sk vs sk

[00:00:00] Ladies and gentlemen, what is going on? It's your buddy Kyle

here in his vocal booth. Once again, on my favorite microphone again.

And I am going to talk about one of my all time favorites. One of my

favorite stories. This is one of the reasons [00:00:30] I love. I'm doing a

movie podcast and I'm, I'm enjoying, you know, the wars are, are still

there and they take time and I'm enjoying just going solo and doing what

I kind of refer to as essays.

[00:00:43] You know, I'm, I'll tell you my opinions on movies, but there's

plenty of movie review podcasts out there. And I'm not really interested

in like being a movie review guy. You know, I want to, I want to analyze

these movies. If you don't know, the reason I got into movies, [00:01:00]

fun story for you, I always enjoyed them.

[00:01:03] And uh, you know, RoboCop is my lifelong favorite movie.

And that's a movie that over time has just aged so well for me because

podcasts, you know, you, when you're younger, you come to it for the

action and then you get older and you realize there's so much

philosophical nuance. And that's what I'm really interested in movies is

the themes and the analysis and how it relates to modernity and all

these different things, you know, and, and the [00:01:30] reason I, I

ended up connecting these two things is I, I was not a good student.

[00:01:33] I grew up in a very turbulent home, a very bad parental

situation that I won't get into here, but I just wasn't a good student. The

only way I really survived, I mean, being frank, the only way I, Stopped

from killing myself, which was my full ambition was playing guitar five

hours a day. And then I, you know, I got into movies, but I liked him at a

surface level, but I knew there was something about them that was

drawing me to them.

[00:01:56] And I had a teacher named Grimsley Graham. He was a

philosophy teacher. [00:02:00] The first, he knew what he was doing.

And I had him around the time the matrix had just come out and the

matrix was just exploding. You know, it was, it was, If you weren't around

then, or weren't paying attention, it was just a cultural event.

[00:02:11] You know, the bullet time, uh, the cool factor, you know, the

conspiracies, just all the things that are in that movie. It just was such a

cultural phenomenon. And he knew what he was doing, and he got me

into philosophy by the very first book we read was The Matrix and

Philosophy. [00:02:30] By an author I can't recall, but it, it talked about all

the philosophies in the movie.

[00:02:36] And I started realizing, like, I think this is why I like movies.

You know, they, they pull me in, and there's, there's nuance, there's, you

know, there's philosophy, there's psychology, it's both audible, it's visual,

it's in some taste, in some senses, like when you watch a horror movie,

you can almost taste what's going on.

[00:02:54] You can only, like, when you see a really bloody scene, you

get that nausea, or that, that, oh, what's going on [00:03:00] here, you

can feel it in your bones. It's such a multi faceted event, but that

philosophy and that meaning, and I love, I love when there's adaptations

of material. Kind of like what we're going to talk about today.

[00:03:11] Anyway, and that's why I talk about old movies. The biggest

question I usually get is, why don't you cover a lot of newer movies?

And, and I'm not prone to it. I mean, we did the newest Batman. Like,

we'll get to newer movies, but there's just not as many stories about new

movies today. I mean, you will occasionally find interesting and fun

stories.

[00:03:29] About [00:03:30] today's Hollywood, but man, there was a

time period for so long where the greatest films faced just adversity and

constraints. Jaws, The Shark, never worked. The Shark is barely in the

movie because it didn't work. It probably would have been a different

movie if it worked. They would have put it in the movie more.

[00:03:47] Godfather. They didn't want Al Pacino. You know, they didn't

want Marlon Brando. They wanted Coppola to be a yes man, a

pushover. They didn't want him to be this new avant garde guy who was

gonna completely change the film [00:04:00] industry. And Chase's

creative and artistic endeavors to the fullest extent. If you want to find

out more about that, watch the Hearts of Darkness documentary.

[00:04:08] Not the book, the Joseph Conrad book that Apocalypse Now

is based on, but the documentary is called Hearts of Darkness. It follows

Francis Ford Coppola, and it follows the making of that film, and how he

almost pushed himself to the brink of insanity. Just to see his own artistic

vision realized, you know, and some of the greatest movies, and this is a

commonality we discovered on the podcast is that some of the greatest

[00:04:30] films of all time almost didn't get made.

[00:04:33] They almost didn't get the right actor. Um, they faced

disasters. There's budget constraints, ownership changes, director

changes, actor changes. There's just so much, and I'm not saying that

doesn't happen today, but the big hitter movies have such big budgets

today, and CGI is so prevalent, they can doctor up and cover up for so

many things now.

[00:04:52] You know, before the age of CGI, and even in the early days

of CGI, you know, they really had to figure out how to make practical

[00:05:00] effects. One of my favorite things I discovered was during the

Indiana Jones podcast that we did, when we, when we did uh, versus

National Treasure. Treasure just the the youth scene at the end when

they open the when they open the the arc The the stuff they went

through with the speeding up of time and using Gelatins and using paint

and using specific types of paint to melt just the incredible things they

went through And and the creativity that had to be utilized In a time

where they couldn't just doctor it up with [00:05:30] CGI.

[00:05:30] So that's why I love Hollywood stories. Now, let's just get right

to it. This is titled, uh, Revisiting Stanley Kubrick versus Stephen King.

And you may have seen that and seen what the hell is he talking about?

They didn't fight. I wish they did. They didn't get their gloves on. So if

you, if you're not aware, I'm just gonna dive in.

[00:05:47] I'm just gonna rehash, kinda react, but also just talk about one

of my favorite all time stories in filmmaking. The Shining is one of

Stephen King's most beloved books. It's not one of my favorite books.

[00:06:00] I have a lot of Stephen King books I like. The Shining is

actually not one of them, surprisingly. The Stand, It, those are probably

my favorite Stephen King novels.

[00:06:08] Which, uh, both led to very interesting adaptations, by the

way. And Stephen King, although he was exhausted, I think he did have

a sense of pride. In the fact that he was Stephen King who wrote The

Shining. It's his most autobiographical work. Torrance, Jack Torrance is

Stephen King in a lot of ways. A writer.

[00:06:27] Although in the book, in the movie, an aspiring [00:06:30]

writer, um, who faces addiction, and addiction messes with his life, it

ruins his relationships. And Stephen King was that guy. He struggled

with addiction so mightily that he doesn't remember writing Cujo. Um, he

was so coked up and drunk, he wrote it in like one or two nights, I think.

[00:06:48] I've heard a lot. I've heard one night, I've heard a few. But

anyway, he was on a coke alcohol fiasco. Wrote Cujo, didn't remember,

got a call from the publisher or a fax or something like, Hey, we love it.

Here's our edits. We love Cujo. And he's like, [00:07:00] Cujo? He's like,

what are you talking about? If I recall, Cujo is another word for coke.

[00:07:05] I can't remember, but I feel like Cujo was a nickname for

cocaine as a street drug back in the day. But addiction was a big part of

Stephen King's life. And Jack Torrance was this character, you know,

toiling with art. Toiling with relationships and how addiction interweaves

with those things. So Q, Stanley Kubrick, prize director, obsessive and

compulsive, and I don't say that negative, in a negative way, I have been

diagnosed with [00:07:30] obsessive compulsive disorder, but not just

like obsessive compulsive, but obsessive over details, it's hard to tell

sometimes, and as someone who has it myself, it's hard to tell where the

art begins and the compulsion ends, but Kubrick was, was meticulous,

and He really showed that the most on The Shining.

[00:07:47] He was always meticulous, especially if you look at the

framework on space, on Space Odyssey. You can see the meticulous

framework and the use of images and repetitive images and

subconscious images. This guy, he [00:08:00] was dedicated to the

details and, uh, but he was in a weird place. Both he and King share a

unique relationship with The Shining.

[00:08:07] In some ways, it's autobiographical for both of them. Um, for

King, it was the addiction, but for, for Kubrick. He, it was two things. He

had an obsession with doing horror, and he just never found a story that

really checked the boxes for him. But also, he himself, and this is just

based on my memory and reading, you know, he had toiled with some

block, writer's block himself, and creative block.[00:08:30]

[00:08:30] And he found himself domesticated, as it was referred to, and

at home with a wife, and living an ordinary life, and this creative block

drove him insane. And so, the way that Shelley Duvall is treated in the

film, if you didn't know, verbally abused her, forced her to do hundreds of

takes, I don't know if you know this, but the Shining, there's several

scenes where Kubrick just drove the actors into the ground doing

hundreds of takes, in fact, I don't know if this holds up today, but For a

long time, it held the Guinness World Record for the most takes.

[00:08:59] [00:09:00] It was the scene between Dick Halloran and Danny

when they meet in The Overlook for the first time. I think it was 149

takes, maybe more. Um, I'll have to look that up, but anywhere between

140 and like 200 takes. Shelley Duvall was not a world class actress.

She had done Olive Oil, and she, she'd done a couple of other films.

[00:09:19] It's not that she hadn't acted, she just hadn't been in a Stanley

Kubrick film. You know, a major blockbuster film. Kubrick found it as an

opportunity to kind of exercise those domesticated demons. [00:09:30]

You know, he saw the domesticated woman as a target, and he picked

Shelley Duvall, I think, because he felt that he could control her.

[00:09:36] And, uh, a lot of people have, have confirmed that there was

this level of verbal abuse, but also you see how it's affected her. She's,

she's not in a good place today. But, um, so for King and Kubrick, This

story was kind of the intersect of a couple of demons. So anyway,

Kubrick adopts his work, adopts Stephen King, and Stephen, uh, and he

says, Stephen King is really good with [00:10:00] plots, but not really as

impressed with the in between details.

[00:10:03] And this is an uncommon, Peter Benchley with Jaws did the

same thing, uh, in the agreement. King got first rights to write the

screenplay. That doesn't mean that the director has to use it, or even

read it. At least Steven Spielberg had the niceties to at least read, you

know, Benchley's work. His problem with Benchley's work is that the

draft was a lot like the book, and it had everything he didn't like in the

book.

[00:10:26] Love the first act, love the third act. The middle act was not,

[00:10:30] they didn't like it. It wasn't adventure. There was this mafia

subplot, there was an affair between characters that Spielberg thought

could be really lovable, you know, Hooper and Brody's wife in the book,

or they have an affair, they're not lovable, there's a lot of like depressing

themes, and Spielberg was like, this is an adventure movie, this is a

summer blockbuster, baby, and so, it's not uncommon, and King got the

same opportunity on The Shining, except Kubrick in his, in his, uh, in his

usual style didn't even read it, you know, you read in some [00:11:00]

places, he just threw it directly in the trash, you And, uh, I don't know

where the quote came from or the interview, but Kubrick was then

interviewed to say we're gonna bring in a serious American author

named Diane Johnson to co write this with me.

[00:11:14] So, right off the bat, he's taking shots at King. He's, he views

him as a lesser creative, he views him as a lesser intellectual, and for

Kubrick, this was a war on King in a lot of ways. I don't know if it was

intentional, but there was something about King [00:11:30] that Kubrick

just did not like, and he's saying, I'm bringing on a A real author, a real

serious American author.

[00:11:37] And I haven't read Diane Johnson, don't know much about

her. But she was the co writer after he threw away King's draft. This

incensed Stephen King. We're talking about a story deeply personal to

him. And a story that he was known for. He was, this was a

breakthrough for him. And he was Stephen King, the guy who wrote The

Shining.

[00:11:55] And, uh, unfortunately that would come back to bite him in the

ass later. Because later, [00:12:00] after the film would come out, he

would become known as Stephen King, the guy that wrote The Shining,

but they didn't mean the book. They meant Stanley Kubrick's version.

Because Stanley Kubrick's version would become such a cultural

phenomenon.

[00:12:13] Here's Johnny, Gimme the Bat, Wendy, Jack Nicholson's

crazy face in the door, Red Rum. All these things that even, like, if you

were, even if you're 20 and listening to this, you know it. If you like

movies, you know Red Rum. You know Here's Johnny. You know The

Maze. You You [00:12:30] know, the, you know, the hotel room with the

woman in it.

[00:12:32] Like you just know it. Even if you haven't seen it, you've seen

it out there on the web. You've seen memes. It just, it was not only the,

one of the biggest movies of the eighties. It's consistently on greatest

films of all time lists. And a lot of that is because Stanley Kubrick

stripped out a lot of the cheese that's in the shining.

[00:12:47] Again, I have a kind of a tumultuous relationship with King. I

don't think there's an author I've read more books up, but an author that I

think less of at the same time, I like King, but given the amount of books

I've read by him, I don't know. Why he's not [00:13:00] my favorite author

because I keep going to the well and I kind of come back disappointed

But there are some works that I absolutely love by him.

[00:13:06] I just find that he has crutches like, you know Telepathy it's

like I don't know what to do here telepathy. We're gonna give the

character. I'm surprised Kujo didn't have telepathy It's like oh man. I

don't know what to do with the dog here Let's give him telepathy. So

Stephen king is absolutely incensed by this Then he finds out they're

casting jack nicholson and he's pissed off about this jack nicholson You

Had already [00:13:30] become such a popular actor, you know, one

flew over the cuckoo's nest, but he, he was known as guy who did crazy.

[00:13:35] Jack Nicholson does crazy. I think Jack Nicholson is more

dynamic than that. And the whole reason I'm doing this podcast is

because we're doing as good as it gets versus silver linings playbook.

And I went on a Jack Nicholson tear because I think he might be my

favorite actor. I went and watched the last detail, the passenger, a

crossing guard, which I don't like that much.

[00:13:54] He's great. And I met Sean Penn. As a director, as the

directorial debut for Sean Penn, not a great film in my opinion. [00:14:00]

But, I'm not here to tell you what to do. But, uh, you know, I didn't need

to re watch The Shining, I watched it twice a year already, as it is. It's, it's

in my top 20, it's probably in my top 10, I love that film, so much.

[00:14:12] And I get this, and this is a complaint you see, I think it's a

near perfect film, but one, one complaint, and I don't really approve of

many complaints of The Shining, but one I can side with is, Jack

Nicholson comes in with a, he's, he's already at a nine, you know. If a

scale of one, if one to ten is like least crazy to most crazy, he's, he's kind

of [00:14:30] like, you know, first scene, he's pissed off at Danny asking

him if they're there yet, and all, and, He's got this kind of sarcastic

demeanor.

[00:14:36] He's already like a humming at an eight on the crazy scale,

you know, whereas in the book, and again, I haven't read the book in a

long time, but if I recall, you know, Jack Torrance, you know, in the book,

his character was in a phase of seeking You know, forgiveness and

seeking a new life after not only in the movie, they reference him hurting

Danny, but in the book, he breaks Danny's arm and beats up a student

in the [00:15:00] book, and for him, writing was a way of getting back

into the good graces of academia.

[00:15:04] If he could just write a book, and that was the whole point of

him writing book again, pulling from memory. So Jack Torrance was kind

of More of a sympathetic character, the way they positioned him. He

was, he kind of started off as someone looking for redemption versus a

guy who comes in crazy and is gonna go out at an 11 out of 10 on the

scale.

[00:15:23] At the same time, even though I understand that critique, Jack

Nicholson puts a performance on here that [00:15:30] is, uh, you don't

get many performances that are both so freaky, Misogynistic, abusive,

scary, and so iconic. I mean, considering what the character represents

and what he does in the movie, I mean, we can't help but take it a little

lighthearted because it's just so embedded in our culture.

[00:15:46] Not just film, but it's embedded in culture. And so, Nicholson

Just cast such a wide shadow here. It's just such an incredible

performance. It's so perfect. And to me, the moment where I'm really

sold on Nicholson is when he [00:16:00] meets Lloyd the first time white

man's burden, Lloyd white man's burden. I don't do a Nicholson

impression, but I try.

[00:16:07] But, just the lines and the way he's interacting with this ghost

bartender, it's just so good. And he breaks the film wide open right there.

That's where I feel like The Shining takes that next step into like, this is a

perfect film. Anyway, so King didn't like that. And then after the movie

came out, King was pissed at the way they treated the character of

Wendy.

[00:16:25] I mean, we, I already mentioned that Kubrick was basically

verbally abusing Shelley Duvall. But in the [00:16:30] book, and, and

King's intention was that she was a strong feminine character. She was

a source of strength. She was a protector. And then Shelley Duvall plays

it up as a, I hate to put it this way, but an unintelligent housewife who

lacks power.

[00:16:42] I mean, Jack Nicholson doesn't, Jack Torrance doesn't lift a

finger in this movie. What, what does he do? He doesn't make a meal.

He throws a tennis ball and writes and kills, and tries to kill people.

That's, that is his forte here. She's doing all the work. I'm just telling you

that Stanley Kubrick really had it out for this.

[00:16:59] This [00:17:00] archetype of the domesticated housewife,

which he had grown to abhor during his, you know, time with some

writer's block. Again, this is research, I'm pulling from memory. I just

turned on the microphone because I'm inspired and want to talk about

one of my favorite stories. So King hated that. And then the film comes

out.

[00:17:15] And he's, he's incensed. He's like, this is not my story. King.

Felt that he had written a better version of this story than what Kubrick

put on. He sued to have his name removed because he didn't want to be

associated with this version. [00:17:30] And basically became hell bent

from there on out. Um, for years he would pine after getting the rights

back for this movie and making it his way.

[00:17:40] You know, even in the movie, it's just crazy, just the pettiness

and, and I've actually in this, in this context, put pettiness in a good way.

Kubrick's genius prods of King embedded in this movie. The biggest one

that comes to my mind is in the, in the beginning of The Shining in the

movie, you know, Jack Torrance is driving a yellow beetle.

[00:17:59] And in [00:18:00] the book, he drives a red beetle. And in the

film, You see, and this is depicted in the, in the novel as well as I

believe, a semi truck when Dick Halloran is scaling back to get to the

mountain or getting back to the hotel through the, through the crazy

snow, the semi truck is turned over and it's on top of a red beetle and

Kubrick did that on purpose.

[00:18:21] That was the one from the book, and that was him saying, I'm

smarter than you, and here's just a little poke at ya. My, my filmmaking

prowess is [00:18:30] greater than your, uh, your authoring. Is what

Kubrick was saying there. And it's such a petty little slap in the face. It's

just, I respect it though. You know, in an age where we just make

memes and, and make shitty comments and react instantly with zero

research, or we go out and research and try to backhand people on the

internet with our last minute research.

[00:18:50] You know, you got to give it to Kubrick there. That's just a

good, that's some good pettiness. You know, and, and what I want to

wrap up with is you, so if this is [00:19:00] a versus, if there is a battle, if

there is a war, a battle of intellectual wills between Stanley Kubrick and

Stephen King, who wins? And in this case, I think it's pretty evident

Kubrick won this war.

[00:19:11] Like I said earlier, this became Stephen King Who wrote The

Shining, but people meant the movie. Before the movie came out, it was

all about Stephen King. Kubrick and Jack Nicholson took this thing to the

next level. It became so iconic, it's such a beloved film, it's so terrifying.

And really, in a lot of ways, it's so simplistic, [00:19:30] and it asks more

questions than answers.

[00:19:32] You know, that's a whole other podcast about, you know, is

Jack Torrance actually, has he been dead the whole time? Or is he, had

he lived in the hotel? And is a reason to picture at the end because he

was always the caretaker? Or is this a different version of an old

caretaker? Is this about Native Americans?

[00:19:47] This is, is this about the space landing? There are thousands

of theories out there about what this movie represents. And the way

Kubrick did it was so subtle. And, and the way the ambiguity works here

is so subtle that it just creates more questions, but not in [00:20:00] like

a, you know, what is this movie even? It brings you back for more and

you rewatch it even though you don't know all the answers and it keeps

you guessing.

[00:20:06] And that legendary, the visuals, the red rum, the blood in the

elevator coming out, it just casts such a wide shadow over the book. And

Stephen King for years said, I'm going to make this as a movie. So in

1997, he did what he has been doing, which is making straight to TV

movies. Cast Steven Weber from Wings as Jack Torrance, a sitcom

which people liked, I didn't love it, I'm a [00:20:30] Seinfeld guy, did not

love Wings, but this is the guy who is gonna play Jack Torrance under

the wide shadow of maybe one of the greatest performances we've seen

in Jack Nicholson in The Shining in 1980.

[00:20:42] And we're going to get Stephen Webber and Stephen King is

going to hire a producer and a director who he can control. He wants to

hire people that are going to see his vision. Yeah, you're the director and

yeah, you're the producer, but this is my book. This is my movie. I want it

done my way and there are things that make it to this.

[00:20:58] Yes, it's straight to TV movie, [00:21:00] but we've seen him

do success. We've had it and we had. Uh, and we had the stand, which

were pretty good. The stand launched Gary Sinise into stardom. You

know, we've seen goodies, even underneath the dome. But there was a

time period, and this is what really makes me angry. I retroactively get

angry at Stephen King because he deliberately cheapens his own work.

[00:21:18] Tommy Knockers, The Langoliers, 20 different children of the

corns, and that, yes, I know, he doesn't have control over the fact that he

has sold the rights to the film and it just keeps getting remade. I know he

doesn't have that control, [00:21:30] but on these straight to TV movies,

like The Langoliers, which is horrific, by the way, just one of the worst

things you've ever seen, it's actually an interesting story, the adaptation

that it's based on, or the story that it's based on, Tommy Knockers, these

things, were awful, and it's partly because he hired these mediocre

producers and directors that kowtowed to his every move and his every

need.

[00:21:49] But he also is, and he did this on the Shining, uh, show, he

was walking around the set, just, just checking everything, checking the

boxes, making sure it meets his expectations, and the stuff [00:22:00]

that made it to the final product is unforgivable. One of the smartest

things Kubrick did was strip out these, these bush animals, you know,

these hedge maze animals that come to life and try to attack.

[00:22:09] You know, in the book, yeah, I didn't like in the book, but I

could see how that could be a little scary. But the way it looks with 1997

cgi on a tv budget horrible. It's cheese It is pure cheese and we got this

comedic sitcom actor trying to pretend to be jack nicholson It's just bad

and he did this he did this with several of his works and it just You know,

I [00:22:30] talked about Coppola earlier.

[00:22:31] You think Coppola wants, uh, wants to do a, uh, straight to TV

version of any of his films? Do you think I know he didn't write the

novels, but do you think that's something he's interested Do you think

he's interested in cheapening his vision, just to prove a point? The

closing sentiment here for me is that King had this chip on a soldier's

shoulder against Kubrick for so long, cheapened his own work just to get

control and try to prove that he's the smarter guy.

[00:22:54] And he's doing it against the backdrop of one of the most

legendary, iconic roles of [00:23:00] Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance.

With some of the most vivid, memorable imagery. Some of the most

horrifying, horror film, psychological stuff we've ever seen in a movie.

And King is casting Steven Weber. Might as well have cast Jerry

Seinfeld.

[00:23:12] Jerry Seinfeld would have been an upgrade at Jack Torrance

here, by the way, if you haven't seen this god awful rendition. And, uh,

that's kind of just the details I'm pulling from memory. I just wanted to

talk about this story in case you hadn't heard it, and if you had, I just

wanted to talk about it.

[00:23:26] It's just so fun. But, uh, I can't wait to cover The Shining

[00:23:30] itself. I, uh, I have a, just a love for that film. Just a love for

that film. I, I, if you told me I could take a break and just watch it right

now, I would. So, anyway, that's the story. If you didn't know it, I hope

you enjoyed that. And I'd love to hear what you think.

[00:23:43] You know, what do you think about artisans? Who maybe

cheap their own cheap in their own work for control or for profit or

whatever is motivating them Is is that is does that lose you as much as it

loses me or am I just a tight ass who? Who's overly artistic and has a

bent towards creativity [00:24:00] versus profits because that's who I am

admittedly.

[00:24:02] That's who I am But anyway, thank you for hanging out with

me in my vocal booth So thankful for your ears and I hope you have the

best of days. Give me the bat. Give me the bat wendy Give me the bat