!
He literally said he'd sell his soul for a beer 🍻🍻
That's the devil in a red jacket. This movie is still a masterpiece 🎧💖
"Your credit is fine."
A few moments later...."It's not a matter that concerns you, Mr Torrance. At least not at this point " - Lloyd
The man takes a drink
The drink takes a drink
Then the drink takes the man
Moe! Give me a beer!
@@finnnation123 that's dark..
Everyone in this film is superb. The real Master however, is Stanley Kubrick himself. Every scene is mind boggling
Pure Movie Making PERFECTION!
The atmosphere is awesome
King didn't agree with Kubrick though...
@@cathhl2440 right, king kong kong disagrees
I wish Kubrick hadn't passed before the final edits were made to Eyes Wide Shut. Though still a great film I believe that his vision for it would have far surpassed the final product we ended up getting.
He was an evil Hollywood perv. The masks have come off in the 2020s and people see there is something seriously wrong in Tinseltown.
I never noticed how the jazz music suddenly becomes discordant when he begins to talk about hitting the boy
I'm almost positive this jazz music isn't in the actual movie...
Lloyd was a lousy bartender...Torrance asked for bourbon and Lloyd gives him Tennessee Whiskey. ...just can't find good help anymore....
Yeah, kinda wondered what was going on there.. haha
I know, especially since so many people are dying to work there.
Tennessee Whiskey is a sub-category of Bourbon, meeting all of the legal requirements for the designation "Bourbon Whiskey" in the USA.
he gave Jack some Jack... what's wrong with that? 😆
@@BeamieYT it is all crap anyway so what is the difference. Islay single malts are real whiskeys. 😆
If ur an alcoholic or are stuck living with one The Shining is even more intense
The novel did a better job at discussing his alcoholism.
Kind of implied seeing he's a writer 😅 @@BunnyWatson-k1w
@@BunnyWatson-k1wthe book was how alcoholics viewed themselves, the movie was how the people around see alcoholics
Notice the music slowly gets all wrong..and outta tune. From smooth jazz to eventual evil morbid...Notes missing skipping....it's great
It's okay but what is that knocking sound? That's really scary.
@@lbks16 Drums. Sounds like tom-toms to me.
The silence is what makes this scene scary, not the melodramatic music...
Yea why ruin something that's already perfect?
You hear the cold wind of despair in the background, so it's not totally silent -- it just needed some appropriate ambience.
You know it's the 80's when a glass of Jack Daniels is considered Bourbon!!
I thought the same thing.
JD is bourbon
it's like champagne. Scotch isn't made in America, and bourbon isn't made in Ireland
@@nocomment1212 It is sour mash.
Bourbon must be made in Kentucky
not Tennessee.
@@michaelcelani8325
fair enough
I met Lloyd while buying a hotdog at Pink's in LA many years ago. I kept staring at him, wondering where I'd seen him before, then realized he was the guy who invented the replicants in Bladerunner. A nicer man you'll never meet. I bought him a chili dog, just to say I bought Tyrell a hot dog.
Lighting is just phenomenal in this scene ✨ don't know how Stanley does it
Helps when you need to fake a moon landing.
@@projectJ30 🤣🤣
@@projectJ30 😂
Did he though? Wouldn't he have mentioned it on his deathbed?
Don't think anyone could make a movie like this again unique class act.
Find a young Jack. Steer him right. bam!
@anthonyboyle877 Mystic River
My favorite horror movie ever. Ironically I believe my favorite comedy ever, Airplane, came out this same year -1980.
Is Jack having a psychotic episode or is he experiencing a past life or are there really ghosts?
😮
Wait a minute. Jack orders a bourbon, but gets poured a Jack Daniels, which of course is a Tennessee whiskey, not a bourbon. How did I miss this until now?!
considering its all in his head he is making errors, Kubrick pulled these stunts to get you questioning every inch of the film
@@grease_monkey6078 I like to think Lloyd made a mistake because he’s an evil spirit that’s only pretending to be a bartender.
It's in principle a bourbon. It's made of maize.
@@francisdec1615 except it tastes like burned motor oil, tainted with some kind of black goo or smtg
This is the only comment that actually has something worthwhile to say. So yeah 👍
Nicholson at his best!
The book is a masterpiece of horror. The movie...just chilling!
Jack Daniels is not bourbon. This whole scene was a lie! My entire childhood was a lie! What else was a lie! My mother? An aardvark. My father? A rusty oil can! DAMN YOU, KUBRICK! DAMN YOU!
2 $20s and 2 $10s ($60) is about $210 today.
Oof
Jack Nicholson's acting is superb
Is
@@MichaelF-cc8ri Is, ur right 👍
This movie aged like fine wine for me; I used to find this movie plodding and would fall asleep sometimes. But after I’ve seen it more than a few times now, I’ve grown to appreciate it so much. Probably cause I’m getting older now too 😊. Jack Nicholson was fantastically psychotic. RIP Shelley Duvall.
At THIS STAGE of her career, what I wouldn't give to stick my nose UP Shelley Duvall's poop crack.
The background music is okay, but it takes the eeriness away from an otherwise ominous scene.
eerie is the word this film brings to mind!...😬😳
'Passengers'
reminded me of this scene
Passengers sucked balls
Crazy how a bartender named Loyd ended up creating replicants
I adore this scene.
Note that, aside from a slow eye close as he turns to the liquor shelf, Lloyd doesnt blink once, despite the pressure in what is a pivotal sequence for this movie masterpiece
The background music takes so much from this scene.
Beautiful on so many levels
The genius who cast Lloyd as the bartender deserves a medal.
"...all work and no play made Jack-ey a dull boy..."
I'm afraid Lloyd might not be such a great bartender...gives him Tennessee whiskey, not Kentucky bourbon.
Technically Lloyd pours him Tennessee whiskey, but alas, great scene.
apparently the whole movie is deliberately full of things that are incorrect. for example, no way into the bar
The only actor to appear in three Stanley Kubrick movies was Joe Turkel.
Who's that.
And Philip Stone
“Thank you for saying so.”
Jack Nicholson can play Jack Nicholson like no other actor.
This really is his most iconic role. Not to be too cliche, but this is the role he was born to play.
Gosh, what a historic comment!
needs no music
Lloyd never blinks.
He doesn’t have to, he’s not human
The Devil never does..........
Blinking is for liberals.
It's real scary watching him slowly becoming posessed.
Kubrick staged some really artificial feeling scenes, and this was one. He really missed the mark quite often, in my opinion. Like he needed someone to tell his 'genius' "No!", sometimes.
Maybe this scene is why so many people think Jack Daniels is bourbon.
Wow. Awesome score! Thanks Stephanie!!!!
Man that’s great acting
So many layers. Read a movie critic who proposed that the movie is, subliminally at least, about the genocide of the American Indian, and that view definitely holds water. Witness: the Calumet Baking Soda Indian behind Jack in the freezer, the elevators spilling a flood of blood, the twin girls in the hall representing the duplicity of the white man, Jack winds up in a picture dated July 4, birth of the nation-and right here in this clip Jack says, “White man’s burden, white man’s burden” , well that clinches it for me. The Tom Toms pounding in the background speak to this interpretation, too. Every detail meticulously contrived. Kubrick was a genius, and fabricated a magic lantern, a multidimensional masterpiece.
Rest in peace best movie ghost bartender ever.
He’s supposed to be an alcoholic yet he hasn’t drank in months. And admitted his mistakes and that it was a accident. I think madness should forgive him
The first step is to admit you’re sorry
Lol
King is a compelling writer,
but he doesn't know dick about shit.
King hated this film. This story actually happened. King did this to his son. Jack is not evil: he's weak. Kubrick turned him into Jack the Ripper.
@@markpage9886 Kubrick's movie is convoluted
White man's bourbon, Lloyd. White man's bourbon.
lets be honest......the original didn't need updating did it ? The stark silence adds to the whole thing...
Music spoils the scene
rip Lloyd. :(
Well, after some hefty wiki'ing i realize that Lloyd was actually American! He puts on a great English accent. Also, it turns out he played Eldon Tyrell in Bladerunner. So he was in two of my favourite films of all time.
Love that the shelfs are empty before loyd appears
i think there is also no way into the bar
Still gives me the creeps.
When he first walks into the ballroom and the place is dark and barely lit by all those small lights it's Barry Lyndon. When he reaches the bar all geometricalky glowing an eery white/yellow it's 2001. So this scene starts out as Barry Lyndon meets 2001!
That's Nick Nightingale on piano.
What's with the annoying music?😮
Where did the $60 go?
@1:32 the Joker laugh
Music ruins it
Best god-damn piano player from Timbuktu to Portland, Main... ..
..or Portland, Oregon ferr that matterr.
That bartender is Mephistopheles in a red tuxedo.
Yeah ok big mouth
Has to be seen at a theater, folks. See it 3 times. I had no idea who Kubrick was but had seen 2001. Artistry and possibly his best movie.
I love all of the quotes from "Rudyard Kipling!!*🌟
On one hand I can see why Stephen King said he never liked this film -- it diverges too much from the central point of KIng's novel. On the other hand, it's a brilliant piece of cinema in its own right if you can accept it as a different entity altogether from the book. Both King and Kubrick kicked ass on this story in their own ways.
More Human than Human...
Is our motto.
In the deleted scene of Doctor Sleep, Jack became the new " Lloyd The Bartender " and tried to tempt Danny to drink.
Much talk, little wool. If Michael Bay had made this, everything would have exploded on the 3rd minute.
Beautiful Native American toms in the ending with tones that were definitely pushing the character over the edge. Very well done.
Kubrick was a genius in light, effect, scenery.
Unfortunately he had no respect for the original author’s story.
He seemed to have not agreed with themes of either King or Burgess.
Burgess went along but King was disappointed and upset.
His snickering laugh after "You aren't too busy, are ya"?
Jack Daniels? No wonder the guy went crazy
I’m not a Jack Nicholson fan. I just don’t really like the guy but this little piece of acting is completely brilliant!! Holy crap he was good in this masterpiece. I loved every second of the shining.
Thank you Joe Turkel for a Fine Performance as Lloyd The Bartender, you'll be missed Greatly 😢
1927 - 2022 🙏⭐️✨️🕊
Thanatos
Let's actually was one of my favorite scenes right here.
So, he knows the bartender Lloyd from before the film, someone from his past?
This movie should be required viewing for the whole month of Oct til Halloween 😂.
They dont make movies this intriguing anymore its all a cash fest
Hi Lloyd. What will be?. Hair of the dog that's bits me. White's man burden Lloyd, white's man burden.
"Best damn bartender from Timbuktu to Portland Maine... or Portland Oregon."
The subtle knocking sounds in the music are quite sinister. Had me looking over at the door 😅
The Gold Room, with Lloyd and Grady..
Edited scene. Originally Lloyd asks how things are going . Jack replies just a little problem with the old sperm bank upstairs 😂
This part of the movie where he goes into this unstocked(dry as a desert gulch) and all of a sudden there is the bartender and a full stocked bar(and some) and then goes back to the former has a real "thud" to it🤔
LOL 😂Perhaps, she may need to be corrected, if you don't mind me saying so. She may need a good talking-to, and perhaps a bit more...
LOL 😂😂😂
My favorite scene ever
One lesson here is if you really want to know what’s going on one’s mind, speak to his/her bartender. That’s one data source no AI could match!!
He asked for bourbon and Lloyd gave him Tennessee whiskey, worst goddamn bartender from timbuck too to Portland Maine or Portland Oregon for that matter. Thank you for saying so sir. I love the little son of a bitch.
The movie passengers might have stolen the idea of only having a Bartender confidant from this movie/ book.
Lloyd giving that look of " I know what you are"
"A momentary loss of muscular coordination."
"Yes sir."
Everyone STF^ already. I have spoken