I feel like some try so hard to look for Kubrick's "hidden messages" that they dont really focus too much on the thematic, emotional, and visceral parts of his films. My interpretation of 2001 personally doesn't come from background information, but rather the raw emotions it gave me throughout.
Well yeah, the point of Kubrick's hidden messages is not that it is the main aspect but just one of many aspects. Kubrick has multilayered his films in a way where it has both of those levels plus more, many of which I don't feel like listing out because I'm fucking tired right now. But Kubrick is who I call a "Paul", and the one thing to note here is the "Pardes" or "PRDS". But it is also very similar to the Patristic Approach or Hermeneutics, in that it is multilayered. The key thing to remember when it comes to the hidden messages, encodings or subliminals is that it is just the 4th layer, the Anagogical layer or "SOD" meaning secret. It is the deepest, meaning most hidden but it doesn't necessarily mean it is the most important. The moral, emotional or feeling layer is also just as important although more easily able to perceive, even if it is broad and universal to the point where different people can receive it differenrly in terms of emotional feelings.
2001 is probably the best film ever made. It's insane how deep that movie gets on like the fifteenth viewing if you're attempting to decipher its meanings. Reading the novelisation (if you can call it that) also helps to understand the themes even more concretely, since they very much parallel.
Reminds me of watching Bergman’s Persona. I tried so hard to get a concrete understanding of the film, but it was only once I let go of that midset that I understood - by experiencing it.
Definitely go back and watch Barry Lyndon. I saw it for the first time a few days ago and its truly a stunning experience. Its on the same level as 2001, because its about so many different themes, and told through an epic scale with amazing cinematography.
2001 was my favourite for a long time, but after rewatching Barry Lyndon it is now at the top for me. There is just simply nothing else like it. For better or worse 2001 created a lot of motifs that are still used in science fiction a lot. No period piece has even come close to the feeling of Barry Lyndon and I think that speaks to the absolute mastery of Kubrick's craft. The composition of each shot is meticulous, the story is slow and yet it is hard to look away as this man's life is built up and broken down, the candle lit interiors, the absolute depression in Lady Lyndon's eyes. It is just a masterpiece.
While I love Barry Lyndon and Paths of Glory, and really appreciate the rest as well, 2001: A Space Odyssey is still far above the rest. It truly is a movie like no other, I just hope that when I see it in the theatre for the first time in a couple of weeks that there won't be anyone talking or using their phone.
"Eyes Wide Shut" is my favorite. The film he worked on the longest, & possibly the hardest. Its adaptation is also very good; although it's loose with its particular novel, a different one it reminds me of is "Las Bas" by Huysmns. Like, this handful of turn-of-the-century novels about dreaming, sexuality, power, society, fidelity in marriage, & the taboo...Except it's set in Christmastime 1990s Manhattan. I also think "Eyes Wide Shut" is his most hopeful film. I watch it every December.
it has a lot to say about the obsessions and delusions of power in a world that worships the individual, so probably more in tune with today's reality than ever
It's truly astounding how well almost all of his movies hold up today. He immerses you in a world that's so timeless, even something like Paths of Glory feels like it could easily have been made a year ago. 2001 was basically the first movie that radically changed my perception of what movies were capable of, and all of them break so many of the conventional "rules" of filmmaking that, despite how different they all are, they all feels distinctly his. Great list!
yes, they are like penetrating psychological assessments, each one with different perspectives, themes, and moods, but all with laser beams piercing right thru you
@@MildSatire I picked up on most of the humor and I just didn’t find it particularly funny. I’m not sure I ever laughed. It’s very clever but not really a genre comedy.
My personal ranking 1. 2001 - was my favourite movie at one point in time (now at number 2) and watching if for the first time was a spiritual experience 2. The Shining - my favourite horror movie of all time and one of the most perfectly crafted films I my opinion 3. Eyes Wide Shut - definitely need to rewatch but this one stuck with my more than any of the films under and the scene with the guy in the Red Cloak may be my favourite in his filmography 4. Dr Strangelove - hilarious and poignant was some of the best comedic performances 5. A Clockwork Orange - one of the strangest films I’d ever seen on my first watch and one of the most interesting protagonists in film 6. Full Metal Jacket - agree with the second half being as good if not better than the first, especially the sniper sequence 7. Spartacus - barely remember this but loved the ending 8. Fear and Desire - watched out of curiosity, wouldn’t recommend but has some interesting camerawork Kubrick is my favourite director by far and I really need to watch Barry Lyndon and Paths of Glory. All the movies 1-6 are 10/10 in my opinion and are in my top 100 movies
i like your rankings, yeah The Shining is quite deep when you get into the themes, the psychological darkness of man, etc. I also find myself drawn into Eyes Wide Shut more and more, it's a movie that is aging well, with the delusion of man's obsessions. Full Metal Jacket is penetrating as well on war and conformity and militarism. Kubrick is beyond great.
Can I just say I appreciate the level of insight mixed with the somewhat casual tone. These type of videos are really good at forging that para-social relationship you’re so fond of.🎉
From the ones I’ve seen: 1. Eyes Wide Shut 2. The Shining 3. Barry Lyndon 4. Space Odyssey I should rewatch them all to really confirm my opinions (and check out the other films too). Eyes Wide Shut was such a weird film that stuck with me for a while after watching it. I know people are a little mixed on it but I loved its dreamlike and unnerving atmosphere. Idk if you are a fan of animation but Hayao Miyazaki list would be fun. One of the most solid filmographies of any director if you are into his style.
13: Fear and Desire 12: Killer’s Kiss 11: Spartacus 10: The Killing 9: Full Metal Jacket 8: Lolita 7: Eyes Wide Shut 6: A Clockwork Orange 5: Barry Lyndon 4: Dr. Strangelove 3: Paths of Glory 2: 2001: A Space Odyssey 1: The Shining
Agreed. It's not my favorite, doesn't even crack my top 3, but it did what few others have done by changing how I view and think about movies in general.
Your video is what inspired me to go look at Stanley Kubrick’s filmography. Before then I only watched The Shining and parts of Full Metal Jacket. Now I’m obsessed with Kubrick! Still haven’t watched all his films but here’s my current ranking on the ones I have watched. I haven’t watched Paths of Glory, Spartacus and Barry Lyndon yet. 1. The Shing 2. Dr Strangelove 3. Eyes Wide Shut 4. A Clockwork Orange 5. 2001: A Space Odyssey 6. Lolita 7. The Killing 8. Full Metal Jacket 9. Killer’s Kiss 10. Fear and Desire
2001: A Space Odyssey, Paths of Glory, Dr. Strangelove, Barry Lyndon, The Killing, Eyes Wide Shut, A Clockwork Orange, Spartacus, Full Metal Jacket, Lolita, Fear and Desire, Killer's Kiss
Very enjoyable video :) My Kubrick ranking is: 1 - The Shining (my favorite movie) 2 - Eyes wide shut 3 - clockwork orange 4 - 2001: A space Odyssey 5 - Barry Lyndon I'm a big fan of Kubrick's work and I totally agree when you say he was just a human, able to make mistakes. Still, i also think The Shining is perfect.
My Top 10 from Kubrick.. 1. 2001: A Space Odyssey 2. The Shining 3. Paths Of Glory 4. Barry Lyndon 5. A Clockwork Orange 6. Eyes Wide Shut 7. Dr. Strangelove 8. Full Metal Jacket 9. The Killing 10. Spartacus
1) 2001 2) Dr. Strangelove 3) Barry Lyndon 4) Paths of Glory 5) A Clockwork Orange 6) Eyes Wide Shut 7) The Shining 8) Full Metal Jacket 9) The Killing 10) Killer’s Kiss 11) Lolita 12) Fear and Desire
2001 is easily my favorite, afterwards I'd probably go Barry Lyndon, Clockwork Orange, Dr. Strangelove, Full Metal Jacket, Paths of Glory, and The Shining last. Haven't seen any others yet. The Shining is amazing, incredibly memorable and iconic, but it somehow didn't really have much of an effect on me, partially because I already knew pretty much every element of the film through pop culture references, which is why my enjoyment was mere admiration and not much more, unfortunately.
I saw The Shining when it first came out, so no pop culture references, but it didn't have any effect on me at all. The reason? Everything was telegraphed in advance. A good horror movie should catch you unawares, but Jack Nicholson was leering ten minutes in the movie, so the only way to rank up the tension was for him to go further and further over the top, so it winds up being laughably awful rather than scary. I've seen most of Kubrick's movies and The Shining leaves me totally cold.
@@tonybennett4159 it's not that kind of horror movie, but if that's how you see it, that is fine. i'm just guessing if you saw it now after many years you may see it different. i didn't think much of it my first two times i believe. one way to think about it is like a hitchcock movie, where the deed is revealed early, but then it's all about the story in between, and how things are revealed, because here the implication is what is occurring is also figurative on another level. that's my take, ty
@@clumsydad7158 Thanks for that. Yes, it's true that a second viewing of any movie can go three ways : either you wonder what on earth you saw in the movie in the first place, or your views remain unchanged or you appreciate it now in ways you hadn't foreseen. Well I saw The Shining again early this year and it certainly fell into the middle category. The hammy acting of both Jack and Shelley meant I couldn't engage figuratively or otherwise, not helped by a score that insists on digging you painfully in the ribs in case you're not getting it. In my opinion only, it remains Kubrick's worst, and I really rate Stanley. Can't please everyone, I guess!
Kubrick is a master of the audiovisual combination. Every movie has that one moment where the picture and the audio just hit so hard and sends chills down your body. The stills of somebody's face or reaction accompanied by music... Many moments of that in the Shining, The one scene with Frank's PTSD in Clockwork, and Obviously the Stargate sequence in 2001 which gave me such an out of body experience that I have never gotten from a movie.
The message I take from Doctor Strangelove is “Mankind’s ultimate downfall will be through its own stupidity,” and I find that a lot funnier than I probably should.
I watched 2001: A Space Odyssey at least 2001 times by now. Now you know how much this movie influenced me. Thank you Jake for your reviews. It was interesting :)
It’s a testament to how good this man is that everyone’s list is different (mine is wildly different) and I find myself watching his movies again and again, but I’m really not a fan of the mystique around Kubrick.
For real. You can make a compelling argument for at least half of his filmography being your favorite that basically nobody would argue with. Paths of Gkory, Dr. Strangelove, 2001, A Clockwork Orange, The Shining, Full Metal Jacket, and Eyes Wide Shut are all somewhere in my top 100. Three of them are in my top 25.
would love to see more of these. my rank: 1.The Shining 2. 2001: A Space Odyssey 3. Eyes Wide Shut 4. Full Metal Jacket 5. Barry Lyndon 6. A Clockwork Orange 1971 7. Paths of Glory 8. The Killing 9. Dr. Strangelove 10. Killer’s Kiss 11. Fear and Desire
I haven't seen Fear and Desire, Killer's Kiss or The Killing, despite hearing nothing but positive things about that movie. Here's my ranking: 1. A Clockwork Orange 2. Full Metal Jacket 3. 2001 4. The Shining 5. Eyes Wide Shut 6. Barry Lyndon (one of my favorite movies) 7. Paths of Glory 8. Dr. Strangelove (another one of my favorites) 9. Lolita 10. Spartacus
Full Metal Jacket is actually one of my favorite movies ever. I think both halves are really special, covering many themes and having a lot of really memorable scenes. I actually thought there was a lot of dark comedy to be found, most notably Sgt. Hartmann screaming at the recruits and having awesome insults, but also many scenes in the war section were actually pretty funny. I also loved the soundtrack and the overall tone of the movie. Also the poster goes hard
Paths of glory really blown me away the first time i watch it. I knew it was positevely viewed but i expected more of a director for hire thing much like spartacus based also on the period it was filmed. But not only it was deeply kubrickian in the mise in scene and the themes, it was also so raw and emotional. I remember feeling kind of depressed and sad by the end of the film. The first time i saw 2001 i felt confused about the slow pacing . I was like 10-11 years old then and i associated space films basically to star wars. I end up being bored to death by the film so i paused about halfway the HAL chapter and decided to finish it the morning after. I dont what happened but the rest of the film completely hipnotized me and even disturbed me. I cannot say i liked it but i found myself rewatching it every certain time. Later i found an explanation about the films plot based onbthe book, and for a while it become my favorite science fiction film. But you are right in that there is a moment when you stop thinking about the lore or the logical explanation and then it becomes a mystical experience. I feel this is like the most mysterious film ever whatever thar means. Now it is in my top 5 best movies ever made.
1. A Clockwork Orange 2. The Shining 3. Full Metal Jacket 4. 2001: A Space Odyssey 5. Barry Lyndon 6. Paths of Glory 7. Lolita 8. The Killing 9. Eyes Wide Shut 10. Spartacus 11. Dr. Strangelove 12. Killer's Kiss 13. Fear and Desire
The Shining is a good contender for my favorite. The hauntingly empty atmosphere of the hotel in many scenes just hits hard for me, really adds to the “Ghost town” vibe of the piece. That buildup of unnerving solitude makes the moments where something supernatural happens a lot more effective. Jack’s performance is a lot of fun, and the music introduced me to Al Bowlly.
9:33 . . . . that yellow poster is scarier than the movie. I saw it at the theatre at age 12/13 when it came out and was, well, not scared. Eyes Wide Shut....150 minute snooze cruise to nowhere. Paths of Glory....very good. Lolita...great. Barry Lyndon, 2001, Strangelove, Clockwork Orange....masterpieces.
That I've seen: 6. A clockwork orange 5. Dr Strangelove 4. Barry Lyndon 3. 2001 2. Full metal jacket 1. The Shining This series is one of my favourites of yours.
2001: A Space Odyssey is the greatest film ever made. It was the first film I watched that totally floored me. It was like I had to pick my jaw up of the floor it was that awesome.
have you seen ai: artificial intelligence? weird movie. Kubrick script directed by spielberg after his death. would be an interesting watch in the context of what Waterloo might look like
My ranking: 1 2001 a space odyssey 2 the shining 3 strangelove 4 eyes wide shut 5 paths of glory 6 full metal jacket 7 barry lyndon 8 clockwork orange 9 the killing 10 Spartacus 11 Lolita 12 killer's kiss 13 fear and desire
I love Keenan Wynn, while the Nation was on the likely brink of World War III, when Peter Sellers has him break into The Soda Machine, "You're Going To Have To Answer To The Coca-Cola Company" from Dr. Strangelove. Priceless
the shining is definitely my favorite, i agree with what you said about it being a perfect movie. the sound and set design are mesmerizing and the acting is incredible
Just one man's ranking below --- it's amazing how many high quality films Kubrick made (at least the first 11 below would fall under that category for me), so it goes without saying that even some of his greatest films (in the eyes of others) might seem far too low on this list, but everyone has their own personal taste and aesthetics after all --- and Kubrick fans are certainly no different: 01. A Clockwork Orange 02. Eye's Wide Shut 03. The Shining 04. 2001: A Space Odyssey 05. Dr. Strangelove 06. Lolita 07. Spartacus 08. Paths of Glory 09. Full Metal Jacket 10. Barry Lyndon 11. The Killing 12. Killer's Kiss 13. Fear and Desire
Here would be my list :) 10. Eyes Wide Shut (I thought it was so directionless and there is so many cringey scenes, the frat guys, and there was many times when I just wanted to do something else) 9. Lolita (very hard to watch and not a fun one either) 8. The Killers (liked. Thought it opened slow but it set up a good movie. Liked the end when the money is flying everywhere, beautiful and comedic) 7. Paths of Glory (loved that prison/pre-execution scene, so beautifully lit and performed. And the song at the end was good) 6. Barry Lyndon (loved the tension like you said, there was also some funny scenes because it was so tense and there was these unspoken rules, every frame was like a painting, so good) 5. Full Metal Jacket (loved that first half. Was amazing. The Mickey Mouse song at the end too. Really good stuff) 4. Clockwork Orange (I really love this one for its visuals. Just how crazy and almost punk it went, which not many, if any, movies had done. The Jesus scene, I always gasp out loud when he comes back to the house he broke into and they recognize him. Crazy stuff) 3. The Shining (It’s The Shining, I mean come on) 2. Dr. Strangelove (so funny. “Don’t fight in here, this is the war room” so weird, and funny. I actually really love the ending, it’s a very Kubrick type of ending for a comedy) 1. 2001 (this movie is a sci-fi, horror, history, art movie. There is everything in this movie. It looks amazing to this day. Wonderful film) I think Barry Lyndon, Full Metal Jacket, Clockwork Orange, and The Shining could all swap depending on the day. You are totally right, The Shining becomes funny after a certain amount of time. I don’t know if that’s a good or bad thing, but it’s definitely a thing.
Maybe someday, revisit "Eyes Wide Shut." Kubrick started working on that adaptation in the late '60s. It was a decades-long project for him. "Directionless" is the very, very last word I would ever use about it. Every moment has extremely precise, deliberate craft as a result of him taking decades to work on it. It even holds the Guiness record for longest film shoot of all time. He had people measure the distance between newspaper stalls in downtown Manhattan, so he could recreate it as a giant set in Pinewood Studios...yes, the same place where Bond & Star Wars sets are...as another example, he used Chinese lanterns to soft-light some of the shots with Christmas lighting... yeah, "directionless" is very opposite of the amount of work he put into directing it. I think people want it to be some erotic thriller with a neat resolution, but the fact is, it is SUPPOSED to be cringy & ambiguous. Because it's about desire, & the fictions we make about desire. It's about the reality in fantasies. In this case, it's also about the fantasies of a fragile male who has very foolish ideas about marriage, power, women, desire, & the difference between dreaming & reality. So he goes on a fool's journey & wises up. Honestly, in some ways, I almost think you have to be a certain age to tune into it.
Judged on first-viewing 1: 2001 2: Eyes Wide Shut 3: Clockwork Orange 4: Shining 5: Barry Lyndon 6: Dr. Strangelove 7: Full Metal Jacket 8: Paths of Glory 9: Lolita 10: The Killing 11: Killer's Kiss 12: Spartacus 13: Fear and Desire
Mine: 1. Eyes Wide Shut 2. 2001: A Space Odyssey 3. The Shining 4. Dr. Strangelove 5. A Clockwork Orange 6. The Killing 7. Full Metal Jacket 8. Barry Lyndon 9. Paths of Glory 10. Spartacus 11. Fear of Desire 12. Lolita 13. Killer's Kiss
@@MildSatire well the whole movie is just so intriguing and enigmatic to me. it's super erotic and electrifying with little easter eggs and theories like how the christmas party is a ritual and that the doctor is the red cloak. for the message, well "eyes wide shut", what we see on the surface isn't there and our natural way of seeing things elude is from what's beneath the surface of what we see. it's also just kubrick's way of showing a unique visualization and critique of society, sex, urges, power, and fornication. knowing this is the longest kubrick spent on a movie and that he died shortly after making it, and that 20 minutes of footage is deleted with it very much likely exposing something real and horrific, it just overall upgrades the mysteriously omnipotent and ominous excitement of the movie. maybe the reason why and i and others like this movie so much is there there is no main message, just very ambiguous and controversial.
@@localcrisis very nice points. Yeah this kind of clarified why I was intrigued with it upon first watch. Definitely want to dive into this deeper in the future 👍
Jake, I have an answer to your ideas on old Hollywood comedy, Preston Sturges, Ernst Lubitsch, and Billy Wilder, perfectly timed, plays with a dry wit, plot points that come back in the best way possible and spectacularly written characters that should be corny but a feel almost heartfelt in a genuine way.
Of the ones I have seen so far, though I do plan on seeing them all: 8. Fear and Desire 7. Paths of Glory 6. The Shining 5. A Clockwork Orange 4. Full Metal Jacket 3. Eyes Wide Shut 2. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb 1. 2001: A Space Odyssey
I was surprised to see Eyes Wide Shut so high on the list, as most of my movie-buff friends didn't care for it much. I thought it was an stunning piece of photography. Amazing visual story telling. And it seemed to tell a different story for everyone. To me, it was about a guy having a psychotic break triggered by jealousy, and sort of spraling down into the depths of his cognizance. And surviving the night. And getting on with the next day. Been there lol Kind of like an acid trip gone awry.
I'd put "Clockwork Orange" at the bottom because, as Kubrick himself admitted when he pulled it from circulation in the UK in 1974 (it didn't become available again until after his death), it got away from him and became a thing he never wanted to make -- an amoral/immoral, hedonistic thrill ride that wound up inspiring copycat violence. He regarded it as his most egregious, unfocused failure. "Barry Lyndon" and "2001" rank at the top for me, both immersive experiences in fully imagined worlds -- one in the past, one in the future. All his movies are about the condition (shared by the characters and the audience) of being inside a Stanley Kubrick movie, where every frame is under his strict control. "Barry Lyndon" addresses this directly -- a fable about a man who tries to exert free will, to control chance and fate (gambling is the central metaphor) and control his own destiny... only he can't because he's trapped inside the predetermined frame of A Stanley Kubrick Film. I saw both "2001" and "Barry Lyndon" when they were first released -- in the same gigantic theater (the Cinerama in Seattle) and they were both life-altering quasi-religious experiences for me as a kid -- an 11-year-old and a 17-year-old, respectively -- that opened up my experience of the world and made me feel that life was larger and more exciting and wondrous and profoundly mysterious than I had ever dreamed before.
It's probably cliche among those who love movies for me to say that Stanley Kubrick is one of my favorite directors, but that opinion became a cliche for a dang good reason. He deserves every bit of love, praise, and respect that he gets. Unfortunately, I haven't seen them all just yet. I still need to see Fear & Desire, Killer's Kiss, Spartacus, Lolita, and Barry Lyndon, but all but maybe one of the rest of his filmography that I have seen are all among my favorite movies. I also share the same interchangeable top 3. My 4-7 are probably interchangeable as well. The only one that's consistently in its place so far is the last one, but that's still in no way any indication that I dislike it at all. They're all great movies, and I think every one of my top 7 would feel right at home in most people's top 50 or top 100. 1. 2001: A Space Odyssey 2. Dr. Strangelove 3. The Shining 4. A Clockwork Orange 5.Full Metal Jacket 6. Eyes Wide Shut 7. Paths of Glory 8. The Killing
From What I’ve seen 6. Dr Strangelove 5. The Shining 4. Barry Lyndon 3. 2001: A Space Odyssey 2. Full Metal Jacket 1. A Clockwork Orange I love all of them so much
Space Odyssey is the definition of “It’s not about the destination, it’s about the journey. …and also that scene where Hal reads their lips, that was some good horror.” It’s an extended version of the saying.
From Dr Strangelove on I saw these movies as they came out. The Shining was SO disappointing at the time, Eyes Wide Shut I didn’t like and said that to a guy at a film festival, who it turned out was the guy who finished the film after Kubrick death. He said, “watch if again”. I haven’t, but will. Gonna try The Shining again. For my money, the top of the list: 2001, Clockwork, Strangelove, Paths of Glory, The Killing. And I like the first 2/3 of Lolita a lot, funny.
1) The Shining 2) Eyes Wide Shut 3) Full Metal Jacket 4) A Clockwork Orange 5) Lolita 6) Dr. Strangelove 7) Barry Lyndon 8) Paths of Glory 9) The Killing 10) Spartacus 11) 2001 12) Killers Kiss 13) Fear anf Desire
1. The Shining 2. Barry Lyndon 3. 2001: A Space Odyssey 4. Dr. Strangelove 5. Eyes Wide Shut 6. A Clockwork Orange 7. Paths of Glory 8. Full Metal Jacket 9. Spartacus
I’m doing my run through now I’d seen most before this run through, and it’s been a blast. I’m hitting Full Metal Jacket, and Eyes Wide Shut here next.
Top 3: 2001, Barry Lyndon, The Shining Next 2: Doctor Strangelove, A Clockwork Orange 6th: Full Metal Jacket 7th: The Killing 8th: Eyes Wide Shut Haven't seen the others
Sorry getting to your discussion so late. Your video just appeared on my youtube menu and I was like, Oh, I gotta watch this. I have seen both Fear and Desire and Killer's Kiss, the first being an ambitious clunky mess and the second quite fascinating despite its technical limitations, but to me "feels" a bit like The Lady from Shanghai or perhaps influenced visually by Welles particularly in one scene. Really not sure how to rank Kubrick's films, but Eyes Wide Shut is my personal favorite with A Clockwork Orange being the one I least like to watch - it's fascinating, but really ugly.
Spartacus was his first film as a direct for hire that he did to after working with Douglas on Paths of Glory. Douglas did it as a power move for himself and Kubrick got to prove he could handle big budgets
Without any attempts at objectivity... 1. Barry Lyndon 2. Full Metal Jacket 3. 2001: A Space Odyssey 4. A Clockwork Orange 5. The Shining 6. Eyes Wide Shut 7. Lolita 8. The Killing 9. Dr. Strangelove... 10. Spartacus 11. Paths of Glory* 12. Killer's Kiss* 13. Fear and Desire* I have love for all of these but don't expect anyone to agree with me on the order. I don't even always agree with myself except 13th place is always the same. *Incomplete viewings: positions variable. Except Fear and Desire, probably
For me, 1. 2001 2. Full Metal Jacket 3. Eyes Wide Shut 4. Dr. Strangelove 5. A Clockwork Orange 6. The Shining 7. Lolita 8. Paths of Glory 9. Barry Lyndon 10. Killer's Kiss 11. Sparticus 12. The Killing 13. Fear and Desire
yeah I don't think Kubrick put all the secret messages, I think he just put Easter eggs or references in movies that appealed to him but other people want to read into it more than needed
Did you know I seen every Stanley Kubrick movies? Every last one of his film I finished watching. . Fear & Desire . Killers Kiss . The Killing . Paths Of Glory . Spartacus . Lolita . Dr. Strangelove: How I stop worrying and love the Bomb? . 2001: A Space Odyssey . A Clockwork Orange . Barry Lyndon .The Shining . Full Metal Jacket . & Eyes Wide Shut That's all I ever saw his film. For me, in my top 5 picks of Stanley Kubrick's movies I had go with, One. Barry Lyndon. Two. The Shining. Three. Paths Of Glory. Four. A Clockwork Orange. And Five. is Full Metal Jacket.
Funny re: 2001 grey screen, I tried to watch it a few years ago with one of my kids, and one scene was lingering for a while during that opening, and I'm saying oh it's intentional! A few more min passed before I realised the Blu Ray had just frozen!! Also I'm 100% the fall asleep during movie Dad, but thats just because I'm exhausted! I often have a hard time comprehending some movies like 2001 but I still love them
My ranking of Stanley Kubrick movies: 1. The Shining (1980) 2. Dr. Strangelove (1964) 3. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1969) 4. Clockwork Orange (1971) 5. Barry Lyndon (1975) 6. Eyes Wide Shut (1999) 7. The Killing (1956) 8. Full Metal Jacket (1987) 9. Paths of Glory (1957) 10. Lolita (1962) 11. Spartacus (1957) 12. Killer’s Kiss (1955) 13. Fear and Desire (1953)
1. 2001: a space odyssey 2. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb 3. Barry Lyndon 4. Paths of Glory 5. Full Metal Jacket 6. The Shining 7. The Killing 8. A Clockwork Orange 9. Spartacus 10. Fear and Desire 11. Killer's Kiss 12. Lolita 13. Eyes Wide Shut Gotta say, coming here from the "man carrying thing" videos I had absolutely no clue you were one of the most knowledgeable and genuine film people on YT.
@@thezachmarsh Killer’s Kiss is a pretty good classic noir movie. Lolita is decent. Eyes Wide Shut is arguably one of his finest and most potent movies. Fear and Desire is a painful, disgusting slog. Almost nothing about it is redeemable. Why would you rank it above Killers or Lolita, let alone Eyes Wide Shut? Are you ok?
@@MildSatire You don't seem like the kind of person who engages in good faith, and I doubt any rationale I give you about why my ranking is the way it is will satisfy you or create a good conversation so I'm just gonna call it here. Have a good one.
@@thezachmarsh look man I’m just exaggerating myself lmao. Sorry if I come off as rude. But I just wanna know, seriously - sometimes I feel like I’m in the wrong when I see opinions so different than mine.
Glad to see Paths of Glory high on the list, it’s very often overlooked, but it’s a masterpiece. I agree with your picks for top 3, but I’d put Doctor Strangelove at the top. That movie just gets funnier every time I see it.
Don't know if you've covered him, but you should do a video on David Lynch. Kubrick was my childhood favorite director, but in the end part of my twenties, Lynch kind of took over. Though, if you do, have fun with Twin Peaks.
Have you seen the movie Failsafe? It came out the same year as Strangelove and has a very VERY similar plot, but it's played as a straight drama. The plot similarities actually led to a lawsuit from Kubrick.
I like Failsafe a bit more than Dr. Strangelove, actually, but they’re both excellent. Sidney Lumet was another master that made films for close to the same amount of time as Kubrick.
My ranking: (Have not seen Lolita, Spartacus or his first 2 movies that he hates yet) 1) 2001: A Space Odyssey (10/10) 2) The Shining (10/10) 3) Barry Lyndon (10/10) 4) Dr Strangelove (10/10) 5) A Clockwork Orange (10/10) 6) Eyes Wide Shut (10/10) 7) Paths of Glory (10/10) 8) Full Metal Jacket (9/10) 9) The Killing (8/10) Literally the greatest director of all time he really did direct 7 10/10 movies no argument (Plus Full Metal Jacket is arguably a 10/10)
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey (One of, if not the, greatest movie that's ever been created) 2. The Shining (One of, if not the, greatest horror movie that's ever been created) 3. Dr Strangelove (One of, if not the, greatest comedy that's ever been created) 4. Full Metal Jacket 5. Barry Lyndon 6. Paths of Glory 7. A Clockwork Orange 8. Eyes Wide Shut I separate them because the top 3 are in my top 20 movies of all time. The other 5 fall slightly behind, but are still masterpieces in their own right.
@@outofreach714 It's been a while since then. The only one still in my top 20 is 2001. My current top 20 is: 1. No Country For Old Men 2. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind 3. 2001: A Space Odyssey 4. Manchester by the Sea 5. The Lord of the Rings trilogy 6. There Will Be Blood 7. Aftersun 8. Apocalypse Now 9. Birdman or the unexpected virtue of ignorance 10. Brokeback Mountain 11. Ratatouille 12. Jagten (The Hunt) 13. Blade Runner 2049 14. Inception 15. The Empire Strikes Back 17. Goodfellas 18. The Dark Knight 19. The Talented Mr Ripley 20. The Social Network Note: these are favourites, not best. So childhood favourites like Ratatouille, ESB, Inception and The Dark Knight make it here where they probably wouldn't on that list. I also have a few films I've only watched once that would probably make the list if I watched them again. Those would be Good Time, Training Day, The Thin Red Line, Ex Machina and Looper.
Top five for me 2001 Shining Dr. Strangelove Full Metal Jacket Clockwork Orange The rest are the rest, varying degrees of good or great. But that top 5...wow
I feel like some try so hard to look for Kubrick's "hidden messages" that they dont really focus too much on the thematic, emotional, and visceral parts of his films. My interpretation of 2001 personally doesn't come from background information, but rather the raw emotions it gave me throughout.
Well yeah, the point of Kubrick's hidden messages is not that it is the main aspect but just one of many aspects.
Kubrick has multilayered his films in a way where it has both of those levels plus more, many of which I don't feel like listing out because I'm fucking tired right now.
But Kubrick is who I call a "Paul", and the one thing to note here is the "Pardes" or "PRDS". But it is also very similar to the Patristic Approach or Hermeneutics, in that it is multilayered.
The key thing to remember when it comes to the hidden messages, encodings or subliminals is that it is just the 4th layer, the Anagogical layer or "SOD" meaning secret. It is the deepest, meaning most hidden but it doesn't necessarily mean it is the most important. The moral, emotional or feeling layer is also just as important although more easily able to perceive, even if it is broad and universal to the point where different people can receive it differenrly in terms of emotional feelings.
there are layers for sure and new relationships and revelations each time, one has to dive for multiple viewings, over time
2001 is probably the best film ever made. It's insane how deep that movie gets on like the fifteenth viewing if you're attempting to decipher its meanings. Reading the novelisation (if you can call it that) also helps to understand the themes even more concretely, since they very much parallel.
Reminds me of watching Bergman’s Persona. I tried so hard to get a concrete understanding of the film, but it was only once I let go of that midset that I understood - by experiencing it.
One day Kubrick fanboys are going to find the formula of a cure for cancer in The Shining carpet.
Definitely go back and watch Barry Lyndon. I saw it for the first time a few days ago and its truly a stunning experience. Its on the same level as 2001, because its about so many different themes, and told through an epic scale with amazing cinematography.
2001 was my favourite for a long time, but after rewatching Barry Lyndon it is now at the top for me. There is just simply nothing else like it. For better or worse 2001 created a lot of motifs that are still used in science fiction a lot. No period piece has even come close to the feeling of Barry Lyndon and I think that speaks to the absolute mastery of Kubrick's craft. The composition of each shot is meticulous, the story is slow and yet it is hard to look away as this man's life is built up and broken down, the candle lit interiors, the absolute depression in Lady Lyndon's eyes. It is just a masterpiece.
While I love Barry Lyndon and Paths of Glory, and really appreciate the rest as well, 2001: A Space Odyssey is still far above the rest. It truly is a movie like no other, I just hope that when I see it in the theatre for the first time in a couple of weeks that there won't be anyone talking or using their phone.
"Eyes Wide Shut" is my favorite. The film he worked on the longest, & possibly the hardest. Its adaptation is also very good; although it's loose with its particular novel, a different one it reminds me of is "Las Bas" by Huysmns. Like, this handful of turn-of-the-century novels about dreaming, sexuality, power, society, fidelity in marriage, & the taboo...Except it's set in Christmastime 1990s Manhattan. I also think "Eyes Wide Shut" is his most hopeful film. I watch it every December.
it has a lot to say about the obsessions and delusions of power in a world that worships the individual, so probably more in tune with today's reality than ever
I liked this, it’d be cool if you did one for Chris Nolan before Oppenheimer comes out.
^Also, I know y’all like book recommendations. I’ve just read 2 by Tim O’Brien. Try The Things They Carried.
Why before?
It's truly astounding how well almost all of his movies hold up today. He immerses you in a world that's so timeless, even something like Paths of Glory feels like it could easily have been made a year ago. 2001 was basically the first movie that radically changed my perception of what movies were capable of, and all of them break so many of the conventional "rules" of filmmaking that, despite how different they all are, they all feels distinctly his. Great list!
yes, they are like penetrating psychological assessments, each one with different perspectives, themes, and moods, but all with laser beams piercing right thru you
Strangelove is so underrated man. The amount of innuendos never ceases to amaze me.
It’s not very funny
@@BRNRDNCK it is, the humor is just subtle and not in your face slapstick comedy. Peter sellers is outstanding
@@MildSatire I picked up on most of the humor and I just didn’t find it particularly funny. I’m not sure I ever laughed. It’s very clever but not really a genre comedy.
@@BRNRDNCK ahh alright idk every expression that george c scott gives just kills me
@@MildSatire That’s fair, humor tends to be a subjective thing. I’m glad you like it. I respect the film a lot and can see how it’s funny
My personal ranking
1. 2001 - was my favourite movie at one point in time (now at number 2) and watching if for the first time was a spiritual experience
2. The Shining - my favourite horror movie of all time and one of the most perfectly crafted films I my opinion
3. Eyes Wide Shut - definitely need to rewatch but this one stuck with my more than any of the films under and the scene with the guy in the Red Cloak may be my favourite in his filmography
4. Dr Strangelove - hilarious and poignant was some of the best comedic performances
5. A Clockwork Orange - one of the strangest films I’d ever seen on my first watch and one of the most interesting protagonists in film
6. Full Metal Jacket - agree with the second half being as good if not better than the first, especially the sniper sequence
7. Spartacus - barely remember this but loved the ending
8. Fear and Desire - watched out of curiosity, wouldn’t recommend but has some interesting camerawork
Kubrick is my favourite director by far and I really need to watch Barry Lyndon and Paths of Glory. All the movies 1-6 are 10/10 in my opinion and are in my top 100 movies
You should. Both are really great.
Barry Lyndon is my 3rd favorite, on the same level as the shining
i like your rankings, yeah The Shining is quite deep when you get into the themes, the psychological darkness of man, etc. I also find myself drawn into Eyes Wide Shut more and more, it's a movie that is aging well, with the delusion of man's obsessions. Full Metal Jacket is penetrating as well on war and conformity and militarism. Kubrick is beyond great.
What’s your number 1
Barry Lyndon and Paths Of Glory are some of Kubrick’s Best Works…can’t recommend that to people enough
Can I just say I appreciate the level of insight mixed with the somewhat casual tone.
These type of videos are really good at forging that para-social relationship you’re so fond of.🎉
From the ones I’ve seen:
1. Eyes Wide Shut
2. The Shining
3. Barry Lyndon
4. Space Odyssey
I should rewatch them all to really confirm my opinions (and check out the other films too). Eyes Wide Shut was such a weird film that stuck with me for a while after watching it. I know people are a little mixed on it but I loved its dreamlike and unnerving atmosphere.
Idk if you are a fan of animation but Hayao Miyazaki list would be fun. One of the most solid filmographies of any director if you are into his style.
I watch "Eyes Wide Shut" every Christmas. It rewards age & revisits. He spent decades working on it & it shows. It's my favorite of his.
EWS has been hugely gaining pop among the fan base and critics it seems
You need to watch Paths of Glory..
One of the Best War Films ever made..
13: Fear and Desire
12: Killer’s Kiss
11: Spartacus
10: The Killing
9: Full Metal Jacket
8: Lolita
7: Eyes Wide Shut
6: A Clockwork Orange
5: Barry Lyndon
4: Dr. Strangelove
3: Paths of Glory
2: 2001: A Space Odyssey
1: The Shining
A clock work orange is my favorite it really opened my eyes in so many ways
Agreed. It's not my favorite, doesn't even crack my top 3, but it did what few others have done by changing how I view and think about movies in general.
the joke went over everyone’s heads :(
Your video is what inspired me to go look at Stanley Kubrick’s filmography. Before then I only watched The Shining and parts of Full Metal Jacket. Now I’m obsessed with Kubrick! Still haven’t watched all his films but here’s my current ranking on the ones I have watched. I haven’t watched Paths of Glory, Spartacus and Barry Lyndon yet.
1. The Shing
2. Dr Strangelove
3. Eyes Wide Shut
4. A Clockwork Orange
5. 2001: A Space Odyssey
6. Lolita
7. The Killing
8. Full Metal Jacket
9. Killer’s Kiss
10. Fear and Desire
2001: A Space Odyssey, Paths of Glory, Dr. Strangelove, Barry Lyndon, The Killing, Eyes Wide Shut, A Clockwork Orange, Spartacus, Full Metal Jacket, Lolita, Fear and Desire, Killer's Kiss
Where my Barry Lyndon fans at!!
Yooooo
One of my favorites
His best.
The best one
Full Metal Jacket just doesn’t get enough love man 🥲
Very enjoyable video :)
My Kubrick ranking is:
1 - The Shining (my favorite movie)
2 - Eyes wide shut
3 - clockwork orange
4 - 2001: A space Odyssey
5 - Barry Lyndon
I'm a big fan of Kubrick's work and I totally agree when you say he was just a human, able to make mistakes. Still, i also think The Shining is perfect.
I'm a Shining fan too, and I'm impressed by how the admiration for Eyes Wide Shut continues to explode
My Top 10 from Kubrick..
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey
2. The Shining
3. Paths Of Glory
4. Barry Lyndon
5. A Clockwork Orange
6. Eyes Wide Shut
7. Dr. Strangelove
8. Full Metal Jacket
9. The Killing
10. Spartacus
1) 2001
2) Dr. Strangelove
3) Barry Lyndon
4) Paths of Glory
5) A Clockwork Orange
6) Eyes Wide Shut
7) The Shining
8) Full Metal Jacket
9) The Killing
10) Killer’s Kiss
11) Lolita
12) Fear and Desire
2001 is easily my favorite, afterwards I'd probably go Barry Lyndon, Clockwork Orange, Dr. Strangelove, Full Metal Jacket, Paths of Glory, and The Shining last. Haven't seen any others yet. The Shining is amazing, incredibly memorable and iconic, but it somehow didn't really have much of an effect on me, partially because I already knew pretty much every element of the film through pop culture references, which is why my enjoyment was mere admiration and not much more, unfortunately.
The Shining can be viewed thru patriarchy and white man's burden; when done so those themes will explode for you ... gl
I saw The Shining when it first came out, so no pop culture references, but it didn't have any effect on me at all. The reason? Everything was telegraphed in advance. A good horror movie should catch you unawares, but Jack Nicholson was leering ten minutes in the movie, so the only way to rank up the tension was for him to go further and further over the top, so it winds up being laughably awful rather than scary. I've seen most of Kubrick's movies and The Shining leaves me totally cold.
@@tonybennett4159 it's not that kind of horror movie, but if that's how you see it, that is fine. i'm just guessing if you saw it now after many years you may see it different. i didn't think much of it my first two times i believe. one way to think about it is like a hitchcock movie, where the deed is revealed early, but then it's all about the story in between, and how things are revealed, because here the implication is what is occurring is also figurative on another level. that's my take, ty
@@clumsydad7158 Thanks for that. Yes, it's true that a second viewing of any movie can go three ways : either you wonder what on earth you saw in the movie in the first place, or your views remain unchanged or you appreciate it now in ways you hadn't foreseen. Well I saw The Shining again early this year and it certainly fell into the middle category. The hammy acting of both Jack and Shelley meant I couldn't engage figuratively or otherwise, not helped by a score that insists on digging you painfully in the ribs in case you're not getting it. In my opinion only, it remains Kubrick's worst, and I really rate Stanley. Can't please everyone, I guess!
Kubrick is a master of the audiovisual combination. Every movie has that one moment where the picture and the audio just hit so hard and sends chills down your body. The stills of somebody's face or reaction accompanied by music... Many moments of that in the Shining, The one scene with Frank's PTSD in Clockwork, and Obviously the Stargate sequence in 2001 which gave me such an out of body experience that I have never gotten from a movie.
1 - A Clockwork Orange
2 - 2001 / Barry Lyndon
3 - The rest
All perfect or near perfect films to me
The message I take from Doctor Strangelove is “Mankind’s ultimate downfall will be through its own stupidity,” and I find that a lot funnier than I probably should.
I watched 2001: A Space Odyssey at least 2001 times by now.
Now you know how much this movie influenced me.
Thank you Jake for your reviews. It was interesting :)
It’s a testament to how good this man is that everyone’s list is different (mine is wildly different) and I find myself watching his movies again and again, but I’m really not a fan of the mystique around Kubrick.
yes, there meaning evolve with us over time
For real. You can make a compelling argument for at least half of his filmography being your favorite that basically nobody would argue with. Paths of Gkory, Dr. Strangelove, 2001, A Clockwork Orange, The Shining, Full Metal Jacket, and Eyes Wide Shut are all somewhere in my top 100. Three of them are in my top 25.
@@Tyler_W eyes wide shut, lyndon and 2001 are all basically in my top 10 hahaha
Every one of Kubricks movies has something else going on and that’s why I love them.
would love to see more of these. my rank:
1.The Shining
2. 2001: A Space Odyssey
3. Eyes Wide Shut
4. Full Metal Jacket
5. Barry Lyndon
6. A Clockwork Orange 1971
7. Paths of Glory
8. The Killing
9. Dr. Strangelove
10. Killer’s Kiss
11. Fear and Desire
A clockwork Orange is his best film personally
I haven't seen Fear and Desire, Killer's Kiss or The Killing, despite hearing nothing but positive things about that movie. Here's my ranking:
1. A Clockwork Orange
2. Full Metal Jacket
3. 2001
4. The Shining
5. Eyes Wide Shut
6. Barry Lyndon (one of my favorite movies)
7. Paths of Glory
8. Dr. Strangelove (another one of my favorites)
9. Lolita
10. Spartacus
Excellent video! I need to rewatch some of these films - been years!
Full Metal Jacket is actually one of my favorite movies ever. I think both halves are really special, covering many themes and having a lot of really memorable scenes. I actually thought there was a lot of dark comedy to be found, most notably Sgt. Hartmann screaming at the recruits and having awesome insults, but also many scenes in the war section were actually pretty funny. I also loved the soundtrack and the overall tone of the movie. Also the poster goes hard
Paths of glory really blown me away the first time i watch it. I knew it was positevely viewed but i expected more of a director for hire thing much like spartacus based also on the period it was filmed. But not only it was deeply kubrickian in the mise in scene and the themes, it was also so raw and emotional. I remember feeling kind of depressed and sad by the end of the film.
The first time i saw 2001 i felt confused about the slow pacing . I was like 10-11 years old then and i associated space films basically to star wars. I end up being bored to death by the film so i paused about halfway the HAL chapter and decided to finish it the morning after. I dont what happened but the rest of the film completely hipnotized me and even disturbed me. I cannot say i liked it but i found myself rewatching it every certain time. Later i found an explanation about the films plot based onbthe book, and for a while it become my favorite science fiction film. But you are right in that there is a moment when you stop thinking about the lore or the logical explanation and then it becomes a mystical experience. I feel this is like the most mysterious film ever whatever thar means. Now it is in my top 5 best movies ever made.
yeah, i need to see Paths still
1. A Clockwork Orange
2. The Shining
3. Full Metal Jacket
4. 2001: A Space Odyssey
5. Barry Lyndon
6. Paths of Glory
7. Lolita
8. The Killing
9. Eyes Wide Shut
10. Spartacus
11. Dr. Strangelove
12. Killer's Kiss
13. Fear and Desire
Great list! My top 3 would be 1. Barry Lyndon 2. 2001 3. Eyes wide shut
The Shining is a good contender for my favorite. The hauntingly empty atmosphere of the hotel in many scenes just hits hard for me, really adds to the “Ghost town” vibe of the piece. That buildup of unnerving solitude makes the moments where something supernatural happens a lot more effective. Jack’s performance is a lot of fun, and the music introduced me to Al Bowlly.
9:33 . . . . that yellow poster is scarier than the movie. I saw it at the theatre at age 12/13 when it came out and was, well, not scared. Eyes Wide Shut....150 minute snooze cruise to nowhere. Paths of Glory....very good. Lolita...great. Barry Lyndon, 2001, Strangelove, Clockwork Orange....masterpieces.
That I've seen:
6. A clockwork orange
5. Dr Strangelove
4. Barry Lyndon
3. 2001
2. Full metal jacket
1. The Shining
This series is one of my favourites of yours.
Hey, also rank Studio Ghibli movie. They are some of the most amazing animated movie ever.
Would appreciate a Tarkovsky ranking now to contrast with Kubrick
Seconding this, very curious to see how he would compare Solaris with 2001 tbh
My ranking..
1. Stalker
2. Mirror
3. Solaris
4. Andrei Rublev
5. The Sacrifice
6. Nostalghia
7. Ivan’s Childhood
Despite seeing 2001 several times already, I still haven't figured it out. And that's exactly why I love it so much
2001: A Space Odyssey is the greatest film ever made.
It was the first film I watched that totally floored me. It was like I had to pick my jaw up of the floor it was that awesome.
Love these director videos
have you seen ai: artificial intelligence? weird movie. Kubrick script directed by spielberg after his death. would be an interesting watch in the context of what Waterloo might look like
My ranking:
1 2001 a space odyssey
2 the shining
3 strangelove
4 eyes wide shut
5 paths of glory
6 full metal jacket
7 barry lyndon
8 clockwork orange
9 the killing
10 Spartacus
11 Lolita
12 killer's kiss
13 fear and desire
I love Keenan Wynn, while the Nation was on the likely brink of World War III, when Peter Sellers has him break into The Soda Machine, "You're Going To Have To Answer To The Coca-Cola Company" from Dr. Strangelove. Priceless
the shining is definitely my favorite, i agree with what you said about it being a perfect movie. the sound and set design are mesmerizing and the acting is incredible
Just one man's ranking below --- it's amazing how many high quality films Kubrick made (at least the first 11 below would fall under that category for me), so it goes without saying that even some of his greatest films (in the eyes of others) might seem far too low on this list, but everyone has their own personal taste and aesthetics after all --- and Kubrick fans are certainly no different:
01. A Clockwork Orange
02. Eye's Wide Shut
03. The Shining
04. 2001: A Space Odyssey
05. Dr. Strangelove
06. Lolita
07. Spartacus
08. Paths of Glory
09. Full Metal Jacket
10. Barry Lyndon
11. The Killing
12. Killer's Kiss
13. Fear and Desire
Here would be my list :)
10. Eyes Wide Shut (I thought it was so directionless and there is so many cringey scenes, the frat guys, and there was many times when I just wanted to do something else)
9. Lolita (very hard to watch and not a fun one either)
8. The Killers (liked. Thought it opened slow but it set up a good movie. Liked the end when the money is flying everywhere, beautiful and comedic)
7. Paths of Glory (loved that prison/pre-execution scene, so beautifully lit and performed. And the song at the end was good)
6. Barry Lyndon (loved the tension like you said, there was also some funny scenes because it was so tense and there was these unspoken rules, every frame was like a painting, so good)
5. Full Metal Jacket (loved that first half. Was amazing. The Mickey Mouse song at the end too. Really good stuff)
4. Clockwork Orange (I really love this one for its visuals. Just how crazy and almost punk it went, which not many, if any, movies had done. The Jesus scene, I always gasp out loud when he comes back to the house he broke into and they recognize him. Crazy stuff)
3. The Shining (It’s The Shining, I mean come on)
2. Dr. Strangelove (so funny. “Don’t fight in here, this is the war room” so weird, and funny. I actually really love the ending, it’s a very Kubrick type of ending for a comedy)
1. 2001 (this movie is a sci-fi, horror, history, art movie. There is everything in this movie. It looks amazing to this day. Wonderful film)
I think Barry Lyndon, Full Metal Jacket, Clockwork Orange, and The Shining could all swap depending on the day.
You are totally right, The Shining becomes funny after a certain amount of time. I don’t know if that’s a good or bad thing, but it’s definitely a thing.
what the fuck I had no idea Kubrick had directed a rendition of Lolita. insane. Wiki says "comedy-drama" lol
Maybe someday, revisit "Eyes Wide Shut." Kubrick started working on that adaptation in the late '60s. It was a decades-long project for him. "Directionless" is the very, very last word I would ever use about it. Every moment has extremely precise, deliberate craft as a result of him taking decades to work on it. It even holds the Guiness record for longest film shoot of all time. He had people measure the distance between newspaper stalls in downtown Manhattan, so he could recreate it as a giant set in Pinewood Studios...yes, the same place where Bond & Star Wars sets are...as another example, he used Chinese lanterns to soft-light some of the shots with Christmas lighting... yeah, "directionless" is very opposite of the amount of work he put into directing it. I think people want it to be some erotic thriller with a neat resolution, but the fact is, it is SUPPOSED to be cringy & ambiguous. Because it's about desire, & the fictions we make about desire. It's about the reality in fantasies. In this case, it's also about the fantasies of a fragile male who has very foolish ideas about marriage, power, women, desire, & the difference between dreaming & reality. So he goes on a fool's journey & wises up. Honestly, in some ways, I almost think you have to be a certain age to tune into it.
This was a great video, interesting to see your perspective on these films.
Judged on first-viewing
1: 2001
2: Eyes Wide Shut
3: Clockwork Orange
4: Shining
5: Barry Lyndon
6: Dr. Strangelove
7: Full Metal Jacket
8: Paths of Glory
9: Lolita
10: The Killing
11: Killer's Kiss
12: Spartacus
13: Fear and Desire
Mine:
1. Eyes Wide Shut
2. 2001: A Space Odyssey
3. The Shining
4. Dr. Strangelove
5. A Clockwork Orange
6. The Killing
7. Full Metal Jacket
8. Barry Lyndon
9. Paths of Glory
10. Spartacus
11. Fear of Desire
12. Lolita
13. Killer's Kiss
Can you explain the main message of Eyes Wide Shut? Especially with regards to jealousy. What was Kubrick trying to show
@@MildSatire well the whole movie is just so intriguing and enigmatic to me. it's super erotic and electrifying with little easter eggs and theories like how the christmas party is a ritual and that the doctor is the red cloak. for the message, well "eyes wide shut", what we see on the surface isn't there and our natural way of seeing things elude is from what's beneath the surface of what we see. it's also just kubrick's way of showing a unique visualization and critique of society, sex, urges, power, and fornication. knowing this is the longest kubrick spent on a movie and that he died shortly after making it, and that 20 minutes of footage is deleted with it very much likely exposing something real and horrific, it just overall upgrades the mysteriously omnipotent and ominous excitement of the movie. maybe the reason why and i and others like this movie so much is there there is no main message, just very ambiguous and controversial.
@@localcrisis very nice points. Yeah this kind of clarified why I was intrigued with it upon first watch. Definitely want to dive into this deeper in the future 👍
Jake, I have an answer to your ideas on old Hollywood comedy, Preston Sturges, Ernst Lubitsch, and Billy Wilder, perfectly timed, plays with a dry wit, plot points that come back in the best way possible and spectacularly written characters that should be corny but a feel almost heartfelt in a genuine way.
100 percent this! And it's older, but I'd add Lubitsch, for sure.
Of the ones I have seen so far, though I do plan on seeing them all:
8. Fear and Desire
7. Paths of Glory
6. The Shining
5. A Clockwork Orange
4. Full Metal Jacket
3. Eyes Wide Shut
2. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey
I was surprised to see Eyes Wide Shut so high on the list, as most of my movie-buff friends didn't care for it much. I thought it was an stunning piece of photography. Amazing visual story telling. And it seemed to tell a different story for everyone. To me, it was about a guy having a psychotic break triggered by jealousy, and sort of spraling down into the depths of his cognizance. And surviving the night. And getting on with the next day. Been there lol Kind of like an acid trip gone awry.
Full metal jacket is my favorite with the shining being a clise second and then a clickwork orange
I'd put "Clockwork Orange" at the bottom because, as Kubrick himself admitted when he pulled it from circulation in the UK in 1974 (it didn't become available again until after his death), it got away from him and became a thing he never wanted to make -- an amoral/immoral, hedonistic thrill ride that wound up inspiring copycat violence. He regarded it as his most egregious, unfocused failure.
"Barry Lyndon" and "2001" rank at the top for me, both immersive experiences in fully imagined worlds -- one in the past, one in the future. All his movies are about the condition (shared by the characters and the audience) of being inside a Stanley Kubrick movie, where every frame is under his strict control. "Barry Lyndon" addresses this directly -- a fable about a man who tries to exert free will, to control chance and fate (gambling is the central metaphor) and control his own destiny... only he can't because he's trapped inside the predetermined frame of A Stanley Kubrick Film.
I saw both "2001" and "Barry Lyndon" when they were first released -- in the same gigantic theater (the Cinerama in Seattle) and they were both life-altering quasi-religious experiences for me as a kid -- an 11-year-old and a 17-year-old, respectively -- that opened up my experience of the world and made me feel that life was larger and more exciting and wondrous and profoundly mysterious than I had ever dreamed before.
Mannn, 2001 isn't even my favorite Kubrick movie (it's full metal jacket) but I think 2001 is just objectively the best movie ever made.
It's probably cliche among those who love movies for me to say that Stanley Kubrick is one of my favorite directors, but that opinion became a cliche for a dang good reason. He deserves every bit of love, praise, and respect that he gets. Unfortunately, I haven't seen them all just yet. I still need to see Fear & Desire, Killer's Kiss, Spartacus, Lolita, and Barry Lyndon, but all but maybe one of the rest of his filmography that I have seen are all among my favorite movies. I also share the same interchangeable top 3. My 4-7 are probably interchangeable as well. The only one that's consistently in its place so far is the last one, but that's still in no way any indication that I dislike it at all. They're all great movies, and I think every one of my top 7 would feel right at home in most people's top 50 or top 100.
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey
2. Dr. Strangelove
3. The Shining
4. A Clockwork Orange
5.Full Metal Jacket
6. Eyes Wide Shut
7. Paths of Glory
8. The Killing
From What I’ve seen
6. Dr Strangelove
5. The Shining
4. Barry Lyndon
3. 2001: A Space Odyssey
2. Full Metal Jacket
1. A Clockwork Orange
I love all of them so much
It's been almost 60 years and we still haven't seen a cinematographer surpass 2001.
Space Odyssey is the definition of “It’s not about the destination, it’s about the journey. …and also that scene where Hal reads their lips, that was some good horror.” It’s an extended version of the saying.
From Dr Strangelove on I saw these movies as they came out. The Shining was SO disappointing at the time, Eyes Wide Shut I didn’t like and said that to a guy at a film festival, who it turned out was the guy who finished the film after Kubrick death. He said, “watch if again”. I haven’t, but will. Gonna try The Shining again. For my money, the top of the list: 2001, Clockwork, Strangelove, Paths of Glory, The Killing. And I like the first 2/3 of Lolita a lot, funny.
1) The Shining
2) Eyes Wide Shut
3) Full Metal Jacket
4) A Clockwork Orange
5) Lolita
6) Dr. Strangelove
7) Barry Lyndon
8) Paths of Glory
9) The Killing
10) Spartacus
11) 2001
12) Killers Kiss
13) Fear anf Desire
I know you have a lot of Criterions, so just letting you know that the Criterion for The Killing has Killer's Kiss as a special feature.
This vid was good you should do more about other directors
1. The Shining
2. Barry Lyndon
3. 2001: A Space Odyssey
4. Dr. Strangelove
5. Eyes Wide Shut
6. A Clockwork Orange
7. Paths of Glory
8. Full Metal Jacket
9. Spartacus
I’m doing my run through now I’d seen most before this run through, and it’s been a blast. I’m hitting Full Metal Jacket, and Eyes Wide Shut here next.
Watched Barry Lyndon again two months ago. It is amazing, gorgeous, perfect
I feel your dad lol. took me three attempts to watch 2001 because I kept falling asleep
Barry Lyndon is for sure my favorite. I love how the narrative is structured, Barry's character arc.
2. The Shining
3. Dr. Strangelove
Top 3: 2001, Barry Lyndon, The Shining
Next 2: Doctor Strangelove, A Clockwork Orange
6th: Full Metal Jacket
7th: The Killing
8th: Eyes Wide Shut
Haven't seen the others
Sorry getting to your discussion so late. Your video just appeared on my youtube menu and I was like, Oh, I gotta watch this.
I have seen both Fear and Desire and Killer's Kiss, the first being an ambitious clunky mess and the second quite fascinating despite its technical limitations, but to me "feels" a bit like The Lady from Shanghai or perhaps influenced visually by Welles particularly in one scene. Really not sure how to rank Kubrick's films, but Eyes Wide Shut is my personal favorite with A Clockwork Orange being the one I least like to watch - it's fascinating, but really ugly.
Spartacus was his first film as a direct for hire that he did to after working with Douglas on Paths of Glory. Douglas did it as a power move for himself and Kubrick got to prove he could handle big budgets
Barry Lyndon is my favorite, could you do deep dives in La Dolce Vita or even Satantango?
Without any attempts at objectivity...
1. Barry Lyndon 2. Full Metal Jacket 3. 2001: A Space Odyssey 4. A Clockwork Orange 5. The Shining 6. Eyes Wide Shut 7. Lolita 8. The Killing 9. Dr. Strangelove... 10. Spartacus 11. Paths of Glory* 12. Killer's Kiss* 13. Fear and Desire*
I have love for all of these but don't expect anyone to agree with me on the order. I don't even always agree with myself except 13th place is always the same.
*Incomplete viewings: positions variable. Except Fear and Desire, probably
For me,
1. 2001
2. Full Metal Jacket
3. Eyes Wide Shut
4. Dr. Strangelove
5. A Clockwork Orange
6. The Shining
7. Lolita
8. Paths of Glory
9. Barry Lyndon
10. Killer's Kiss
11. Sparticus
12. The Killing
13. Fear and Desire
yeah I don't think Kubrick put all the secret messages, I think he just put Easter eggs or references in movies that appealed to him but other people want to read into it more than needed
Did you know I seen every Stanley Kubrick movies? Every last one of his film I finished watching.
. Fear & Desire
. Killers Kiss
. The Killing
. Paths Of Glory
. Spartacus
. Lolita
. Dr. Strangelove: How I stop worrying and love the Bomb?
. 2001: A Space Odyssey
. A Clockwork Orange
. Barry Lyndon
.The Shining
. Full Metal Jacket
. & Eyes Wide Shut
That's all I ever saw his film. For me, in my top 5 picks of Stanley Kubrick's movies I had go with, One. Barry Lyndon. Two. The Shining. Three. Paths Of Glory. Four. A Clockwork Orange. And Five. is Full Metal Jacket.
Do more director rankings! Very interesting stuff
Funny re: 2001 grey screen, I tried to watch it a few years ago with one of my kids, and one scene was lingering for a while during that opening, and I'm saying oh it's intentional! A few more min passed before I realised the Blu Ray had just frozen!!
Also I'm 100% the fall asleep during movie Dad, but thats just because I'm exhausted! I often have a hard time comprehending some movies like 2001 but I still love them
Do Jean Renoir next!
My ranking of Stanley Kubrick movies:
1. The Shining (1980)
2. Dr. Strangelove (1964)
3. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1969)
4. Clockwork Orange (1971)
5. Barry Lyndon (1975)
6. Eyes Wide Shut (1999)
7. The Killing (1956)
8. Full Metal Jacket (1987)
9. Paths of Glory (1957)
10. Lolita (1962)
11. Spartacus (1957)
12. Killer’s Kiss (1955)
13. Fear and Desire (1953)
1. 2001: a space odyssey
2. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
3. Barry Lyndon
4. Paths of Glory
5. Full Metal Jacket
6. The Shining
7. The Killing
8. A Clockwork Orange
9. Spartacus
10. Fear and Desire
11. Killer's Kiss
12. Lolita
13. Eyes Wide Shut
Gotta say, coming here from the "man carrying thing" videos I had absolutely no clue you were one of the most knowledgeable and genuine film people on YT.
Why is Fear and Desire so high?? One of the worst films I’ve ever seen
@@MildSatire You should take another look, there are nine films above it.
@@thezachmarsh Killer’s Kiss is a pretty good classic noir movie. Lolita is decent. Eyes Wide Shut is arguably one of his finest and most potent movies.
Fear and Desire is a painful, disgusting slog. Almost nothing about it is redeemable. Why would you rank it above Killers or Lolita, let alone Eyes Wide Shut? Are you ok?
@@MildSatire You don't seem like the kind of person who engages in good faith, and I doubt any rationale I give you about why my ranking is the way it is will satisfy you or create a good conversation so I'm just gonna call it here. Have a good one.
@@thezachmarsh look man I’m just exaggerating myself lmao. Sorry if I come off as rude. But I just wanna know, seriously - sometimes I feel like I’m in the wrong when I see opinions so different than mine.
Glad to see Paths of Glory high on the list, it’s very often overlooked, but it’s a masterpiece. I agree with your picks for top 3, but I’d put Doctor Strangelove at the top. That movie just gets funnier every time I see it.
Possibly the most agreeable kubrick ranking
Another great Director to do would be spike Lee
Don't know if you've covered him, but you should do a video on David Lynch. Kubrick was my childhood favorite director, but in the end part of my twenties, Lynch kind of took over.
Though, if you do, have fun with Twin Peaks.
"It feels like the best movie ever made." Great way to describe Strangelove
Barry Lyndon is the no1 for me. I get why the movie is so underrated though (setting, pace...)
Can you please do one for Tarantino movies? Will be interesting to know how you feel about the guy and his movies.
This is a great review with great insights.
Have you seen the movie Failsafe? It came out the same year as Strangelove and has a very VERY similar plot, but it's played as a straight drama. The plot similarities actually led to a lawsuit from Kubrick.
I like Failsafe a bit more than Dr. Strangelove, actually, but they’re both excellent. Sidney Lumet was another master that made films for close to the same amount of time as Kubrick.
My ranking: (Have not seen Lolita, Spartacus or his first 2 movies that he hates yet)
1) 2001: A Space Odyssey (10/10)
2) The Shining (10/10)
3) Barry Lyndon (10/10)
4) Dr Strangelove (10/10)
5) A Clockwork Orange (10/10)
6) Eyes Wide Shut (10/10)
7) Paths of Glory (10/10)
8) Full Metal Jacket (9/10)
9) The Killing (8/10)
Literally the greatest director of all time he really did direct 7 10/10 movies no argument (Plus Full Metal Jacket is arguably a 10/10)
Even though i disagree with the list, i liked it!
Paths of Glory is absolutely incredible
Got a way different rankling but respect your opinion for sure
1. 2001: A Space Odyssey (One of, if not the, greatest movie that's ever been created)
2. The Shining (One of, if not the, greatest horror movie that's ever been created)
3. Dr Strangelove (One of, if not the, greatest comedy that's ever been created)
4. Full Metal Jacket
5. Barry Lyndon
6. Paths of Glory
7. A Clockwork Orange
8. Eyes Wide Shut
I separate them because the top 3 are in my top 20 movies of all time. The other 5 fall slightly behind, but are still masterpieces in their own right.
What are your top 20?
@@outofreach714 It's been a while since then. The only one still in my top 20 is 2001. My current top 20 is:
1. No Country For Old Men
2. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
3. 2001: A Space Odyssey
4. Manchester by the Sea
5. The Lord of the Rings trilogy
6. There Will Be Blood
7. Aftersun
8. Apocalypse Now
9. Birdman or the unexpected virtue of ignorance
10. Brokeback Mountain
11. Ratatouille
12. Jagten (The Hunt)
13. Blade Runner 2049
14. Inception
15. The Empire Strikes Back
17. Goodfellas
18. The Dark Knight
19. The Talented Mr Ripley
20. The Social Network
Note: these are favourites, not best. So childhood favourites like Ratatouille, ESB, Inception and The Dark Knight make it here where they probably wouldn't on that list. I also have a few films I've only watched once that would probably make the list if I watched them again. Those would be Good Time, Training Day, The Thin Red Line, Ex Machina and Looper.
@@Jack-iu7pw Wow, thank you so much for the response. ☺️
Do David Lynch ranked!
Top five for me
2001
Shining
Dr. Strangelove
Full Metal Jacket
Clockwork Orange
The rest are the rest, varying degrees of good or great. But that top 5...wow