Yahoo Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: stanley kubrick movies ranked
  2. Read Customer Reviews & Find Best Sellers. Free 2-Day Shipping w/Amazon Prime.

Search results

  1. 2 days ago · 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)92%. #4. Critics Consensus: One of the most influential of all sci-fi films -- and one of the most controversial -- Stanley Kubrick's 2001 is a delicate, poetic meditation on the ingenuity -- and folly -- of mankind. Synopsis: An imposing black structure provides a connection between the past and the future in this ...

    • Fear and Desire
    • Killer’S Kiss
    • Lolita
    • Spartacus
    • The Killing
    • Paths of Glory
    • Dr. Strangelove OR: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb
    • Full Metal Jacket
    • A Clockwork Orange
    • Barry Lyndon

    It's almost hard to judge Kubrick’s directorial debut Fear and Desire against the rest of his filmography, as the hour-long anti-war film is more or less an extended student short project that’s mostly fascinating in how it predicates his later achievements. Like any great filmmaker, Kubrick didn’t come out of the gate fully formed, and his experim...

    Kubrick’s second film is certainly a step up from Fear and Desire, but it was still the work of a developing filmmaker who was more trying to perfect current trends than innovate his own. Compared to the rest of his filmography, Killer’s Kiss is perhaps the biggest outlier. It showed genuine empathy for sympathetic characters, and crafts a tragic s...

    Lolita is a fascinating example of Kubrick biting off more than he could chew. On paper, matching the novel filmmaker with the controversial 1955 novel by Vladimir Nabokovseemed like a perfect fit, as Kubrick had shown he could adapt great literature and offer his own interpretation. Unfortunately, much of the brilliance of Nabokov’s novel was from...

    It's fascinating that a film as iconic as Spartacus is Kubrick’s most compromised work, and although the film is hailed as a classic, is the one film within Kubrick’s filmography where he didn’t have complete artistic control. The importance of Spartacus ranges beyond Kubrick himself; written by Dalton Trumbo amidst the Hollywood blacklisting crisi...

    In only a few short parallels, it's easy to see how The Killing is one of the most influential films ever made. Kubrick’s 1956 neo-noir heist thriller tells its robbery plot from multiple perspectives and was among Quentin Tarantino's primary influences for Reservoir Dogs. If you consider how Reservoir Dogs laid the groundwork for Pulp Fiction (and...

    Anti-war themes are prevalent within a good portion of Kubrick’s work, and in many ways Paths of Glory is a more mature version of his early attempts to make a statement in Fear and Desire. Kubrick trekked into less ambiguous territory with a grounded narrative set within an actual historical context. Set in World War I, the film follows the trial ...

    What has always made Kubrick such a fascinating filmmaker is that despite the dark subject material that he frequently tackles, he’s never failed to have a sense of humor. There are satirical elements woven into all of his films, and unsurprisingly his only outright comedy Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb is both...

    There is a broad misconception among cinephile circles that Full Metal Jacket is a lesser Kubrick work that only works in its first half. Undoubtedly, the first hour of Kubrick’s 1987 war film includes some of the most powerful imagery of his career as it follows the brutal training process of U.S. Marines as they undergo boot camp training. Lee Er...

    The only thing more shocking than the highly disturbing material within A Clockwork Orange is how completely ahead of his time Kubrick was, and how half a decade later his 1971 dystopian classic is just as impactful and relevant (and unfortunately subject to the same debates over whether or not it's “promoting” its characters' behavior). A Clockwor...

    It goes without saying that Barry Lyndon is one of the most beautiful-looking movies ever made. Rarely will you find a three-hour film that’s this entertaining, as Barry Lyndon saw Kubrick lampooning the self-seriousness of the cinematic epic with a titular character that’s selfish, repugnant, and generally unlikeable. Ryan O’Neal crafts one of the...

    • Liam Gaughan
    • Senior Writer
    • Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) Speaking of anti-war films, Dr. Strangelove finds Stanley Kubrick at his most cynical on the topic.
    • Paths of Glory (1957) There's a quote that is often attributed to late French filmmaker François Truffaut: "there's no such thing as an anti-war film."
    • 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) Regularly considered to be one of the greatest films ever made, perhaps a more fitting description for 2001: A Space Odyssey would be the most cinematic film ever made.
    • Barry Lyndon (1975) Barry Lyndon is one of the most methodically beautiful films ever made. Following the titular character as he wiggles his way up to the top of the aristocracy of 18th-century England, there isn't a single moment in the movie that doesn't feel packed with emotion.
    • Eyes Wide Shut (1999) Eyes Wide Shut, a sexual odyssey starring Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman, was Kubrick’s final film. Set against a dream-like Christmas backdrop, Eyes Wide Shut steers Cruise’s upper-crust doctor through a hazy mess of conspiracies and perversions, leading to a masked orgy in a private mansion; the most resounding and talked-about sequence in the film.
    • Full Metal Jacket (1987) (Warner Bros.) Kubrick’s shocking take on the Vietnam war arrived in the wake of several other classic Vietnam movies (Apocalypse Now; Platoon; The Deer Hunter) but found its own place in the public imagination thanks to its unusual diptych structure.
    • Barry Lyndon (1975) Barry Lyndon is a superlative feat of filmmaking craft and is considered by many Kubrick purists to be the director’s finest feature.
    • A Clockwork Orange (1971) Stanley Kubrick's 'A Clockwork Orange' also gained accusations of so-called obscenity, prompting the director to withdraw it from circulation.
    • 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) After an alien monolith is unearthed on the moon, a team of astronauts and their sentient supercomputer set off to investigate a similar anomaly near Jupiter.
    • The Shining (1980) Based on the novel by Stephen King, this movie follows an alcoholic writer (Jack Nicholson) who takes his wife (Shelley Duvall) and psychic son (Danny Lloyd) to watch over a haunted hotel for the winter, only to get torn apart by cabin fever and the malevolent specters watching over them.
    • A Clockwork Orange (1971) This one is arguably Kubrick’s most controversial picture. Set in a dystopian version of London, this film follows sadistic teenager Alex (Malcolm McDowell) as he and his gang of droogs get their jollies by engaging in sexual assault and ultraviolence, both of which the film may overindulge in presenting.
    • Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) After a paranoid Air Force (Sterling Hayden) general orders a nuclear strike on the USSR, the U.S. president (Peter Sellers) and his cabinet race against the clock to prevent this attack from setting off a Soviet doomsday device that will destroy the world.
  2. Jun 26, 2023 · Here is every movie by Stanley Kubrick, ranked: 13. Fear and Desire (1953) A 24-year-old Stanley Kubrick’s feature debut, which he later described as “a bumbling amateur film exercise,” Fear ...

  3. Jan 11, 2020 · A great film, even though only 50% of it is sheer genius. 7. The Killing (1956) At the time compared to the original Scarface and Little Caesar, The Killing is about a successful heist at a race ...

  1. People also search for