Stanley Kubrick: Behind the Scenes with Jan Harlan and Michael Stock
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- Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
- Take a trip through the cinematic mind of Stanley Kubrick as SCI-Arc Cinema Scholar, Michael Stock, interviews Jan Harlan, Stanley Kubrick's Executive Producer from 1975 to 1999 (and before that, his assistant from 1969 to 1974). Sit back and relax as they discuss - film soundtracks, music rights, subtle lighting, cinematography, steadicam techniques, "unrealized" projects and everything else under the filmic sun. A behind-the-scenes journey that explores what was and what could've been as the result of the Kubrick-Harlan collaboration.
Crew Credits:
Production:
Creator and Executive Producer - Hernan Diaz Alonso
Producer - Marcelyn Gow
Director - Reza Monahan
Director of Photography - Sean Morris
2nd Camera - Robert Moreno
Assistant Camera - Walker Sayen
Sound Engineer - Chris Trueman
Post-Production:
Story/Editorial - Sean Morris/Reza Monahan
©2017 SCI-Arc Channel
Jesus... an interviewer who listens more than he talks! Beautiful!
yea that chick is all ears
I noticed that too, no constant interruptions, he let Harlan tell his wonderful remembrances.
Jan Harlan is a very charismatic guy. We're lucky to have someone like him to tell Kubrick's story.
what i would give to watch "Napoleon" - by Stanley Kubrick
Indeed. Nonetheless, Kubrick,probably assessing the movie market situation, he knew they had already been 2 films on napoleonic wars: 1st/ S. Bondartchuk's masterpiece "War and Peace", which won an Academy award, and, 2nd/ "Waterloo", a multinational production directed by Bondartchuk. Had he created his own "Napoleon" he would have been undoubtedly epic.
What a fascinating interview with just a few good questions, leaving this dream of an interviewee to do the rest! Jan really is as relaxed, charming and clear-sighted in real life as he seems here. As a young man I was for a time his neighbour and classical guitar teacher, and will never forget the kindness and hospitality that he and his family showed to me then. Now, 40-odd years after that period between Barry Lyndon and The Shining, it's great to see his energy and passion undimmed.
"obsessive is not a negative thing, for someone to be called a perfectionist is a complement" - "some people always say he was obsessive or a perfectionist as if it was something bad" - " Claude Monet's did so many paintings of water lilies was he obsessive about water lilies?...I suppose so, he certainly loved it or he wouldn't have done it in different lights morning and afternoon all the time and I think that makes an artist" ..................This was a lovely interview!
Perfect interview. Thank you for asking great questions and then allowing Harlan to flow with the answers. Bravo!
Excellent interview. Harlan's very informative. Thanks.
Thanks for watching!
Great interview, can never get enough of this type of thing.
One of the best interviews ever about Kubrick. Mr. Harlan is a delight to listen to, us Kubrick fans are grateful.
Thank you. This is one of the best interviews that have been done with Jan.
Thanks for watching!
The tragedy of old age is not that one is old but that one is young ~ Stanley Kubrick 💖
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
very good interview
Fantastic!
"The greater the artist, the more respect FOR others." Notice he does not say from others.
Such a rare thing, interviewer letting the guest speak!
Rest in powerful peace Stanley Kubrick 🙏
26 July 1928 ~
7 March 1999⚘
The irony is that the way films are made today have a vast amount of technical trickery, some of which can obtained in an efficient way compared to a film made in the 60s. Obsession or attention to detail is part of the course when doing anything creative, I would imagine.
Great interview
:)
I wish stanley kubrick lived at least 20 more years.
"Stanley was a world artist." that hits hard.
Nice
amazing
Stanley Kubrick is the best
I don't know how the fuck you make a decision about a Kubrick movie based on the failure of a DeLaurentis movie. IT'S KUBRICK!!! Even in 1973, he was a legend!
You must not understand the studio system, there was money lost on Waterloo so they look at the market to see what floats and what doesn’t.
Legend or not money talks in Hollywood, if it doesn’t turn a profit then things get cut. Plenty of unrealized projects from legendary directors based on the market of the era.
He ended up doing a period piece drama which bombed hard. As lovely as Barry Lyndon is it just performed terribly.
Scorsese is more of a legend today than what Kubrick was in 1973 and Scorsese can still barely find funding.
"....in 1970, at that point, stereo film had already become the standard..."
?? Not true at all. Not until many years later, in fact.
Garth is asking some pretty good questions
I would like to have Jan Harlen be my producer who knows London seems to be the place to be
Napoleon would have been awesome, of course.
I say 21st century is about survival and standing out.
where is stanley
He died in 1999
The German government backed the DFF to do the exhibition... wow.
That tattoo must have been mind numbingly painful and looks like he's wearing some kind of sheer ladies glove or something.
At least Soyboy didn't talk much. BTW, IT was Walter Carlos during ACO; not Wendy.
I think her operation was done sometime between "Switched-On Bach II" (1973) and the "By Request" album ('75).
you gotta come up with a higher-resolution profile pic, that one you got now is an embarrassment