Why We're Obsessed with Stanley Kubrick Movies- Kubrick's Directing Style Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • Kubrick’s Directing Style Explained ►► bit.ly/kubrick-style
    Eyes Wide Shut Moodboard ►► bit.ly/kubrick-ews
    Color Theory Ebook ►► bit.ly/c-eb
    Cinematography Checklist ►► bit.ly/camera-cl
    Music in Film ►► bit.ly/music-film
    Chapters:
    00:00 What Makes Kubrick's Movies So Timeless?
    01:49 Kubrick's Stories - Approach to Scripting
    03:36 Kubrick's Production Design - Thematic Design
    06:19 Kubrick's Colors - Colors...Elevated (Eyes Wide Shut)
    09:02 Kubricks' Cinematography - The Overlook Hotel
    12:41 Kubrick's Editing - Edit for Internal Montage
    14:51 Kubrick's Sounds - The Sounds of Silence
    16:26 Kubrick's Music - Ironic Music
    19:42 How to Define "Kubrickian"
    Stanley Kubrick will go down as one of the greatest filmmakers of all time. No question. But why? What makes his filmmaking so outstanding? In this video essay, our task (and not an easy one) will be to dig inside Stanley Kubrick’s directing style to see if we can unlock the secrets within. From his scriptwriting, production design, color, cinematography, film editing, sound design, and film music - his mastery of all these filmmaking elements is legendary.
    Stanley Kubrick only made 13 movies in his lifetime, but they are all considered classics. Not only the best movies in their respective genres but also some of the best movies ever made. Dr Strangelove, 2001 A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange, The Shining, Full Metal Jacket, and Eyes Wide Shut, just a few iconic Stanley Kubrick movies you may have heard of. Despite their dissimilarities, behind each is filmmaking craftsmanship at its finest.
    With regards to Kubrick’s scriptwriting, his consistent focus is the human experience, where big questions are left unanswered. In his production design, he will echo the prevailing themes of each film into the set design and costumes. Stanley Kubrick is often associated with his cinematography, including his wide shot compositions, practical lighting, and those iconic tracking shots. Any fan of color theory will have a field day with Kubrick’s colors, which sail past subtle and overwhelm us.
    Kubrick doesn’t overly cut his films - his film editing is reserved and patient. On the soundtrack, Stanley Kubrick might go light on sound design but more than compensates with dramatic and enthralling film music.
    In the world of film theory and film analysis, Stanley Kubrick has left us 13 amazing films that we will endlessly puzzle over, dissect, and interpret. In film directing, he has set the bar for directors everywhere. And while we never get another Stanley Kubrick movie, what he has given us will last forever.
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  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @StudioBinder
    @StudioBinder  3 года назад +292

    Chapters:
    00:00 What Makes Kubrick's Movies So Timeless?
    01:49 Kubrick's Stories - Approach to Scripting
    03:36 Kubrick's Production Design - Thematic Design
    06:19 Kubrick's Colors - Colors...Elevated (Eyes Wide Shut)
    09:02 Kubricks' Cinematography - The Overlook Hotel
    12:41 Kubrick's Editing - Edit for Internal Montage
    14:51 Kubrick's Sounds - The Sounds of Silence
    16:26 Kubrick's Music - Ironic Music
    19:42 How to Define "Kubrickian"

    • @blacklizard5639
      @blacklizard5639 3 года назад +3

      If u know kubrick mind of filmmaking then make film for yourself.. lol

    • @Michlwhtn
      @Michlwhtn 3 года назад +5

      Watching studio binder is like receiving a formal education.

    • @justpinguvibin2894
      @justpinguvibin2894 3 года назад +3

      Directing style of Steven Spielberg please?

    • @foundsoul5024
      @foundsoul5024 3 года назад +5

      Do Tarkovsky please!

    • @akhils1850
      @akhils1850 3 года назад

      Please add english subtitle of your voice over. Then it become more understandable

  • @partogihutapea8632
    @partogihutapea8632 3 года назад +511

    This guy never won a single Oscar for best director and yet he is the most influential filmmaker of all time. Truly amazing artist.

    • @trucututrucutu6071
      @trucututrucutu6071 Год назад +29

      OF COURSE... THE WORK ITSELF IS THE REWARD, THE STATUE IS JUST A SOCIAL SYMBOL

    • @jerrygraves6531
      @jerrygraves6531 Год назад +11

      He's overrated

    • @samfisher2306
      @samfisher2306 Год назад +4

      Great director but I dare say Scorsese was better and more influential

    • @jmdi2703
      @jmdi2703 Год назад +5

      Because Kubrick is overrated.

    • @hardywoodaway9912
      @hardywoodaway9912 Год назад +8

      @@jmdi2703 because awards don’t go to the best, but mostly the most popular or the one who has the most influential friends..

  • @jackoo666
    @jackoo666 3 года назад +236

    8:48 Kubrick discovering one of the most iconic shots in horror cinema. "well that's not bad"

    • @rodneyngulube7444
      @rodneyngulube7444 3 года назад +10

      Couldn't have agreed more lol...

    • @jmdi2703
      @jmdi2703 Год назад

      Discovering? This shots done before Kubrick.

  • @filmshunting
    @filmshunting 3 года назад +351

    What I personally love about Kubrick is that almost all his films feels like a reinvention of a genre. I watched this video like three times. Definitely one of the best film channels on youtube.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +18

      Agreed, every genre he touches he defines

    • @ingvarhallstrom2306
      @ingvarhallstrom2306 3 года назад +5

      His biggest regret was that he didn't change "the form" of cinema. 2001 came close, but not close enough for Kubrick. All he ever wanted was ro re-invent cinema....

    • @The_Ring_Leader
      @The_Ring_Leader Год назад

      Let's also thank him for confessing the fake moon landing.

    • @Reedy1h38
      @Reedy1h38 Год назад +1

      If you enjoy Kubrick analysis videos I recommend rob Agers RUclips channel collative learning he’s got some real in-depth theories about Kubricks films. Studio binder and collative learning are my favourite

  • @hussainlali4630
    @hussainlali4630 3 года назад +1436

    Imagine the kind of movies he couldve made today

    • @nikhilnanda5922
      @nikhilnanda5922 3 года назад +403

      I was not able to wrap my head around the fact that '2001' was made in 1968 and i saw it 2018. 50 years later and it looked so fresh in terms of visual effects and cinematography.
      Kubrik was a master of his craft.

    • @LPChipi
      @LPChipi 3 года назад +215

      I'm actually glad that he did all his films before CGI was a major thing. He delivered pure cinematic magic without a crutch that now seems essential even for smaller films.

    • @rolandocalzadilla8960
      @rolandocalzadilla8960 3 года назад +35

      I.A, Lord of the Rings and Napoleon they are all unfinished projects

    • @Toxxsicklemons
      @Toxxsicklemons 3 года назад +19

      Nikhil Nanda I saw it before the year ended 2019. And I still can’t get over how perfect that movie was it almost seems like a movie made in 2004.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +193

      Would've been interesting to hear his thoughts on today's film industry

  • @cjfredi
    @cjfredi Год назад +29

    His way of capturing light, color and mood was absolutely fantastic. Pure cinematic artistry.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo Год назад +106

    Kubrick' brilliance was so good the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences never understood his influence in film. Maybe because a Kubrick film is not spoon fed mush as Hollywood loves to pump out and self award.

    • @ingvarhallstrom2306
      @ingvarhallstrom2306 Год назад +6

      There's a story he lost a nomination for best make up in 2001 going to Planet of the Apes because the Academy didn't realize there were people in costumes playing the prehistoric ape-men and not real animals.

    • @leokimvideo
      @leokimvideo Год назад +6

      @@ingvarhallstrom2306 Not surprised. Sadly The Academy is a collection of previous winners and 'click crowd'. 2001 ASO only won Best Visual Effects. It honestly should have cleaned up every award considering how groundbreaking the film was. Sci Fi films always struggle at the Oscars and one major aspect to a win in any category is has the film broken new ground in film making. Be it technology, story telling, film craft, directing, sound. And it gets back to the old crowd who are voting for all their Hollwood mates. The BAFTA's were kinder to the film, they seemed to understand how groundbreaking it was in many ways. Even the solo Oscar for Best visual effects for 2001 really goes to the leader of the VFX team. I can only assume Kubric was in total control of the VFX for him to be awarded the Oscar. Very unusual for the Director to win an Oscar for VFX. Kubrick must have upset the Hollywood 'click' to be so avoided in awards.

    • @danielc1978
      @danielc1978 6 месяцев назад

      @@leokimvideo Kubrick and good movies do not need validation from "institutions"; the same goes for the Grammys, the Rock Hall, etc,
      They're for giving people, who already get a lot of attention, more attention....
      "Awards" are, really, superficial and meaningless....

  • @saicharansinganmala658
    @saicharansinganmala658 3 года назад +359

    Iam obsessed with his crisp and clear story telling and it's transition of simple plot to simple yet impeccable execution.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +15

      Impeccable is a great word to describe his filmmaking

    • @jackm4457
      @jackm4457 3 года назад +6

      I disagree with the point that Kubrick always presented "crisp and clear story telling." Barry Lyndon was hardly "crisp." In fact, when I first saw it in the theater, 45 years ago, my date kept on asking to leave. (I broke up with her a week later. ) But, over time, I now appreciate Barry Lyndon as a true masterpiece. That's the thing about Kubrick movies -- they may not always get you on first viewing, but they'll draw you back again and again, until you're hooked. I saw 2001, again, in theater, at the age of 16, and thought it boring. But re-watched a dozen years later, on VHS, and was mesmerized. Clockwork Orange was repulsive to many on first viewing, but a lot of them came back. Kubrick films are like Picassos -- they might jar your sensibilities, at first, but their depth and attempt at truth convert you.

    • @saicharansinganmala658
      @saicharansinganmala658 3 года назад +2

      @@jackm4457 👍👍👍

    • @robvangessel3766
      @robvangessel3766 3 года назад +7

      I'm not sure if everyone would agree with the word "clear" when it comes to Kubrick's storytelling, but captivating, definitely.

    • @cory99998
      @cory99998 2 года назад

      @@jackm4457 she was not the one haha

  • @arpitraj3496
    @arpitraj3496 3 года назад +267

    Stanley Kubrick's visual story telling has no match. Highly symmetrical but at the same time dealing with contrasts and painting brilliantly woven stories.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +6

      Perfectly complimented his stories

    • @claudiakoning
      @claudiakoning 3 года назад

      werner herzog, roman polanski, quentin tarantino, alfred hitchcock, Darren Aronofsky, Federico_Fellini, martin scorsese, david lynch, jaques tati, david cronenberg, chris nolan, steven spielberg, george lucas, ridley scott, ingmar bergman and andrei tarkovsky are at least matches to kubricks "visual story telling". i personally think kubrick is way, WAY overrated and there are alot of better filmmakers like for example werner herzog out there.

    • @tharunkumar6694
      @tharunkumar6694 3 года назад +12

      @@claudiakoning looks like you googled film directors and copy pasted those here

    • @TonyBraun
      @TonyBraun 3 года назад +1

      @@tharunkumar6694 ....Yeah.......Lol

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      yeah he's the best...i have learned so much from him...lynch too...and aronofsky...hey friend,i made this...maybe you'll like it ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

  • @smartpotato1910
    @smartpotato1910 3 года назад +100

    His knowledge on wide variety of subjects and how he is able to transform them into symbols and metaphors is what sets him apart for me atleast. His mastery of semiotics, psychology, colour theory, perspectives is genius. He is a really admirable person

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +1

      So much to unpack in each of his films 👍

    • @AnnaLVajda
      @AnnaLVajda 2 года назад +6

      Yeah his work is thought provoking unlike most of the mindless drivel out now.

    • @xerxespowers2557
      @xerxespowers2557 2 года назад +2

      Kubrick was a psychologist who used film as a medium..

  • @Zingerbooda
    @Zingerbooda 3 года назад +146

    This the most underrated channel in RUclips

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +18

      Appreciate the support!

    • @muhammadfauzan6864
      @muhammadfauzan6864 3 года назад +7

      Its growing really fast and i love it

    • @ErickGarcia-qs2yh
      @ErickGarcia-qs2yh 3 года назад +3

      Definitely. Those guys are pros.

    • @asokanp1186
      @asokanp1186 3 года назад

      @@muhammadfauzan6864 Are you good,bad or ugly?

    • @muhammadfauzan6864
      @muhammadfauzan6864 3 года назад +5

      @@asokanp1186 My spirit is good, my body is bad, and my face is ugly. Help!

  • @willyfafok
    @willyfafok 3 года назад +488

    Next director series Andrei Tarkovsky

    • @contemporaryfilmreviews5583
      @contemporaryfilmreviews5583 3 года назад +17

      Best of the best

    • @Sumitaser
      @Sumitaser 3 года назад +7

      Willy Fafok Yes yes yes please he’s my all time favourite

    • @Sumitaser
      @Sumitaser 3 года назад +13

      Also Sergei Eisenstein and Jean Luc Godard

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +65

      Thanks for the suggestion!

    • @vincentgaliano
      @vincentgaliano 3 года назад +9

      There's an amazing (and long) video about Tarkovski by The Cinema Cartography.

  • @joaquinhernandez6940
    @joaquinhernandez6940 3 года назад +177

    The sound design -- without a doubt -- did remind me of how scary the vacuum of space can be. :-O

  • @JoJo-xp6wr
    @JoJo-xp6wr 3 года назад +192

    I am obsessed with your director's chair series, need more! And maybe next time explain Alfred Hitchcock's directing style?

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +21

      He's definitely on the list!

    • @robvangessel3766
      @robvangessel3766 3 года назад +9

      Alongside Kubrick and Bunuel, Hitch is my 3rd obsession. Which is interesting, because the 2 directors were opposite in their approach to their material. Kubrick liked to do as many retakes as possible, until something "new and different" happened - to let his subject grow organically. Coppola works that way too. But Hitchcock - who had a background in both engineering and graphic arts - liked doing all his "filmmaking" before any cameras rolled. He'd buy the rights to a short story, usually out of his own pocket; pare it down to the bare bones so that he could write a treatment with his own themes and motifs around it, storyboard some early ideas, hire a writer with whom he'd work closely throughout the development process (occasionally rewriting the dialog himself, as he did with LIFEBOAT), and then storyboard every single shot and sequence, so there'd be next to NOTHING left on the editing room floor. By the time shooting started, he knew everything that was going to happen.

    • @JoJo-xp6wr
      @JoJo-xp6wr 3 года назад +3

      @@robvangessel3766 I was actually fascinated by Hitchcock's films and approach to storytelling, a true master!

    • @NUCLEARDASH
      @NUCLEARDASH 3 года назад +2

      Orson welles would be so cool ...if he dint have just one well-known movi

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      hey jojo are u ready for your next favorite youtube short?.....well here it is,please enjoy ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

  • @qayyimsb
    @qayyimsb 3 года назад +319

    I think I speak for a lot of people when I say, "About damn time."

  • @KeemoRicablanca
    @KeemoRicablanca 3 года назад +67

    "You're so ugly you can be a modern-art masterpiece"

    • @FotisAthanasopoulos
      @FotisAthanasopoulos 3 года назад +5

      If I remember correctly, the actor ad-libbed most of his insults, and that makes it all the more funny and special

  • @DelightLovesMovies
    @DelightLovesMovies 3 года назад +55

    I really love how Mr. Kubrick's films get better the more you watch them. You have a really great voice Mr StudioBinder. I can listen to you talk about films all day. Thanks so much for sharing on youtube.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +4

      Agreed, 2001 only got better with each viewing until now it's one of my favorites

    • @pigstrotters4198
      @pigstrotters4198 3 года назад

      @@StudioBinder 2001 is a movie people either love or hate. The one who love it, (including myself), spent hours discussing the rest of the movie after Bowman disconnects HAL, “Daisy, Daisy”, the journey, the 3rd monolith and the space-child. It's said "HAL" meant "Heuristically Programmed ALgorithmic Computer"...others IBM. Nevertheless, this is the only movie I could watch say, twice a year.

    • @tnightwolf
      @tnightwolf 2 года назад

      It is the kind of magic very few are able to achieve!

  • @soundhealingbygene
    @soundhealingbygene Год назад +21

    Such a phenomenal cinematographer and director. Every single element of his films is carefully and meticulously planned out. I believe his films will be studied for decades to come. And there are so many great ones.

    • @dclindberg
      @dclindberg 7 месяцев назад

      While Kubrick's eye is incredible, he was the auetur (director.) Don't discount the efforts of his "go to" cinematographer, John Alcott. That dude shot 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), A Clockwork Orange (1971), Barry Lyndon (1975), and The Shining (1980.) He was a true talent.

  • @BadKarma714
    @BadKarma714 3 года назад +95

    Stanley Kubrick is a legend one the best filmmakers I’ve ever seen.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +5

      One of the best we've all ever seen!

    • @BadKarma714
      @BadKarma714 3 года назад +1

      StudioBinder yeah of course that’s what I meant but personally he’s one of my favorites he’s up there with Alfred Hitchcock and then after those two would have to be Quinton Tarintino Robert Rodriguez have you guys done any videos about Robert Rodriguez films

    • @Largentina.
      @Largentina. 3 года назад +6

      @@BadKarma714 They probably haven't done one on Robert Rodriguez because they usually stick to talented filmmakers.

    • @laurenhendricks8918
      @laurenhendricks8918 3 года назад

      I actually didn't know who he was I had to search him but I now know how amazing he is and how he has changed the way we are in this world. a great inspiration and very appreciated how much time he put in the creation of everything he has produced 💯👌

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      HE SUCKS!! nah!...just kidding! 😊..he's the best....maybe you'll like this,i made it and it was much work...but it is strangely captivating ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

  • @mjhzen8313
    @mjhzen8313 3 года назад +8

    I've always thought the quality that defines Kubrick films was beauty; in particular, an incredibly beautiful series of visual images which were so beautiful, in fact, that you could stop the film almost anywhere, enlarge the still, frame it, and hang it on the wall.

  • @wakeupuk3860
    @wakeupuk3860 3 года назад +6

    ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT !!.... I am not a film studies student but have loved and admired Stanley Kubrick films since Paths of Glory. Having spent some time as a photographer when young, later a teacher and now retired taken up oil painting found this video far exceeds other RUclipss in terms of teaching, quality and for fans of Stanley Kubrick a 'goal mine' of fascinating gems that I never knew about his films - thank you very much.

  • @akajkyt
    @akajkyt 3 года назад +20

    My favorite filmmaker of all time! A perfect artist, great video on him as well!

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад

      Thanks! We had a great time making it

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      my fave of all time for sure...i just saw barry lyndon last year......i actually strongly disliked barry..but thought the film was brilliant...sad....and brilliant....barry lyndon was gorgeous....i made this myself...maybe you'll be able to appreciate it..it was just for fun..but it is actually very intriguing ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

  • @ArtbyAtlas
    @ArtbyAtlas 2 года назад +17

    I think Kubrickian style is when the evironment and circumstances are as important as the character themselves.

    • @iamamaniaint
      @iamamaniaint 8 месяцев назад

      Exactly... he's an expressionistic director. But very subtle about it.
      You can watch a Kubrick film with no sound and still understand it.

    • @dclindberg
      @dclindberg 7 месяцев назад

      Points!

  • @experienceanimation217
    @experienceanimation217 3 года назад +56

    I'm impressed with the fact that every film he made had cultural significance, by blatantly pointing out the 'taboo' of the era. I find it mad alone, that he called out nazis working with the American government back in the 60's! Right in the thick of it, what balls! And it all turned out to be completely true

  • @johnnyzeee5215
    @johnnyzeee5215 3 года назад +6

    Every film of his reaches an artistic pinnacle, in exploring themes from the "...origin and purpose of humanity itself."

  • @garrettmorrell3864
    @garrettmorrell3864 3 года назад +15

    Eyes wide shut is my favorite! Wish I could see the directors cut, but you know...

  • @KMichiyu
    @KMichiyu 2 месяца назад

    Kubrick: crisp, intimidating... and colours like no films have. In one line: bizarre yet extremely interesting and captivating.

  • @dhruvgadhavi843
    @dhruvgadhavi843 4 месяца назад +2

    I admire him its so painful that he isn’t with us but his work is blessing to whole film industry.

  • @sebastianalegria3401
    @sebastianalegria3401 3 года назад +17

    Kubrick, apart from being a magnificent film director, is a big influence for directors like David Lynch, Spielberg or even Chris Nolan, I think that he based on 2001: A Space Odyssey to make the movie "Interstellar". Moreover, what makes Kubrick a great filmmaker is the way he repeats over and over again every take in his movies, so that's why I am someone else who's obsessed with his films.

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      well.....hopefully you'll be able to enjoy this short i made...if u have the time ..please enjoy ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

    • @354Entertainment
      @354Entertainment Год назад

      Lynch was inspire Kubrick in surreallism. One of Kubrick's fav. movies are Eraserhead. After that, he goes on his surreal trip with Shining... Not before...

  • @rahuldey1182
    @rahuldey1182 Год назад +27

    And Stanley Kubrick is the god of filmmakers. He made GOAT movies in every genre possible - Horror, Science Fiction, Crime, Comedy, Drama.

  • @ScruffyWarlord
    @ScruffyWarlord Год назад +3

    Eyes wide shut left me thinking about it long after the credits rolled. My favorite film from him.

  • @oobrocks
    @oobrocks 2 года назад +19

    The biggest error in Oscar's history is not even nominating 2001 for best picture

  • @JhonLd
    @JhonLd 3 года назад +11

    The singing in the rain part was improvised by Malcolm McDowell

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +5

      For all his control over the production, Kubrick frequently supported improv from his actors

    • @pigstrotters4198
      @pigstrotters4198 3 года назад +1

      I hurt my foot one time kicking the door going to class whilst singing.

  • @bijanadhikari7928
    @bijanadhikari7928 3 года назад +15

    Took you long enough for Kubrick who is undoubtedly the greatest and most influential director and filmmaker to have ever lived.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад

      haha he's not a guy we can rush talking about

    • @mateostanley4387
      @mateostanley4387 3 года назад

      @@StudioBinder
      The wait was worth it!

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      yes..kubrick is amazing...but give me a chance too pal....i'm ok...right? ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

  • @hradke9706
    @hradke9706 3 года назад +16

    I may be on my own here but I would LOVE to see a series on Paul Thomas Anderson and David Lynch sometime in the future.

  • @AdanRivasV
    @AdanRivasV 3 года назад +9

    You should make more of these videos, these are very interesting to watch, especially the way you divide your explanation with sections. Very smooth editing and stylish presentation.

  • @holasoyjuansm
    @holasoyjuansm 3 года назад +5

    It’s amazing the level of detail you go into your videos, thank you for teaching us so much!

  • @xxnightopsxx
    @xxnightopsxx 3 года назад +5

    Kubrick was the filmmakers filmmaker, it makes you wonder what he would have thought of RUclips and how heavily he would feature on it. Great channel and excellent production quality of your videos. Fantastic.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +1

      He was very progressive - I wonder if he would've made his own YT account 😮

    • @xxnightopsxx
      @xxnightopsxx 3 года назад

      @@StudioBinder now that would be great.

  • @frankcross6958
    @frankcross6958 Месяц назад

    Kubrick was a chess hustler, nfl lover, aviophobe, and absolute perfectionist. nobody ever had an eye like him from the look magazine photos to the feature films. he knew every crew members job better than they did. revered, respected, but never particularly honored. 2001 is likely the most influential film ever made. Kubrick was, is, always will be the GOAT of filmmaking.

  • @asokanp1186
    @asokanp1186 3 года назад +6

    Every movie directed by him surprises me every time I watch it.I somehow figured out diff sort of things whenever I watch a Kubrick film.I don't know how fast time went by when I have watched Barry Lyndon (his longer film)

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +1

      His films are packed with so much detail I think we'll always be able to discover new things on repeated viewings

  • @NasserTone
    @NasserTone 3 года назад +197

    Amazing Content! We want an episode about Jean-Luc Godard so badly! 😍🔥

    • @seancurry3920
      @seancurry3920 3 года назад

      JLG all time great my friend, unfortunate times we live in

    • @rosario508
      @rosario508 3 года назад +4

      I’m a HUGE fan of his!!!! He was great in Bloodsport!!!

    • @bitl5950
      @bitl5950 3 года назад +4

      @@rosario508 lmao

    • @proxkei2266
      @proxkei2266 2 года назад +1

      Contempt!!!

  • @asokanasokan8664
    @asokanasokan8664 3 года назад +8

    18:11 that's a great editing.

  • @a.t.6322
    @a.t.6322 3 года назад +5

    Loved this. Bronx boy Kubrick was brilliant! In regards to his use of music in the opening of The Shining, it is the Dies Irae, 4 notes of music over 800 years old, used to express dread in over 120 films.

  • @edgar.espinoza
    @edgar.espinoza 2 года назад +1

    Great essay! From script, to editing, to narration... just great!

  • @haiderjasim5093
    @haiderjasim5093 3 года назад +22

    What an incredible episode, this channel is still surprising me every day

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +5

      Surprising people every Monday!

  • @Jim-gk4so
    @Jim-gk4so 3 года назад +15

    I’m happy this video came out. He is a legend

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад

      A Directing Styles series isn't complete without him

    • @Jim-gk4so
      @Jim-gk4so 3 года назад

      StudioBinder yep also could you do directing style of Alfred Hitchcock I would like to see that. Only if you can, thanks

  • @juliepeterson6639
    @juliepeterson6639 Год назад

    The mirroring, the color, the angle, the movement. So much more.

  • @jeffspinner6579
    @jeffspinner6579 3 года назад +73

    If you can fake a moon landing, he deserves respect.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +14

      😂

    • @paulrevere2928
      @paulrevere2928 3 года назад +3

      Absolutely! ‘’The American people do not believe anything until they have seen it on television...’’ Richard Nixon

    • @jeffspinner6579
      @jeffspinner6579 3 года назад +1

      @@paulrevere2928, or have their president, President Nixon, talk on the phone to the astronauts "on the moon" with *zero* delay because Nevada ain't that far away after all.
      Like the newer Musk, _it must be real because it looks so fake_ animal abuse neurolink demo he faked according to neuroscientists that watched the show?
      Heartwarming.

    • @ResoluteGryphon
      @ResoluteGryphon 3 года назад +10

      Yes, Kubrick was selected to fake the moon landing but he was such a perfectionist that he demanded that they film it on location.

    • @jeffspinner6579
      @jeffspinner6579 3 года назад +1

      @@ResoluteGryphon I know right!? I mean when Nixon had his phone call with the Astronauts on the Moon, there was no delay for the astronauts to respond to the president, or a delay for the president to respond to the astronauts.
      I mean, for live tv, you can overcome the physical laws of the Universe right? Who wants the audience to wait to hear the scripted dialogue after all!
      *"The passed is erased, the erasure is forgotten, the lie becomes the truth."*
      I was 5 years old when I watched the Saturn V Moon launch in 1969. How old are you Resolute? You only know the last 20 years, cause the last 20 years has been completely psychotic, anti-scientific times in education, media, the courts and the gov't. According to a 2020 Pew Research study, more than half the women under 30 have psychiatric disorders. (Pew American Trends Panel: Wave 64, March 2020)
      You wouldn't have noticed, if you were born in this complete bizarro world. You must assume that all men around you with voices almost as high as the women around you was always the case. No, no, it hasn't.
      The young "men" of today have less than 15% of the testosterone of their great grandpas in the early 20th century. I have 50% the testosterone levels, but I'm 56 atm, so, I can supplement by injection.
      *Ignorance is bliss, until it isn't.*

  • @viktorsz
    @viktorsz 3 года назад +6

    Such a fine content put together, and covers the best director ever lived! Thank you guys!

  • @thecraigster8888
    @thecraigster8888 3 года назад +6

    That’s the first time I heard about Kubrick’s use of green to signify death. That does shed light on the presence of the green space helmet in 2001. The scene where Dave is on his way to disconnect HAL is the only time green is seen on the spacecraft. There were no green spacesuits in the ready room. Where did he get that helmet? On a basic level as the plot moves forward, the jarring contrast of the green helmet and red suit add tension to the scene as a reminder of the harrowing experience he just went through by not having a helmet in the pod. The symbolism of the color green adds even another layer to the movie.

    • @laslalal8451
      @laslalal8451 4 месяца назад

      Apparently, even though the film is black and white, the war room table in Dr Strangelove is green too

  • @CharlieECM
    @CharlieECM 2 года назад

    Im in tears of happiness i have no words to describe what i just saw just unbelievable awesome thank you very much

  • @pascaldeshayes5459
    @pascaldeshayes5459 3 года назад

    Absolutely brilliant! Thank a lot for making this available.

  • @WhiteBloggerBlackSpecs
    @WhiteBloggerBlackSpecs 3 года назад +3

    Great breakdown of what elements make Kubrick a cinematic genius

  • @danburity
    @danburity 3 года назад +3

    As always, great video! But I would like to point out that Alex singing "Singing in in Rain" wasn't Kubrick's idea was an improv by Malcom Mcdowell, he came up with the idea of singing the song in that scene.

  • @jedgould5531
    @jedgould5531 Год назад +2

    I love your writing. I think you could have expended each section just with Kubrick. Shot selection impeccable. Makes me glad I bought all of his films. The announcer - while a superior choice - could slightly attenuate his floridity, but just a bit.

  • @awesomebluemonkey3486
    @awesomebluemonkey3486 3 года назад +8

    This video is very very well done. I don’t know how you do this! Very impressive! Studio binder gets better every time! Keep it up!

  • @StevenAlvarez
    @StevenAlvarez 3 года назад +34

    i see 'Kubrick' i click, no questions

  • @Neocleese
    @Neocleese 3 года назад +23

    Without Kubrick would we have a David Fincher? Kubrick was a master Filmmaker and an influence of mine.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +6

      hard to overstate his influence on today's filmmakers

    • @TheListenerCanon
      @TheListenerCanon 3 года назад

      Most directors would be completely different.

    • @elestireninsanylmaz9581
      @elestireninsanylmaz9581 3 года назад +1

      Without Sergio Leone, S. Packinpah, Orson Welles, D.W.Griffith and D. Arbus would we have a Kubrick?

    • @Neocleese
      @Neocleese 3 года назад

      @@elestireninsanylmaz9581 Yes we would!

    • @stewartbloomfield8035
      @stewartbloomfield8035 3 года назад

      @@elestireninsanylmaz9581 Actually one of Stanleys hero's was D W Griffith. stew fmj crew.

  • @ffxiarcadius
    @ffxiarcadius 3 года назад

    Excellent video.
    Normally, I skip through videos, but this one I watched until completion.

  • @brantfrans8595
    @brantfrans8595 11 месяцев назад +2

    Truly one of the all time greats. Even though he never won an Oscar; he has the incredible respect and admiration from the fans.

  •  3 года назад +3

    In regards to the cinematography, he also uses a lot of zooming shots to frame certain characters in a particular state of mind while revealing the context in which they are. And regarding themes in Eyes Wide Shut, the iconic masks worn by the atendees at the secret cult further suggest the message about duality, speaking about production design.

  • @maazsiddiqui7616
    @maazsiddiqui7616 3 года назад +4

    Please upload an episode on Satyajit Ray's directing style.

  • @syntaxerorr
    @syntaxerorr 3 года назад +1

    Music, symmetry, not afraid to get dirty on topics, visually stunning.

  • @Clarence299
    @Clarence299 3 года назад +2

    I am loving these directors' chair videos! Can't get enough. Can you, maybe, explain Jean-Luc Godard or any Nouvelle Vague Directors?

  • @andrewparker318
    @andrewparker318 3 года назад +7

    No director has ever matched the mastery and genius that Stanley Kubrick had. He had an understanding of art and storytelling that was beyond any human mind capable of making a movie.

  • @TheThinkersBible
    @TheThinkersBible Год назад +3

    This is amazing information. Subscribed. The Story and Sound Design elements really stick out. As well as the use of irony. These are things I included in my videos unconsciously in places. I've published my 4th video now, am working on my 5th one and I intend to incorporate more of these ideas - and to do so consciously in addition to unconsciously. Thanks also for the resource links, am looking forward to reading all of the papers and articles. Will probably need your platform in the future when my channel gets bigger. Thanks!

  • @hustlehosh
    @hustlehosh Год назад

    I love these directing style videos! Would love to see the channel do one about Kurosawa as well!

  • @siegfriedkleinmartins7816
    @siegfriedkleinmartins7816 2 года назад +1

    StudioBinder made a huge score point by analizing the works of Kubrick. Even dead, he still is the big reference in film making.
    Many, many thanks !!!! Well done !!
    Greetings from Brasil

  • @hehhehdummy
    @hehhehdummy 2 года назад +3

    I love his movies so much.
    This video was insightful. I hadn't noticed that his true torture didn't start until the desecration of his beloved Beethoven.

  • @clausvergara9702
    @clausvergara9702 3 года назад +4

    You should definitely do a video about Oliver Stone, David Lynch, Sergio Leone and Roman Polanski. I always enjoy your videos about filmmaking, it is so educational and well explained. Thanks a lot!

  • @katfayegarrett3872
    @katfayegarrett3872 3 года назад

    Beautiful video. Loved the color discussion.

  • @brunobaw657
    @brunobaw657 3 года назад

    The ending of Paths of glory (the soldiers in the bar with the singer and Kirk Douglas moving) is a very good example for the music section.

  • @oliverklosov5153
    @oliverklosov5153 3 года назад +11

    Now this is how to advertise your product. Well done, StudioBinder.

  • @TheBlueMeanie101
    @TheBlueMeanie101 3 года назад +11

    Finally, what we've all been waiting for.

  • @filmlvr25
    @filmlvr25 3 года назад

    Love this content and the narratives are solid gold!

  • @arthurbotting9557
    @arthurbotting9557 3 года назад +2

    This is amazing! It explains Stanley Kubrick’s style and psychology in his films so well.

    • @TETCOM.
      @TETCOM. 2 года назад

      maybe you'll find some psychology of your own in this short i made ruclips.net/video/NE6qCUTJjU0/видео.html

  • @CareggiStudio
    @CareggiStudio 3 года назад +5

    I have been waiting 15 years to listen to someone explaining this.
    A Digital Revolution? Maybe.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @mandolindleyroadshow706
    @mandolindleyroadshow706 3 года назад +14

    Where are The Killing, Paths of Glory, Lolita and Barry Lyndon? Not even a nod to those classics.

  • @PtolemyCeasar
    @PtolemyCeasar Год назад

    Taking a space and using the camera to relentlessly mine for shots is the first level of respect i have for Stanley.

  • @HiramMaxem
    @HiramMaxem 3 года назад +2

    Amazing essay on my favorite Director. Great choices and analysis.

  • @ShakilAhmad-uc8fr
    @ShakilAhmad-uc8fr 3 года назад +21

    *Please make a video on Vince Gilligan*

  • @jamie7357
    @jamie7357 3 года назад +34

    This Kubrick guy is pretty good.

    • @ErickGarcia-qs2yh
      @ErickGarcia-qs2yh 3 года назад +14

      Yes. The kid has potential.

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +7

      he's a talented bloke for sure

    • @mjolninja9358
      @mjolninja9358 3 года назад +4

      This Guy Kubrick might be the next big one

    • @Largentina.
      @Largentina. 3 года назад +5

      @@mjolninja9358 I wouldn't go that far. He's too young to say for sure, but he's probably just a one hit wonder.

  • @peeetteerr
    @peeetteerr 3 года назад +2

    I thank you for adding real insight into what he achieved. I am a fan, but not one who has studied or analyzed film, so you taught me much.

  • @clath2823
    @clath2823 3 года назад

    Amazing sound editing from about 3:30-4:00.

  • @Damidas
    @Damidas 3 года назад +14

    The greatest movie Kubrick ever made was the moon landing

  • @goodtitle686
    @goodtitle686 3 года назад +14

    I really love these, so thank you! Could you also make one on Hitchcock's directing style?

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +3

      He's definitely in the pipeline!

  • @trenttsu673
    @trenttsu673 3 года назад +1

    ur channel really is helping me a lot thank u guys for your work!

  • @syahrurieramadhani
    @syahrurieramadhani Год назад

    oh boy... that singin in the rain and symphony no.9 is always there dazzling around in my mind. genius.

  • @hannibalcosta
    @hannibalcosta 3 года назад +3

    One could point out that classic directors are missing from that list: Woody Allen and his mentor, Federico Fellini (Amarcord). It would also be good to consider the masterpiece of Elem Klimov (Come and See), Andrei Tarkovski, Akira Kurosawa, Wim Wenders, Roberto Rosselini, Sergio Leone, and, finally, the father of all of them: Sergei Eisenstein.

  • @mahmoodalsalmi6591
    @mahmoodalsalmi6591 3 года назад +7

    I have never ever watched a great timeless films as a Stanley Kubrick films

    • @StudioBinder
      @StudioBinder  3 года назад +1

      Part of the Kubrickian quality

  • @bySterling
    @bySterling 3 года назад

    A Legend like none other 💯💪🏻❤️👊🏻💥👏🏻 One of my favorite aspects of his visual captures is Kubrick’s often use of symmetry.

  • @vicentecampos2893
    @vicentecampos2893 2 года назад

    Lots of work put in this video, great information again.

  • @kinotochishi3083
    @kinotochishi3083 3 года назад +18

    Dear #Studiobinder the amount of information and presentation that you put in each and every video is impeccable✊. And speaking specifically of this video I'm sure Stanley Kubrick is proud of this 😭. And as always much love to this channel, and hoping for the day for this channel to blow soon 🤧.

  • @JasonVoorhees10100
    @JasonVoorhees10100 Год назад +4

    Because his camera work is the best of the best. I've come to the conclusion its even subconscious. If you watch his movies on psychedelics his movies are very aesthetically pleasing to the eye for being so centered and full of life and atmosphere.

  • @kf5541
    @kf5541 3 года назад

    Love the chapters option 👍🏻

  • @directedbymohith1396
    @directedbymohith1396 3 года назад

    It learned me a lot about his filmmaking style
    Stanley Kubrick is the person who changed my view of filmmaking

  • @tomcombe4813
    @tomcombe4813 3 года назад +4

    I'm pretty sure the reason it goes silent when dr pool's air is severed is because that's what would actually happen if all the air in your suit escaped. Sound doesn't travel in the vacuum of space so it would be completely silent. It wasn't really a 'sound desgin' choice it was more of a 'realism' choice.

  • @vidujayasuriya9597
    @vidujayasuriya9597 3 года назад +3

    This video essay is insightful, inspiring, amazing and mesmerizing. Please upload a video essay on Clint Eastwood, Alfred Hitchcock and Orson Welles. Also, on the French New Wave Movement

  • @spicetbedhead
    @spicetbedhead 3 года назад

    This makes me learn a lot about film making!!!

  • @CROMA1927
    @CROMA1927 3 года назад +1

    The worlds this man has created. Wonderful.