Jrrarglblarg
Unregistered
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2010
- Messages
- 12,673
so, was buzz aldrin the man on hte grassy knoll, or was lee harvey the mysterious "left behind" cameraman who did the tilt-up?
The real achievements of Apollo are a lot more interesting to me, definitely. If you'd actually like to talk about the program, rather than waving your hands about meaningless "clues" you read into movie snippets, I'll be happy to oblige.Meanwhile, try the moon stuff. It is as interesting as the JFK assassination.
.....waving your hands about meaningless "clues" you read into movie snippets....
Kubrick takes the scene about 80 times until he was satisfied.
Wendy took 16 pages out of the box and and it needs only 45 seconds in the movie. His production manager wanted to copy the pages, but Kubrick let all the 300 pages type by students. I think he typed minimum 4 pages by himself.
So in this 45 seconds showing the 16 pages Kubrick burried : Apollo 12
I cannot help you more, otherwise a child can find it out.
I make you an offer :
If you find it, I move. This must be no problem for you, because you know nearly everything.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeOevu4zC5o
it begins at 1:03
regards Hans
So in this 54 seconds showing the 16 pages Kubrick burried : Apollo 12
Jack Ruby was on that crappy b&w camera used on Apollo 11 to shoot Neil's first steps on the moon. Or maybe it was Sirhan Sirhan, I always get those two mixed up.so, was buzz aldrin the man on hte grassy knoll, or was lee harvey the mysterious "left behind" cameraman who did the tilt-up?
Kubrick takes the scene about 80 times until he was satisfied.
Wendy took 16 pages out of the box and and it needs only 54 seconds in the movie.
So in this 54 seconds showing the 16 pages Kubrick burried : Apollo 12
I cannot help you more, otherwise a child can find it out.
I make you an offer :
If you find it, I move. This must be no problem for you, because you know nearly everything.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeOevu4zC5o
it begins at 1:03 and finished at 1:57
regards Hans
Perhaps you missed the part where I said I wasn't interested in handwaving about "clues" (of dubious quality) that mean nothing to anyone but you. Responding with more handwaving won't help you any.Kubrick takes the scene about 80 times until he was satisfied... I cannot help you more, otherwise a child can find it out.
Ham-fisted attempt at sarcasm noted.I make you an offer :h
If you find it, I move. This must be no problem for you, because you know nearly everything.
Kubrick takes the scene about 80 times until he was satisfied.
Wendy took 16 pages out of the box and and it needs only 54 seconds in the movie. His production manager wanted to copy the pages, but Kubrick let all the 300 pages type by students. I think he typed minimum 4 pages by himself.
So in this 54 seconds showing the 16 pages Kubrick burried : Apollo 12
I cannot help you more, otherwise a child can find it out.
I make you an offer :
If you find it, I move. This must be no problem for you, because you know nearly everything.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeOevu4zC5o
it begins at 1:03 and finished at 1:57
regards Hans
Honestly, why would you make this is major point of your argument when it's widely know he did this in almost every film he ever made. That's why almost no one (or is it no one) has ever appeared in a Kubrick film more than once.So, for example, in Eyes Wide Shut, there was a totally inconsequential scene where Sydney Pollack had to get up from his chair, walk and open a door. That's all. There was no dialogue. Kubrick forced the actor to perform the same scene, walking from chair to door, over and over and over and over, for two straight days.
Kubrick takes the scene about 80 times until he was satisfied.
Wendy took 16 pages out of the box and and it needs only 54 seconds in the movie. His production manager wanted to copy the pages, but Kubrick let all the 300 pages type by students.
I think he typed minimum 4 pages by himself.
I cannot help you more, otherwise a child can find it out.
I make you an offer :
If you find it, I move. This must be no problem for you...
...because you know nearly everything.
Yes, that's typical of Kubrick's style of filmmaking.....
My problem is my poor English, I try without Google.
Kubrick must have known this, because he used it like a master.
When Wendy starts
<speculative nonsense snipped>
Now she took the first page away and the message begins.
So try by youself, If you can't see it, I will post screenshots if requested.
So you're saying that a well-known highly symbolist film director used subtle symbology in his films. No mystery there.You certainly heard about the "Sublingual messages" in movies. These are messages, which you get no notice about when you "read" them, but your subconspicious still get notice about and it "runs around" in your brain.
Kubrick must have known this, because he used it like a master.
Thanks to god, that you american guys are standing with both feet on the ground.
Hans![]()
So you're saying that a well-known highly symbolist film director used subtle symbology in his films. No mystery there.
What you have not done is connect these "symbols" you purport to have found with actual factual textual material evidence of something. Really, you're just making up your own language for a set of symbols created by another.
He was a master, and you have it very wrong.
Also, you are following a rabbit down a hole while ignoring the forest of facts around you. The Apollo program generated an enormous volume of data and material evidence which is neither contradicted or discredited in the least by your pseudosemiotic pseudoananalysis of small pieces of only one film in Kubrick's long career.
From my analysis, Kubrick's cinematic interpretation of King's book is about the horrors of long term isolation of humans from others, such as during a long space flight. The book is about an off-season caretaker of a hotel, and he took that story and filmed it, but Kubrick's visuals and symbols clearly put the story into space. Duvall, probably the strangest looking successful mainstream actress in American cinema, is presented as a defacto non-human (alien), Nicholson is an archetypical American Male and their son is the mutant/crossbreed offspring. The characters in Kubrick's film are not overwintering in a hotel but traveling to a distant star. Try watching the film again with that in mind (assuming you've actually watched the film once as opposed to simply reading webcrap and watching youchump videos).
Your analysis of the film is naive and simplistic, and takes individual shots and scenes out of the larger context of the film and his total body of production at large. A thoroughly educated view of Kubrick's body of work presents a much deeper and much more disturbing view of humanity, with layer upon layer of subtle symbolism that requires multiple watchings in order to even document without comprehension; fully comprehending his work requires viewing the entire body (in any order, although in the order of "time-the-story-took-place" seems best to me) as a whole and viewing it as a journey of the human soul from Animal to God. Taking an individual scene out of context of the originating film and out of his entire body of work is like trying to analyze a single sentence of the Bible while ignoring the entire history, culture and religious progression of the middle east from paleolithic times on.
The Shining is a horror film about supernatural events at the Overlook Hotel, no symbolism, or analysis, required.