Friday, July 26, 2024

Flashback, July 1999: Kubrick Continues to Make Stir Beyond the Grave With ‘Eyes Wide Shut’

Today, on what would have been the 96th birthday of film director Stanley Kubrick, it’s worthwhile revisiting his last film, the widely anticipated Eyes Wide Shut, which premiered in Los Angeles 25 years ago this month.

Kubrick only made 13 features and three documentaries in nearly a half century as a filmmaker, but each reflected his perfectionism and control-freak tendencies. Eyes Wide Shut was no exception.

Everything reflected his imprint: every frame of the film, the advertising copy, even the time and place of the premiere.

It was all being orchestrated from the grave, because the legend who had created 2001: A Space Odyssey, The Shining, Dr. Strangelove, A Clockwork Orange, Lolita, and Spartacus had died four months before.

In But What I Really Want To Do Is Direct, Ken Kwapis listed several characteristics he had associated with 2001: A Space Odyssey, only to take issue with them now: Kubrick’s “cold formality, his mania for one-point perspective composition, the stultifying pace, the too-cool-for-school Nietzscheanisms.”

But all, to one degree or another, carried over to Eyes Wide Shut, despite Kubrick’s usual single-minded attempt to make each succeeding film utterly unlike anything else he had done.

The long preparation period for the movie—not to mention Kubrick’s death before it could see the light of day—led to all kinds of speculations, all kinds of stories about what went on while shooting took place in or near London.

The pre-premiere buzz only increased with word that some explicit scenes need to be obscured with computer-generated images to avoid a box office-killing NC-17 rating. Consider, for instance, the following:

*Stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman expected to be in England for single months of shooting. But, having signed open-ended contracts, they ended up taking nearly two years. Nevertheless, as Kidman told Glenn Whipp in a Los Angeles Times interview earlier this month: "I would have stayed a third year. Does that mean I'm crazy?"

*The stars were in England so long that their two children supposedly acquired English accents.

*Post-production lasted almost a year.

* Kubrick joined psychoanalysis sessions with Cruise and Kidman, urging them to open up in such a way that the line between the fictional spouses and the actors playing them began to blur.

*Speaking of therapy, that’s how Kubrick got the idea for the movie in the first place, 30 years before it was released. He and star-producer Kirk Douglas clashed so much on the set of the mega-budget epic Spartacus that they went for professional counseling together, during which he learned of the Arthur Schnitzler novella Traumnovelle.

*Kubrick would not allow the couple to share their notes on scenes, hoping to heighten the alienation and confusion that their characters, Dr. Bill and Alice Harford, would feel.

*One sequence alone— a 13½-minute billiard room scene between Tom Cruise and Sydney Pollack—required nearly 200 takes.

* Kubrick made Cruise do 95 takes of just walking through a door.

* Alan Cumming auditioned six times for the small role of a hotel clerk.

* Sydney Pollack and Marie Richardson filled in when Harvey Keitel and Jennifer Jason Leigh could not do post-production work on the movie because shooting lasted so long and they had prior film commitments.

*Screenwriter Frederic Raphael caused a stir with a memoir of his collaboration with Kubrick, Eyes Wide Open, in which he related the director’s anger when he sent a copy of the script to his agent, as well as his own frustration over how little of his screenplay made it into the finished product: “I was there to prepare the way for him to do his stuff. Anything that was markedly mine was never the stuff he was going to do."

In mid-career, Kubrick gravitated towards low-budget filmmaking that paralleled his own reputation for parsimony. 

In the end, his attempt to hold the line on expenses for Eyes Wide Shut paid off. While costing $65 million, the movie totaled $162 million in worldwide box-office receipts, making this the director’s most successful film of his career.

Quote of the Day (Roger Ailes, on ‘Wet Noodle’ Patriarch Rupert Murdoch)

“He’s walking into walls. He doesn’t know what time it is. It’s old man time. Rupert is an odd bird. A cold fish, but a f-----g wet noodle — it's pathetic — around those kids. They're always stomping off and giving the poor guy the finger.”—The late Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, on Australian-born media baron Rupert Murdoch, quoted by Michael Wolff, The Fall: The End of Fox News and the Murdoch Dynasty (2023)

As a youngster listening to the original “Eyewitness News” broadcast in the New York area, I would smile and lean forward whenever I heard short, dour reporter Milton Lewis tell the audience, “Now listen to this,” in a confiding, “you’re not going to believe what I’m about to tell you” tone.

I experienced the same sensation when I read Jim Rutenberg and Jonathan Mahler’s New York Times report this week that three of Rupert Murdoch’s children have united against their father. They are arguing in court against him changing the family’s “irrevocable trust” to ensure that his anointed successor, eldest son Lachlan, will stay in charge of the conservative multinational media empire.

Lewis’ “this” happens, in 1924, to be a plot twist right out Succession. There’s little that the creators much-honored comedy-drama did not imagine. Maybe they dismissed this idea in the belief that their audience would never accept this kind of switcheroo coming from a nonagenarian.

Murdoch is a nightmare spin on Dylan Thomas’ notion that old age should burn and rave at close of day. Having assisted at the birth of Trumpism, he finds himself unable either to embrace or evade his handiwork. 

However much he may carp about the former President, his attempts to promote an alternative GOP candidate have foundered. He’s even been dissed by Don Jr.: “There was a time where if you wanted to survive in the Republican Party, you had to bend the knee to him or to others. I don’t think that’s the case anymore.”

And now, this mess.

The discovery process in the litigation can only reveal more embarrassing secrets, the kind he sought to avoid after reaching a $787 million settlement in Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit against Fox.

Or maybe Murdoch is beyond mortification at this point in his life. After all, who else would marry for the fifth time at age 93 and dare to risk comparisons with billionaire oil tycoon J. Howard Marshall, who was a mere 89 when he wed Anna Nicole Smith?

Fox News and Murdoch’s New York print mainstays, The New York Post and The Wall Street Journal, have been making great sport of President Biden’s age-related difficulties. But Ailes came up with that “old man time” phrase about his former boss eight years ago. What could that line possibly entail now?

TV Quote of the Day (‘The Big Bang Theory,’ On Why Physics Is Like ‘Lost’)

Leonard Hofstadter [played by Johnny Galecki]: “It just turns out that physics is exactly like 'Lost.' It started out great and turns out just a big ol' waste of time.”— The Big Bang Theory, Season 11, Episode 2, The Retraction Reaction,” original air date Oct. 2, 2017, teleplay by David Goetsch, Eric Kaplan, and Anthony Del Broccolo, directed by Mark Cendrowski

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Song Lyric of the Day (The Moody Blues, on Being ‘Part of the Fire That Is Burning’)

“We're part of the fire that is burning,
And from the ashes we can build another day.”—"The Story in Your Eyes,” written by Justin Hayward, performed by The Moody Blues on their Every Good Boy Deserves Favour LP (1971) 

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Quote of the Day (Wynonna Judd, With the Determination to Carry On)

“Just go to the next step. Then go two more. Sometimes that's enough."—Country music singer Wynonna Judd, quoted by Liz McNeil, “Wynonna Judd on Mom Naomi: 'With the Same Determination She Had to Live, She Was Determined to Die,'” People, Oct. 5, 2022

The image accompanying this post, of Wynonna Judd performing live in Arlington, VA, was taken Oct. 18, 2018, by Michael Dyer. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Quote of the Day (Henry Fielding, on Slander and Praise)

“The slander of some people is as great a recommendation as the praise of others.”—English novelist-playwright Henry Fielding (1707-1754), The Temple Beau (1730)

Monday, July 22, 2024

Quote of the Day (Mike Kelly, on a Consequence of Political Violence)

“[T]wo years ago… I reported that more than 75 members of Congress routinely wore bulletproof vests to public events. America took the news in stride. So did most of our public officials. Wearing a bulletproof vest is somewhat akin to wearing an American flag pin on your lapel.”—Columnist Mike Kelly, “After Shooting, Can Americans Stop Accepting Gun Violence?”, The Record (Bergen County, NJ), July 15, 2024