The Shining (1980) *First Time Watching Reaction!! | Best Horror Movie Ever?!?! |

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 569

  • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
    @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад +46

    Share your thoughts, subscribe and give the video a 👍🏻💚

    • @MLJ7956
      @MLJ7956 Год назад +2

      Great reaction ladies to this horror classic....
      Do you also plan to do the sequel 'Doctor Sleep' (2019) anytime soon?....if you do, I highly recommend the extended director's cut version (the extended director's cut is the closest to the novel unlike the heavily edited theatrical version done by the movie studio itself not by the director & editor, in addition the theatrical version does contain some plot holes because of the studio edits made to shorten the runtime. The studio really didn't care about the plot/story, character development and other expositions, they just wanted to shorten the film to try to make more money in the theater release. Thankfully the extended director's cut does not have those plot holes at all & I personally think, the extended director's cut is a much richer in story & characters and a much better put together film than the theatrical is in my own opinion)
      Even though Stephen King wasn't a fan of Stanley Kubrick's movie version of his novel 'The Shining', SK was very happy about Mike Flanagan's sequel film (the extended director's cut version that is) that was based on his novel. SK said he loved it. 😁 👍

    • @mikesilva3868
      @mikesilva3868 Год назад +2

      Agreed 🤗

    • @stevem.1853
      @stevem.1853 Год назад +3

      If you look for an explanation for this movie, you'll find a massive rabbit hole... The director explained that the picture at the end suggests "a sort of evil reincarnation" like a cycle of violence that repeats.

    • @kiranolan7104
      @kiranolan7104 Год назад +1

      This is my favorite horror movie of all time, and one of my favorite movies period! Thanks for watching it 😃

    • @alfroml.a.5404
      @alfroml.a.5404 Год назад +1

      Stanley Kubrick filmed the footage shown to the world of US landing on the Moon. We didn't have the technology to beam a television signal from the moon @ the time. (I'm not saying we didn't land on it) 2001. Elvis' Aloha from Hawaii 1973 ❤ was the first live broadcast worldwide 🌐 no bullshit. DOCTOR SLEEP original theatrical version is now available on "max" ❤💯🙂✔️ L Love youse Love youse & love youse siempre

  • @stevena3244
    @stevena3244 Год назад +304

    My wife didn't care for this film at first. In fact, she only gave it a 4.5 out if 5....But I corrected her.

    • @dukenukem-c2e
      @dukenukem-c2e Год назад +7

      Ooooh you....didnt😮

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +5

      Stephen King hated this movie

    • @dukenukem-c2e
      @dukenukem-c2e Год назад +31

      @@nsasupporter7557 it's because it's better than all his movies put together. Thinner, Christine, maximum over drive are not well put together, just simple movies with no backstory,, suspense, his creations all need to be reworked. Thankfully shinning was

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +13

      @@dukenukem-c2e “All of his movies??” Stephen King doesn’t make movies, he writes the books 😉 did you mean to say that it was better than all of his adaptations of his books? Or did you mean to say something else?

    • @bobbyg7102
      @bobbyg7102 Год назад +12

      After 4 shots of Red Rum, my wife finally agreed to watch it

  • @Danathema
    @Danathema Год назад +81

    Phillip Stone as Grady was incredible too. The way he goes from docile, friendly and subservient to vicious, cold and cruel without ever raising his voice or gesticulating is terrifying.

    • @bfdidc6604
      @bfdidc6604 Год назад +9

      Well said. Perhaps he won't have to correct you.

    • @philstone2627
      @philstone2627 Год назад +4

      I agree completely

    • @kpmac1
      @kpmac1 Год назад +8

      True. The way he says "I corrected her" is terrifying.

    • @CASantos
      @CASantos Год назад +3

      That's possibly my favorite scene in all of film. The choreography is stunning, almost like a dance. Even the way the actors lean (jack forward while he's questioning him, grady backward) until the "flip" and then their posture subtly changes with grady upright and dominant and of course that menacing lighting.
      I always say, as someone who doesn't really believe or get spooked by the supernatural, the only 2 things in the film that actually scared me were Jack at numerous times but especially in the bedroom scene with Danny (ghosts may not be real, but a domineering and abusive husband/father who flies off the handle too easily sure is!) and this one😅 Kubrick really is the 🐐

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 Год назад +6

      @@kpmac1 The rolling 'r' is what seals it. Speaking the Queen's English to describe unspeakable horror with obvious relish.

  • @UberDurable
    @UberDurable 4 месяца назад +8

    RIP Shelley Duvall (1949 - 2024) 🙏🙏🙏

  • @rabidfollower
    @rabidfollower Год назад +22

    The "shining" is often literal in this movie: there is bright light in several scenes. The manager and the family doctor early on, the bartender, and notably Grady in the bathroom (21:21), all have bright lights shining from a lamp or window behind or above them when they are talking to one of the Torrances. Instead of darkness and shadows seen in most horror films, the film does the unusual and uses bright lights as a source of creepiness. The final maze scene is again fairly brightly lit, instead of the usual scary and dark.

  • @citizenbobx
    @citizenbobx Год назад +18

    The book insinuated that the billionaire power-broker guy who built the place was into some sort of dark magic that somehow wedded his malevolent life force to the place. This was able to linger through the periodic sacrifices of souls taken captive by the hotel over the years. So you see at the end, the hotel found a place for Jack as well.
    The hotel sensed that it could greatly amplify its power to grab people by getting hold of Danny.

    • @dracoargentum9783
      @dracoargentum9783 Год назад +2

      What I wouldn’t give to have the builder turn out to be Ivo Shandor; what a cross-over that would make…

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 6 месяцев назад

      Actually, my idea is that the Hotel was good but its human spirits were evil.

  • @jwnj9716
    @jwnj9716 Год назад +38

    It's funny that Jack mentions in the beginning that Wendy is a horror fan. Well, towards the end, she gets the horror movie of her life.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад +7

      Doubt she is a fan anymore 😂

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +2

      What’s sad is that Shelley Duvall went through hell on the set of this movie

    • @jwnj9716
      @jwnj9716 Год назад +2

      @@nsasupporter7557 Indeed

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +1

      @@jwnj9716 I forget what exactly happened, but Jack was treated like royalty and she was treated like garbage

    • @CASantos
      @CASantos Год назад

      I think that part was meant to be false. Nothing in her demeanor or temperament implies she likes that kinda stuff, even the "cannibalism" comment in the car. And Kubrick, who was notoriously meticulous, had the TV on some older hollywood seemingly romantic show or movie when we saw what she was watching in the room.
      (The other instance of an observable tv show playing within the movie was wendy+danny watching roadrunner at one point, which is also obviously 100% intentional and much more on the nose).

  • @BrettYeamans
    @BrettYeamans Год назад +27

    The Shining was one of the first Steven King books I ever read and it’s one of Stanley Kubrick’s best movies in my opinion.

    • @tarzapopohead
      @tarzapopohead Год назад

      I like Stephen King more enjoy the TV mini series produced by king which is more inline with the book.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 7 месяцев назад

      @@tarzapopohead aka "King's Komplaint"

  • @tomfrankiewicz4030
    @tomfrankiewicz4030 Год назад +58

    Jack Nicholson is just a awesome actor. His screen presence is unsurpassed.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад +10

      Truly fantastic!!

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +3

      He might not be around much longer, he’s 86 and he has Alzheimer’s now 😢

    • @maexpert11
      @maexpert11 Год назад +2

      Jack Nicholson and Brad Dourif are probably two of my top and I'm glad they were in a movie together

    • @CASantos
      @CASantos Год назад +1

      Agreed. Some who don't *get* what Kubrick was going for say he "overdid" it, but frankly not many could've done what Nicholson did here.

    • @stevev2492
      @stevev2492 Год назад +1

      Kubrick wanted Nicholson to play Napoleon in a film about Napoleon, but the studio wouldn't finance the film.

  • @bkboy2384
    @bkboy2384 Год назад +10

    Jack absolutely owns this every second he's on screen...legend

  • @matthewstroud4294
    @matthewstroud4294 Год назад +12

    King says that he dislikes the portrayal of Jack in the movie, as his character in the book is more even-keeled and gets twisted by the hotel, whereas in the movie Jack is a textbook narcissist from the beginning and then develops into a maniac. Apparently he didn't want Nicholson to play the part either, because audiences would think Jack was a bit nuts from the off. However, I think Kubrick was right, and that the movie is a masterpiece.
    Reading the Wiki page on The Shining is fascinating. The film was generally not well received by critics, some of whom totally backtracked many years later when everyone else decided it was brilliant.
    Nice watch ladies, next onto the G.O.A.T. - The Exorcist. Unless you've both seen it.

  • @auntvesuvi3872
    @auntvesuvi3872 Год назад +10

    Many thanks to Michelle & Natalie! 😱 I hope you'll watch the sequel DOCTOR SLEEP (2019) very soon. It's really good and adds to the characterization of a couple of familiar characters, as well as the overall lore. #ForceOfLightEntertainment #StanleyKubrick #TheShining #TheShining1980

  • @tbmike23
    @tbmike23 Год назад +9

    Kubrick was a genius, and you ladies look absolutely stunning, as always. His use of symmetry and pacing are so unsettling. The soundtrack could be a main character in the film. In the book the dad isn't the bad guy, merely possessed. The hotel is the bad guy, and Danny makes it stronger. It tries to take Danny but can't, so it takes his dad instead, who struggles against it.

  • @carloslionel1653
    @carloslionel1653 Год назад +6

    This is the type of movie you need to watch three times, you’ll find a new thing you missed every time. Great reaction.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад +1

      I’m sure!! I plan on watching it tomorrow!

    • @victoryak86
      @victoryak86 Год назад +1

      Watch for the appearing/disappearing chair, them going into one storage pantry and coming out across the hall (many other such things that some call “continuity errors” but you can be sure each and every one was planned and intentional. There’s a great deal to unlock in this film.

  • @TheTriumphbsa
    @TheTriumphbsa Год назад +5

    The ground is cursed, and all the ghosts are the victims of the place. At the bar, Jack said he'd sell his soul for a drink; then everything is opened up to him. He, like Delbert Grady and all the others, are quickly corrupted into pure evil. Jack becomes part of the hotel and reoccurring Ball day and Party night after he dies. Delbert thinks he's always been there, and now Jack is incorporated into their hell forever also, as seen in the 1920's pic that now includes him .

  • @josepha5885
    @josepha5885 Год назад +5

    Some lady sitting behind me in the theater screamed when that person in the bear costume came on.

  • @chrisb9577
    @chrisb9577 Год назад +5

    Excellent review. You are right: the camera work, acting (especially Jack Nicholson), and the music/sound effects were all masterfully done. Stanley Kubrick was also an incredible director.

  • @therealstephentv
    @therealstephentv Год назад +6

    The Shining, classic. Michelle "Hit him again, go again" and "We can hug later" lol. Did you know theres a sequel called "Doctor Sleep?"
    Again I give y'all 5 hoot 🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉 Take care and stay blessed.

  • @SinSationNation
    @SinSationNation Год назад +5

    Jack Nicholson nailed it with the character he portrayed in The Shining. It gave me the heebie jeebies 🫣when I first watched this. A true horror classic.
    As always loved watching the both of you react to another movie 🍿

  • @williambanks2223
    @williambanks2223 Год назад +6

    Jack Nicholson is the Lon Chsney of our rea. He can change his mood and expression to fit the movie effortlessly.

  • @tomfrankiewicz4030
    @tomfrankiewicz4030 Год назад +11

    This movie definitely needs to be re-released in theaters

    • @275lawrence
      @275lawrence Год назад +1

      Before doctor sleep came out they re-released it in theaters where I live. Got to see it for my first time on the big screen.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 7 месяцев назад

      @@275lawrence Were the colours right or did they do that horrible pink version?

  • @donparnell309
    @donparnell309 Год назад +4

    Jack Nicholson has a reputation as a heavy from this movie and A Few Good Men. Ironically two of his Academy Awards are from a Rom-Dramedy (As Good as It Gets) and the Dramedy Terms of Endearment while his third is is from One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest where he is the leading man/protagonist in the drama.

  • @JoeCool7835
    @JoeCool7835 Год назад +12

    My favorite horror movie of all time, the one that got me into the genre.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад +4

      Personally think it’s the best!

    • @JoeCool7835
      @JoeCool7835 Год назад +1

      @@ForceOfLightEntertainment The biggest reason it's one of the greatest horror movies ever made is because so much is left up to the audience's interpretation. I watch it every year & still find things I missed previously. There's even a documentary called "Room 237" that looks at the various fan theories about the movie.

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад

      @@JoeCool7835some people think this movie is overrated, I can see their point but I’m not 1 of those people. It’s an absolute classic movie

  • @DavidSnow-s2r
    @DavidSnow-s2r 5 месяцев назад +1

    All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. What a great movie I watch it every year.

  • @richardkrawczyk5606
    @richardkrawczyk5606 Год назад +8

    Kubrick used the mirrors for a purpose. They were the hotel's spirit gateway. Also, none of the spirits manifested visually until room 237 was opened. That's also when the sound of a heartbeat was added to the soundtrack.

    • @meanstreetmook
      @meanstreetmook Год назад +3

      The two girls manifested to Danny in the games room on closing day. Then again in the spot they were killed, both before 237 was opened.

    • @richardkrawczyk5606
      @richardkrawczyk5606 Год назад +2

      @@meanstreetmook he was the only one who could because of the Shining. Jack didn't have the ability, which is why every scene he sees people in has mirrors and only after 237 was opened.

    • @meanstreetmook
      @meanstreetmook Год назад +3

      @@richardkrawczyk5606 Ah so you meant Jack and Wendy after 237, and Wendy only when the Hotel flexed all its power. Many people seem to think Jack also had The Shining, but I, like you, don't believe he did.

  • @quixote6942
    @quixote6942 Год назад +4

    A GREAT IDEA FOR A BOOK... It'd be called "The History of the Overlook", by Jack Torrance... The first 40-50 pages are the start of a good book, but as the story continues, The words "All work and no play makes jack a dull boy" begin popping up until about the 70th page when that's all that's written (Identical to the various pages Wendy saw).... In a 150 page Novel!

  • @timaustin2000
    @timaustin2000 Год назад +3

    "It's just the three of them".
    But that's the thing: it's never just the three of them: the Hotel is always there. The hotel is the fourth person.

  • @WolfHreda
    @WolfHreda Год назад +3

    One thing they don't go into much is the Overlook's boiler. A big part of the reason they need a caretaker during the winter is that they need to vent the pressure from the boiler consistently, or it will explode, like it did back in 1921. In fact, in the book, it does explode because Jack has been neglecting his duty to chase his family around with an axe. There's a TV miniseries that Stephen King made later because he wasn't satisfied with Kubrick's version of The Shining. It follows the book much more closely, including the reveal of who Tony is at the end. But all things considered, it's not really worth the watch unless you're big into King. If you want the best King miniseries, those would be It (Tim Curry is iconic), The Stand (The original with Gary Sinise and Molly Ringwald. It's my favorite.), and 'Salem's Lot (either the original, or the Rob Lowe remake. They both have their merits.)
    My favorite anecdote from this movie is that Jack Nicholson chopped his way through an actual door. He spent some time as a volunteer firefighter, so when he took that axe to the prop door they had set up, he went through it in one chop. After another prop door fell apart too quickly, Nicholson and Kubrick agreed to just put up the real door, and Jack went to work on it.

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 10 месяцев назад

      So, the 'Mister Torrance' in the July 4 1921 picture , and the boiler exploded in the winter of 1921, and now Jack Torrance is back two generations later.
      - also Delbert and Charles Grady two generations apart.

  • @DVDNewsFlash
    @DVDNewsFlash Год назад +3

    Jack Nicholson did make a werewolf movie, WOLF (1994).

  • @coldflamebluedragon196
    @coldflamebluedragon196 Год назад +7

    The Shining is a flawless horror film and it’s the perfect example of one

  • @phillipdycaico5949
    @phillipdycaico5949 Год назад +2

    I’ve seen this movie many times. The father and son are sensitive to the spirits. When they entered the special hotel room, the power of the spirits was released and they were able to affect the real world. I could be wrong. Great movie.

  • @johnmaynardable
    @johnmaynardable Год назад +3

    Stanley Kubrick is one of my favorite directors. Someone below states that it took 117 takes for them to complete the scene of Nicholson chopping through the bathroom door. That is not unusual for Kubrick. He was famous for doing a hundred takes on many shots, because he was a mad perfectionist. This would drive some actors crazy, but Nicholson kind of egged him. He would dare Kubrick to get another take. Sadly Kubrick was a little harsh on Shelley Duvall, because he needed her to reach extreme levels of stress. Stephen King didn't like this film because of the changes from the book. In the book Dick Halloran lives and escapes with Wendy and Danny. Also there is no hedge maze in the book. Instead the book has hedge animals that animate and threaten the heroes. I think Kubrick killed Halloran to shock the hell out of the millions of people that had read the best-selling book (like me). Also the hedge animals would have been an easy special effects trick. The hedge maze was much more cinematic, and mirrored the hotel.

  • @williamjones6031
    @williamjones6031 Год назад +3

    1. Joe Turkel/Lloyd plays Tyrell in the original "Bladerunner" 😇
    2. "Here's Johnny" was adlib by Nickelson.
    3. It took 117 takes for Jack to chop through the doors. He used his voluntary firefighting skills to get through all the takes.
    4. The reason King didn't like this adaptation of the movie is because he didn't like the changes Kubrick made. This thing was remade just for King and although the remake was more in line with the book IMVHO it wasn't as good at this one.
    5. Two of the changes he didn't like were Jack's decent into madness was too rapid, and Wendy wasn't such a patsy in the book.
    6. Shelley Duval said making this film was the worst thing she ever experienced in her life. She was abused on and off camera".
    7. Jack Nicholson and Scatman worked together in "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest".
    8. The real villain here is the hotel itself.
    9. Watch Dr. Sleep. Danny is an adult and many of the loose ends will be cleared up.

  • @jeffbassin630
    @jeffbassin630 Год назад +4

    Glad that you both "enjoyed" watching The Shining, a classic and frightening film!

  • @jesses5463
    @jesses5463 Год назад +3

    16:01 Funny that you mentioned that. Jack Nicholson later starred in the 1994 film titled "Wolf"

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Год назад +10

    "Here's Johnny!"
    Fun Fact: The door that Jack Nicholson chops through with the axe near the end of the film was real. Stanley Kubrick originally shot this scene with a fake door, but Jack Nicholson, who had worked as a volunteer fire marshal and a firefighter in the California Air National Guard, tore through it too quickly.
    Now, the absolute scariest moment of this film to me is when Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) wife Wendy Torrance (Shelley Duvall) realizes that he's just been writing the same sentence over and over and over from the very beginning, and then he's RIGHT THERE!
    Shelley Duvall who has the most wonderful eyes and who's so underrated, her reactions throughout the film are unfortunately largely genuine as Stanley Kubrick terrorised the poor woman relentlessly.
    Also, big shout out to Danny "Doc" Torrance (Danny Lloyd) for being the smartest person ever in a horror film with that walking-backwards-in-snow trick.

    • @Buzza235
      @Buzza235 Год назад +1

      She gave a great performance. She had a lot of respect for Kubrick. Her role was definitely the toughest to get right.

    • @rabidfollower
      @rabidfollower Год назад +1

      Kubrick did lots of takes and that often wore down the actors. Some shoots are more grueling than others. And every working person can relate to having a tough day at the office when you have to butt heads with your boss or coworkers.

    • @Buzza235
      @Buzza235 Год назад

      Kubrick's method is a minimum of 30 takes of every scene.

  • @americanmutt9089
    @americanmutt9089 Год назад +3

    Speaking of Jack looking like he was turning into a werewolf there is a movie starring Jack Nicholson, Michelle Pfeiffer and James Spader called Wolf. Not his best role, but I liked the story.

  • @victoryak86
    @victoryak86 Год назад +2

    I enjoyed your this a lot. One of the more fun “reaction channels” imho, (and I’ve watched a bunch). Good observations and plenty of humor sprinkled in. Great job.

  • @stephenhall8249
    @stephenhall8249 11 месяцев назад +2

    The best interpretation of the Shining I have ever heard is called the Wendy theory. It proposes that it was Wendy who was schizophrenic and also suffered from Munchausen by proxy. Every bizarre scene such as with the bear suit human. Everything involving room 237. Dany having the shining. It is all her decent her madness. Each of the scenes involving her losing her mind all have continuity errors. Kubrick was a stickler for only having exactly what he wanted in each scene. The errors are not errors but on purpose to let the viewer know that what she is interpreting as real is in fact not. Jack never escapes from the locker with the help of a ghost or whatever viewers may think because he was never there. When Wendy first sees the locker there is clearly a light switch near the door handle on the outside. When she "locks" him in there is no light switch. She did not lock him in, she dragged him outside after hitting him with the bat and he died of exposure. We know this because a closer look at the decay of the body and amount of snowfall and ice is not consistent for a short amount of time. He has been there for awhile. Also, she is the woman in 237. She hurts Danny as she has always done to receive sympathy from others for his wounds and a "you go girl" approval for putting up with such a "horrible" man. There is no Shining. Munchausen by proxy patients often invent fanciful abilities for the children to make them seem special. Again making her seem special. It was all Wendy's madness.

  • @mralmnthwyfemnin5783
    @mralmnthwyfemnin5783 10 месяцев назад +2

    I like how she choked up on the bat. Makes for better control.

  • @matthewgordon2811
    @matthewgordon2811 Год назад +10

    Classic horror film! One of my favorites! Great reaction! I enjoyed it!

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Год назад +3

    That was such a fun reaction, you guys cracked me up so many times during that one! I loved your commentary at the end. I never really thought of it as a two and a half hour movie (which it is), and yes, it flies by....and it's only three people mostly! All of Kubrick's movies are interesting, intelligent, one-of-a-kind and often trippy. In fact, he's made three of the trippiest movies of all time (2001: A Space Odyssey, The Shining and A Clockwork Orange)! Jack Nicholson is always great and he didn't always play crazy, he's great in everything, including romantic roles. He followed this with "Reds" where he's in a love triangle with Diane Keaton and Warren Beatty. And then he got his second Oscar for his brilliant performance in one of the ultimate so-called "chick flicks" "Terms Of Endearment" with Shirley MaClaine and Debra Winger. Don't miss that movie, on or off the channel. And of course in the 70s he played so many great roles in super classics including Chinatown, Carnal Knowledge, The Last Detail and One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest. Two of his last great roles were in "About Schmidt" where he plays a timid widower and "Something's Got To Give", another romantic comedy with Diane Keaton.

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 Год назад +1

      PS: I have to say it one more time: your post film remarks were fantastic, every single thing you said was right on.

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад +1

      Thank you!!

  • @PaulMcMurray-q7j
    @PaulMcMurray-q7j Год назад +2

    Thank you two for this reaction video,.....From Canada.

  • @hopeyouguess9850
    @hopeyouguess9850 Год назад +6

    Great reaction. Funny fact: Stephen king was actually not a big fan of this interpretation of his novel. However, when the book and film sequel Doctor Sleep was written decades later, the film picked up from the film, and the book picked up from the book. Worth a watch/read IMO.

  • @stevev2492
    @stevev2492 Год назад +2

    Kubrick took 2 weeks to shoot the scene in the red toilet. He told the actor playing Grady that he should sound like a ghost.

  • @independenceltd.
    @independenceltd. Год назад +2

    In the book the hotel is built on an old Indian burial ground, so it is haunted by evil spirits from the desecration.

  • @elitexpgaming1810
    @elitexpgaming1810 Год назад +7

    The hotel actually makes more sense if you read the book. This hotel exist in a place where reality is thin and an entity its evil and malice is spilling through kinda like IT , it is both real and in his head.

  • @CaptOrbit
    @CaptOrbit 10 месяцев назад +1

    There are several theories about how he could have gotten out without any supernatural intervention. The only one I remember off the top of my head is as you see him speaking to Grady you can actually see there's another door with a shelf in front of it. He might have realized that and gone out the unlocked side door. They're like four other theories. The channel "Collative learning". Covers several Shining theories pretty well

  • @michaelc9915
    @michaelc9915 Год назад +2

    I actually like that what is causing it is never really explained in the movie. Makes it more unsettling.

    • @chrisrus1965
      @chrisrus1965 10 месяцев назад +1

      " I'm just very confused and I need some time to think things over"

  • @discoveringcalculus
    @discoveringcalculus Год назад +2

    When Michelle introduced herself as “Michelle with two Ls,” I totally thought the other one must be Michele with one L 😂. But nah… she’s Natalie 😂

  • @lisae9958
    @lisae9958 Год назад +2

    This is a great ghost story. The father is being haunted the most because he has a history of drinking and injuring his son as a result. He is the 'weakest link' in the family. Danny is being protected by Tony because his mom's ability to protect him is questionable. The hotel has a history of wild times and murders. Back in the 20s people had masquerade parties (hence when Wendy saw the person dressed in the bunny costume on its knees doing you know what). They are all ghosts🤗

  • @brianshepherd9740
    @brianshepherd9740 Год назад +2

    Thank you so much, #ForceOfLightEntertainment, for uploading this awesome movie reaction. I love you both so much, and I'm still supporting you because your content is absolutely amazing, and also because I enjoy watching your reactions to different movies and TV shows.

  • @jwnj9716
    @jwnj9716 Год назад +4

    I recommend Rob Ager's analysis of the Shining. He has other interesting ones like The Exorcist, The Thing, etc.

  • @quixote6942
    @quixote6942 Год назад +3

    Stephen King HATED this movie, as it strayed away from his Novel. They did a Remake Decades later that more closely followed the Book, but it didn't get the reception Stephen thought it would.

  • @radonaccount4454
    @radonaccount4454 Год назад +4

    Y’all really need to watch A Clockwork Orange. It’s in my opinion, Stanley Kubrick’s best film

  • @jameswoollard84
    @jameswoollard84 Год назад +3

    Jack Nicholson is so good in this movie

  • @ConfuserUsed
    @ConfuserUsed Год назад +2

    Hi from Spain, it's the guy who always recommends They Live. Since you're discovering so many horror classics and you definitely like action movies, here's an expanded list of recommendations:
    - John Carpenter: Halloween (horror), The Thing (horror), They Live (action/sci-fi/unique movie), Escape from New York (super cool action).
    - Hitchcock: The Birds (horror, it has no freaking music), Vertigo (suspense, masterpiece), pretty much his whole filmography including underrated gems like The Lady Vanishes (a lady dissappears in a train) and The Rope (whole movie is in a flat filmed to appear as a single shot).

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад

      Hey! Thanks! We already have reactions to Halloween and The Thing! Check them out!

    • @ConfuserUsed
      @ConfuserUsed Год назад

      ​@@ForceOfLightEntertainment Okay, so the updated list of recommendations would be:
      1) The Birds by Hitchcock because it's a pure horror movie and you seem to be a "horror movie month".
      2) Vertigo by Hitchcok (suspense) and They Live by Carpenter (sci-fi, you laugh sometimes, action, politics, 5 minute fights).
      3) Other Hitchcock movies like The Rope or The Lady Vanishes if you feel like moving more into suspense (I'm watching Escape from New York from Carpenter again and it's not that great, but it's definitely interesting as it's a movie that feels like a video game and Metal Gear Solid clearly copied it). The Lady Vanishes perhaps I'm over rating it, but it's a refreshingly "cute" suspense movie and works as a time machine as well as it's from the 30s! It's quite an experience. Of course, there are 5 big Hitchcock films (Strangers on a Train, North by Northwest, etc.) that theoretically come before that, but I enjoyed those more.

  • @TheBriguy33
    @TheBriguy33 Месяц назад

    Watched this reaction after you posted a link in your recent post :) I'm thinking you might have watched Doctor Sleep, the sequel. I loved your reaction to this. Jack Nicholson and Shelly Duvall (RIP) were terrific in this. The tension just builds and keeps you invested the whole time. I watch this once a year around Halloween time. Michelle, your reference in the kitchen scene to Jurassic Park, I noticed it too and that meme of a frozen Jack I know very well haha. It also made me think that in The Great Outdoors, Dan Aykroyds creepy twin daughters were a comedic homage to the twins in this film. It's just fun to pick up on certain things, and hear your commentary on such a classic horror film :)

  • @henrytjernlund
    @henrytjernlund Год назад +3

    Great spooky movie. Great reaction. Thank you, forever and ever and ever and...

  • @quentinshimek367
    @quentinshimek367 Год назад +2

    My folks took me to see this at a drive in when I was about Danny's age! That's how parents rolled in the day!

  • @RodVonLongrod
    @RodVonLongrod Год назад +2

    @8:34 Notice how the knives in the background are over Danny's head.

  • @metalanarchy5186
    @metalanarchy5186 Год назад +2

    Stephen King wrote the book Stanley. Kubrick made the movie but King hated it cause he didn't like Jake Nickleson than he got the rights back and made a special like 5 or 6 part series type movie and it was no where near as good

  • @druciferDMA
    @druciferDMA Год назад +1

    I was 12yo watching The Shining for the first time at a bday party and over the years watching it over and over its weirdly become a comfort movie I can fall asleep too, its fascinating how the film was constructed. Have a great one!

  • @neutral6941
    @neutral6941 Год назад +10

    Beautiful babes.

  • @toddhill7483
    @toddhill7483 Год назад +2

    To maximize flavor and absorption, it is recommended to dip bacon in eggs approximately 35 times.

  • @Rock-n-Rolla369
    @Rock-n-Rolla369 Год назад +2

    A lot of settlers in the Old West had cabin fever, except it was called “prairie madness.” Isolation does strange things to people.

    • @michaelb1761
      @michaelb1761 Год назад +1

      After a few days of solo backpacking without seeing anyone, I can see how a few months alone could destroy a person. Though in this movie (and the book) he wasn't alone...in more ways than one.

    • @Rock-n-Rolla369
      @Rock-n-Rolla369 Год назад

      @@michaelb1761 Solo backpacking sounds amazing, but I totally hear what you’re saying lol. I guess everything has a cost.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 7 месяцев назад

      Like the pandemic?

  • @Ogdoad3939
    @Ogdoad3939 9 месяцев назад +1

    Good to see you watched the long cut.

  • @brownstarslots
    @brownstarslots Год назад +4

    Shelly Duvall is wonderful in this.
    For a lighter film with her, she played Olive Oil in the live action Popeye movie starring Robin Williams. Think it came out in the late 80s?

    • @pabloortizdelatorre3530
      @pabloortizdelatorre3530 Год назад +1

      Shelly Duvall is fantastic, especially in the scarier scenes. Surely Kubrik's methods had something to do with it.

  • @screenwritingprofessor7346
    @screenwritingprofessor7346 Год назад +8

    When you get the chance, go watch this (and all Kubrick films) in a movie theater. The surround sound and ambiance add to the experience so much. There's a lot to miss just watching it on TV.

    • @Chilipotamus
      @Chilipotamus Год назад +1

      Yeah I recently saw this at a local Alamo Drafthouse and it was absolutely electric. The sound design was omnipresent and overwhelming on a full cinema sound system

    • @screenwritingprofessor7346
      @screenwritingprofessor7346 Год назад

      @@Chilipotamus check out 2001 A Space Odyssey if you can one day. If seen it a hundred times before but this was beyond amazing.

    • @victoryak86
      @victoryak86 Год назад +1

      Yeah that’s true. Kubrick was a master and all the films are definitely best appreciated on a big screen. 2001 and Barry Lyndon are two others that would blow you away, seen on a big screen and the Shining is as well.

  • @chrisb9577
    @chrisb9577 11 месяцев назад +1

    The acting across the board was superb.

  • @thechosenones4375
    @thechosenones4375 Год назад +2

    Natalie's nonchalant whoot whoot @ 25:42 😂

  • @rray848
    @rray848 Год назад +1

    The famous "Here's Johnny!" line was from the way Ed McMahon use to introduce Johnny Carson on the Tonight Show. Jack Nicholson improvised the line... it wasn't in the script.
    I always hated that the Chef Hallorann dies in the movie... he was such a nice guy and trying to help them. Funny thing is that in the book he lives and helps the mom and boy get out of the hotel.

  • @BigGator5
    @BigGator5 Год назад +3

    "Heeeeere's Johnny!"
    Fun Fact: Theatrical movie debut of Danny Lloyd.
    Not An American Fact: As he lived in England, Stanley Kubrick was not at all familiar with the "Heeeeere's Johnny" line (from The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962)) that Jack Nicholson improvised. He very nearly didn't use it.
    Hot Take Fact: There is a great deal of confusion regarding this film and the number of retakes of certain scenes. According to the Guinness Book of Records, the scene where Wendy is backing up the stairs swinging the baseball bat was shot 127 times, which is a record for the most takes of a single scene. However, both Steadicam operator Garrett Brown and assistant editor Gordon Stainforth say this is inaccurate. The scene was shot about thirty-five to forty-five times.
    Method Director Fact: Despite Stanley Kubrick's fierce demands on everyone, Jack Nicholson admitted to having a good working relationship with him. It was with Shelley Duvall that he was a completely different director. He allegedly picked on her more than anyone else. He would really lose his temper with her, even going so far as to say that she was wasting the time of everyone on the set. She later reflected that he was probably pushing her to her limits to get the best out of her and that she wouldn't trade the experience for anything, but it was not something she ever wished to repeat.

  • @garybrockie6327
    @garybrockie6327 Год назад +2

    There is a worthy sequel book and film titled “Doctor Sleep”. It picks up with Danny after the Overlook.

  • @anrun
    @anrun Год назад +2

    The Shining is a great movie for any genre.

  • @MarcelPilie
    @MarcelPilie Год назад +4

    The scene with the two guys in the room where one has on a furry costume, confuses everybody. In the book it's supposed to be two men engaging in a sex act. The director should have just left that scene out. It's not a scary scene. And it just breaks the mood.
    The hotel was haunted because, as they said in the beginning of the movie, it was built on an Indian burial ground. It had the power to manipulate weak minds.
    The husband had a weak mind because he was already a bad person (selfish, abusive, alcohol abuse, etc).
    The son had a weak mind because he was just a little kid. And he had suffered physical abuse.
    The wife had the strongest mind. She was the last to be manipulated. She didn't see any ghosts until her husband turned on her, and understandably scared her to death.
    The ghosts had the ability to open doors (let Jack out of the pantry). And the hotel could change the picture after Jack's death. That is why he was in the picture in the end from 1921.

  • @ImaRush
    @ImaRush Год назад +1

    I love you say you like how “they” did the camera work….One man envisioned and made all decisions. Watch out for the rabbit holes looking for an explanation to this movie. Thanks you. And a special thank you to you. 😉

  • @simonlakin1378
    @simonlakin1378 Год назад +3

    You should try more Stephen King horror movies. Christine, Firestarter, Carrie, Salem's Lot, Cujo, Misery and Pet Cemetery are some of the best.

  • @NickSantoro-c4w
    @NickSantoro-c4w 9 месяцев назад +2

    There are a bunch of crazy therorys on you tube but I truly believe " The Wendy Theory " explains everything

  • @gingernichols1981
    @gingernichols1981 10 месяцев назад +1

    Read the book, so much better. Also there is a sequel. And Kubrick is a genius, this is one of the most well filmed movies ever. Watch the documentary on the making of the movie.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 3 месяца назад

      The book is just a 26-year-old's rewrite of John D. MacDonald.

  • @notofthisgod32
    @notofthisgod32 11 месяцев назад +1

    18:00 is one of the scariest scenes in the movie for me, because you know it's an evil spirit

  • @alonzocoyethea6148
    @alonzocoyethea6148 Год назад +1

    One of director Kurbick and Nicholson's finest movies..an unbeatable team that gave us an AFI top 100 horror classic. Have no clue why KIng didn't like it, But I knew you ladies would love it! To me, the ending meant one thing; Hotel's evil sprits always wanted others to come join their sick little " murderer's club"..called out to Jack, got him to come. After he got turned inot a Popsicle, they got his soul..That's why he's in the pic, . Sequel, 2017's Doctor Sleep also wirtten by King, great movie with Ewan McGregor as grown up Danny, still struggling with his shine, tense and a little more gory,..final scenes take place at the same Hotel.

  • @RichardM1366
    @RichardM1366 11 месяцев назад +1

    The woman in 237 is Mrs. Massey a rich woman who was in a relationship with a younger man. He ran out on her and it lead her to take her own life in the tub. This is in the novel. No back stories were added to the film. It allows the viewer to use their imagination. The ghost is forced to haunt the room forever.

  • @LoneCloudHopper
    @LoneCloudHopper 11 месяцев назад +1

    One of my favs. Wonderfully creepy masterpiece.

  • @TheTriumphbsa
    @TheTriumphbsa Год назад +1

    Fun fact: Jack Nicholson got his movie break in the classic film with Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, Easy Rider!

  • @timmycollins7665
    @timmycollins7665 11 месяцев назад +1

    There are full blown full documentaries that break down this movie. If you look up the movie's meaning you are going down a big rabbit hole.

  • @maingate7672
    @maingate7672 Год назад +1

    Some places are just evil. ''REDRUM! REDRUM!'' You should check out the sequel, ''Dr. Sleep'', it explains the Overlook a bit, and expanses on the concept somewhat.

  • @JustLouIt
    @JustLouIt Год назад +2

    Jack Nicholson's eyebrows give him such a deranged look

  • @TZ61
    @TZ61 Год назад +1

    So much to say and has been said about the book and movie; suffice it to say that I also had questions upon first seeing it at about 19-years-old, but the creepy score by Wendy Carlos, Joe Turkel (the bartender) who usually played beatnik types in early 60s movies, Philip Stone, whom Kubrick had used in "A Clockwork Orange", and the main cast. I had read "Doctor Sleep" the many years later sequel, a couple times before seeing it and think it is worth checking out also. Thanks for the upload.

  • @BladeObssession
    @BladeObssession Год назад +3

    I think he was like reincarnated

  • @amyjordan195
    @amyjordan195 Год назад +9

    An old woman named Mrs. Massey committed suicide in the bathtub of room 237. (217 in the book.) Judging by Danny's visions, it was the room in which Grady stacked the bodies of his daughters. They were actually killed in the hallway.

  • @GENGHISKHAN-hk3qs
    @GENGHISKHAN-hk3qs Год назад +4

    Just watched it for the first time in 20 years on Blu-ray about a month ago ladies such a great movie

  • @roninprofessor
    @roninprofessor Год назад +4

    Hopefully you guys will check out the follow up movie: “Doctor Sleep”. It’s based on King’s follow-up novel that he wrote decades later.

  • @ghostwolf4495
    @ghostwolf4495 Год назад +1

    "Keep drivin', boy" made me laugh!

  • @danielwagman9794
    @danielwagman9794 Месяц назад

    Very smart comment you made that "time flies" in spite of its small cast and lengthy running time -- that's very true!

  • @paulconnett3654
    @paulconnett3654 Год назад +1

    The boy doing his friends voice and when he's having his fits. Will always make me nervous for him. The mother always looked a nervous wreak and I always felt sorry for her because Kubrick was a Prick/Bully to her while filming. And the scene of running through the maze being chased by daddy, was brilliantly light and will always be a classic to me. Seen a reaction to Doctor Sleep and it looks good but will after see it in full before making my mind up. Michelle and Natalie both of you going in blind was good and you still had laughable moments.✓✓✓ Chuffed you enjoyed this Classic and I loved your reactions. Cheer's Gorgeous Ladies.xx 🇬🇧 Suggestion:: I may of mentioned Exorcist 3. You'll Love it.xx

  • @vangannaway1015
    @vangannaway1015 Год назад +3

    Believe it or not Shelly Duvall was a quirky sex symbol in the late 60s and early 70s.

  • @surfrats
    @surfrats Месяц назад +1

    The witches of Eastwick should be
    next.

  • @tlyon2
    @tlyon2 Год назад +1

    Its cool you finally seen The Shining' its a great horror movie, of course I don't need to tell you there is a sequel because others in your comments have already mention it! So instead I would like to up vote once again both Killer Klowns From Outer Space and the original Japanese classic masterpiece Godzilla (1954)' were getting close to his 69th birthday here on Nov 3rd, maybe then around that time we might get to see it???
    If not' then will see it when we see it, great reaction as always.

  • @retireddadlife
    @retireddadlife Год назад +1

    Thanks for the reaction. :) Loved it. Now you are ready for another Jack Nicholson masterpiece in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (Award Winning)

    • @ForceOfLightEntertainment
      @ForceOfLightEntertainment  Год назад

      I have heard that’s why the studio didn’t want to cast him for this movie. Thank you!!