Saturday, August 14, 2021

A Kubrick Short Set in Ohio

 

"Margaret Stackhouse's speculations on the film [2001: A Space Odyssey] are perhaps the most intelligent that I've read anywhere, and I am, of course, including all the reviews and the articles that have appeared on the film and the many hundreds of letters that I have received. What a first-rate intelligence!"

- Stanley Kubrick, circa late 1960s          

March 6, 1999

          Guiding my nephew Robby over to the kid's section, which was oddly situated next to the horror section at Vince's Videos, I stood back waiting for him to pick out something, knowing he was fond of Pinky and the Brain and Power Rangers. Vince's seemed more active than usual for a Sunday, typically the day everyone returned their tapes. I noticed a gathering of customers at the classics section, and I heard someone say, "Stanley Kubrick died." The words got my attention, "Stanley Kubrick died." 

          My mind drifted back to 1986 all squiggly TV lines/harp sounds style when I worked at the video store to scrape through college, you could do that with part-time job back then. My co-workers were a social melting pot of working-class intellectuals, wannabee filmmakers, and college students like me. Most of all I remembered Lisa. 

          Lisa went to art school and for a time was the only female employee at the store, although she later got a few of her friends hired. There was a power structure. Video stores were a boy’s club, dudes endlessly debating the virtues and vices of American cinema. It wasn't like the 20-something cinephiles of today who proudly compare their Criterion Collections of Ozu and Bergman, Manhunter was considered the pinnacle of cinema in Mid-Eighties Ohio. There were many characters. A few I remember: Monroe made his own little films with Super 8 and blustered on all day about his favorite cult classics like Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia and The Mack. Travis majored in film studies, a sort of self-appointed cultural board of authority. 

          While Monroe and Travis clashed all the time, Lisa often jumped into the fray, pouring cold water on their egotistical rants. I typically stood clear when a fracas between the three of them broke out, but they are lodged in my memory. 

          If Monroe and Travis had anything in common, it was their endless fascination with Kubrick. Travis preferred the earlier New York City guerilla filmmaker fare like Killer's Kiss and The Killing, both progressing to the formalist precision of Paths of Glory and DrStrangelove. Monroe argued A Clockwork Orange was the true masterpiece, a dark and spectral vison of the future influencing all the arts from punk music to comics.

    On that particular day, a customer was renting out The Shining, providing Travis with the opportunity to recommend Kubrick's earlier work. A trigger for Monroe, he butted in with his opinion, "Don't listen to him, The Shining is great. You'll love it, almost as good as A Clockwork Orange."

    As the customer walked out, Travis was pissed at Monroe, "Stop interrupting me in front of customers!”

    Monroe cackled, "With all of your horrible recommendations I cannot remain silent. Last week you recommended Balthazar to a five-year-old child.”

    Travis, always ready to for a sparring match, "The Shining is an overlong exercise for anyone's patience. Nicholson is in self-parody mode, and Shelley Duvall cannot act." 

    Lisa jumped into the fray, "Nothing's more obnoxious than a guy critiquing a female performance. What do you know of acting Travis?"

    Travis in his most condescending tone sounding like a cardiologist proclaiming a diagnosis, "Kubrick only cast her because of that helpless look in her eyes. She was skilled at looking terrified - that's all."

     Fed up, Lisa threw a rhetorical wrench at them, "Besides, Kubrick is the most overrated director of all time anyway."

    They both snickered with wry amusement.

    Lisa continued, "All of his movies are about male obsessions. Women are pretty much absent."

    Travis jumped in, "My point exactly. Shelley Duvall has nothing to do but look terrified in The Shining. That sums up Kubrick's view of women."

    As per usual, the discussion gave Monroe a chance to deliver a rant, "I don't disagree with you Lisa. Most of his movies are fixated on men. Kubrick movies are a rite of passage. The pointlessness of war and bureaucracy in Paths of Glory and Dr. StrangeloveSpartacus and Lolita have their moments, but they're minor. 2001 expanded the possibilities of cinema, A Clockwork Orange made screen violence electric, disturbing, and thought provoking. Barry Lyndon is a beautiful, haunting film. The Shining is a masterpiece of modern horror. We're obsessed with his movies for reasons that are difficult to articulate, but they hit something primal within us."

    With a fierce look in her eyes indicating she was about to strangle Monroe, "You're full of shit. So full of shit."

    Monroe cackled, "You know I'm right."

    Lisa demurred, "Nope. You do know it was a 15-year-old girl who decoded 2001, way before all those male critics jumped in with their own interpretations. Look, his films provide insights into the male psychology as you just went to great lengths to point out. They're all about self-destruction. My takeaway from Kubrick: If the patriarchy isn't shattered like right now, before the year 2000 at least, humanity is doomed."

    Travis droned on about the humanistic messages embedded in Kubrick movies and I tuned out. When Full Metal Jacket came out a year later, I thought it paradoxically confirmed both Lisa and Monroe's points. The film acted as a warped recruiting tool for the Marine Corps, perhaps even more successful than Top Gun in the war propaganda department. 

                            *                    *                    *

    Robby had decided to go with the Power Rangers video. On our way out there was clerk, a dude, naturally, droning on about Kubrick and what a loss it was for cinema. I got the sentiment, but his need to display expertise was grating - and predictable. That’s it, one day people are wondering what your next project will be, the next you shuffle off the mortal coil, and the trajectory of conversations change. Stanley Kubrick was dead. 

 

 

 

 


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