Sean Azze Posted July 19, 2005 Share Posted July 19, 2005 Kubrick - arguably the most meticulous director in cinema history. The shadow of the helicopter in the opening of The Shining - one of the most obvious goofs in a film. Anybody know any lore behind this "mistake". Did Kubrick, the man who would shoot 50 takes of a scene, watch the dailies, notice the ashtray in the background had one cigarette butt in it when two would work better, and reshoot the thing another 50 takes, intend for this shadow to be visible for some reason? Any thoughts? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member David Mullen ASC Posted July 19, 2005 Premium Member Share Posted July 19, 2005 He didn't shoot those helicopter shots -- MacGillivray-Freeman did. No doubt he told them to use some really wide-angle lenses, so framing out the helicopter blades and shadow on the ground was not always possible. They probably shot miles of footage and Kubrick picked the best out of the bunch, and not having digital efx tools, he couldn't really erase mistakes in the footage. Besides, most of the blades are out of the theatrical 1.85 area. It's only in the 4:3 TV versions that you really see them. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jason Maeda Posted July 19, 2005 Share Posted July 19, 2005 and so beautiful... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Josh Bass Posted July 19, 2005 Share Posted July 19, 2005 Wait wait wait. . . I thought 4:3 showed LESS than 1:85, not more. I was under the impression 4:3 was a result of "zooming in" and recomposing each shot, if the work in question was initially released widescreen, that is. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest robix Posted July 19, 2005 Share Posted July 19, 2005 Wait wait wait. . . I thought 4:3 showed LESS than 1:85, not more. I was under the impression 4:3 was a result of "zooming in" and recomposing each shot, if the work in question was initially released widescreen, that is. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> It was filmed in 4:3 and was intended to show in theaters with top and bottom matted out. TV versions often do not matte the top and bottom so they don't have to pan&scan. Of course the compositions suffer from this, but they would suffer by zooming as well. It's quite a task to compose in 1:85 AND also make it acceptable in unmatted 1:33. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Adam Frisch FSF Posted July 19, 2005 Premium Member Share Posted July 19, 2005 BTW, you will fin the exact same heli shot at the end of the director's cut of Balde Runner, too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member David Mullen ASC Posted July 20, 2005 Premium Member Share Posted July 20, 2005 The 1.85 projection format is achieved by masking the top & bottom of the 1.37 Academy format. Most 1.85 movies are shot "open-matted" exposing a 4x3 negative; they are just COMPOSED for cropping to 1.85. Kubrick preferred that his 4x3 TV transfers be unmatted, unless the original photography was matted (Clockwork Orange & Barry Lyndon, which have a mild camera matte) or naturally widescreen (2001). He died before 16x9 TV become more common, so we have no idea if he would have preferred HD versions to be 16x9 or 4x3. One reason he liked the 4x3 TV versions was that it reminded him of 1.37 Academy, his favorite format. But the movie was not shot to be shown this way other than protecting (most of the time) the full frame. You can see in this 4x3 DVD frame from "Full Metal Jacket" that the movie was obviously composed for cropping to widescreen for projection. Here it it cropped by me to 1.85: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Christian Appelt Posted July 29, 2005 Share Posted July 29, 2005 (edited) More on SHINING helicopter shadows: helicopter shadow discussion Perfection is impossible to achieve. The only question is how close you decide to look at details. Twentytwo years after I first saw 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, I attended a recent 70mm screening, and for the first time I noticed that for a split second one of the "apes" in the first sequence hits the large front projection screen, causing a slight shake in part of the background image for a split second. This is a long shot, and the disturbance is minimal, but there it is. Even a perfectionist like Kubrick could not spend another two or three years to watch every shot for the slightest problem, and it took me decades of watching that film to notice it. You don't need to have it perfect, just make it damn good! :) Edited July 29, 2005 by Christian Appelt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
keidrych wasley Posted July 29, 2005 Share Posted July 29, 2005 Well, at the end of 2001 some chess pieces are clearly in the wrong position which Kubrick, being an avid chess player and meticulous lover of detail would have been unlikely to have left by mistake. In the Shining helicopter shot it would only have meant cutting the negative by half a second or so if that, which is nothing in the context of how long the shot is. Added to the perfect compositions that Kubrick loves it seems highly unlikely that this was an error. Mistakes always seem to leave some essence of the real human film-maker behind them, could this be why they are left in? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Annie Wengenroth Posted July 30, 2005 Share Posted July 30, 2005 If you really wanna be nit-picky there are some continuity issues in "The Shining" where Danny is talking to Dick and in some shots, he has alternating amounts of ice cream on his upper lip which don't really match up (one shot it's there, the next it's gone, then partially there again, etc.). Oddly enough, I was the one sitting there happily mesmerized by one of my favorite films and my dad was the one to notice it first. So of course I pointed at him and yelled "YOU RUINED THE SHINING!" and stomped out of the room. :P I really enjoy that film but I wish they'd used the concept of the moving hedge animals from the book...it could've been pretty cool. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Christian Appelt Posted July 31, 2005 Share Posted July 31, 2005 Seems hard to do with traditional special/visual effects. IIRC the hedge animals move around very fast in the book, maybe Kubrick was afraid that it might look stupid. There's a great article about the process of turning the King book into the SHINING screenplay, explaining the changes and addition, in this book: Kubrick on View Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mark leuchter Posted September 2, 2005 Share Posted September 2, 2005 I'm glad Kubrick decided to make it a hedge maze instead of animals. Kubrick's film is intensely psychological and he did research intro Freud, Bettleheim, and others psychoanalytical theorists before making the film. The hedge maze becomes a metaphor for the mind, and Danny's ability to escape it signals his move into the next stage of psychological development (whereas Jack is trapped in the maze of his own relapse). Mark Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matt Pacini Posted September 9, 2005 Share Posted September 9, 2005 Surprise, surprise, Kubrick was not a god. I think people forget, the boss is the producer, not the director. I would imagine the conversation went something like this: Producer: "No, we are NOT going to reshoot the scene just because you can see the blades! If you want to reshoot, then YOU pay for it!. We already spent a shitload of cash reshooting the opening scene, because you didn't like the look of the cavemen kids, so bite me." Kubrick: "Uh, OK, maybe nobody will notice." MP Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Roman Posted September 10, 2005 Share Posted September 10, 2005 I think people forget, the boss is the producer, not the director.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Hm, hm... I wouldn't be so sure, at least not when Kubrick was the director... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vivian Zetetick Posted October 27, 2005 Share Posted October 27, 2005 The DVD edition of Adrian Lyne's film "9 & 1/2 Weeks" has both the "widescreen" and "full screen" versions of the film. However, unlike a pan & scan, the full-screen version is actually the widescreen version with the 1.85:1 theatrical mask lifted away. As in the DVD release of "The Shining", the home audience sees more than the theatrical audience if they view the film full-screen. As has probably been covered here before, the "Super 35" format allows some filmmakers the freedom to abstract a different version of the film for both 4:3 and 16:9 presentation, as this film frame demonstrates: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mitch Gross Posted October 29, 2005 Share Posted October 29, 2005 My favorite change from the book to the movie was the room number that Jack visits. I believe in the book it is room 217 but the movie has it as 237. Kubrick had some mental game going for years with the numbers one and two, first evidenced in the very title of 2001: A Space Odyssey. 237 adds up to 12. At the end of the film the photos on the wall are arranged in groups of 21. Danny wears a jersey with the number 42 (21x2) on it, Danny and Wendy are seen watching on TV the movie Summer of 42, the gold corridor wall has 21 pictures, the radio call sign for the Overlook is KDK 12, and the two screen titles in Part Three are 8am and 4pm (adds up to 12). And in 2001, HAL's birthday is January 12, 1992, which gets both the day of the month and if you add up the digits in the year (1+9+9+2) you get twice the numerical fun. Don't look at me: Someone had to smoke a lot of pot or drop a lot of acid to catch all this nonsense. Kubrick claimed he changed the room number for "legal reasons," whatever the hell that means. Now isn't that more fun than finding technical errors? And I have no friggin' clue as to the meaning of it all other than some game Kubrick liked to play. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Welle Posted October 29, 2005 Share Posted October 29, 2005 And I have no friggin' clue as to the meaning of it all other than some game Kubrick liked to play. I thought that this was a very profound essay on "The Shining" that gave me a better understading of its meanings. Basically, I understood it to be an indictment of a racist and hypocritical white society that lives off the murder of less powerful peoples. Essentially Social Darwinism. Essentially the movie was predicting everything George W. Bush and the Republican party have done so far. And confirmed everything Peter Greenaway was showing in "The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover." Here is the link: http://p066.ezboard.com/ftheshiningcommuni...picID=375.topic Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Zimmerman Posted October 29, 2005 Share Posted October 29, 2005 I saw The Shining projected as a 35mm print matted 1:85 in college and it was perfectly composed, no helicopter blades, no unneeded extra headroom. I swear some of the shots one the current dvd are zoomed in. I remember when Jack was looking across the minature of the hedge maze, looking straight at the camera the sides fit snuggly within the sides of the frame, the bottom was just above the lower matte, Jacks head was just within the upper matte. On the dvd the frame cuts into the sides of the maze minature. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rolfe Klement Posted October 29, 2005 Share Posted October 29, 2005 have you seen the work PS260 - are doing on the Shining New version of the Shining :) thanks Rolfe Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Stephen Williams Posted October 29, 2005 Premium Member Share Posted October 29, 2005 have you seen the work PS260 - are doing on the Shining New version of the Shining :) thanks Rolfe Hi, Thats very funny! Stephen Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Leo Anthony Vale Posted October 29, 2005 Share Posted October 29, 2005 Perfection is impossible to achieve. The only question is how close you decide to look at details. Twentytwo years after I first saw 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, I attended a recent 70mm screening, and for the first time I noticed that for a split second one of the "apes" in the first sequence hits the large front projection screen, causing a slight shake in part of the background image for a split second.This is a long shot, and the disturbance is minimal, but there it is. Even a perfectionist like Kubrick could not spend another two or three years to watch every shot for the slightest problem, and it took me decades of watching that film to notice it. ---Also in '2001' during the TMA-1 sequence: After the long shot of the astronauts walking down the ramp into the excavtion, there's a handheld medium close up following the astronauts walking toward the slab. Toward the end of the shot, Kubrick operating the handheld camera can be seen reflectled in the faceplate of one of the astronaut's helmet. Can't recall howmany times I'd seen the movie before noticing this. this was in a theater. ---LV Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Dan Goulder Posted November 2, 2005 Premium Member Share Posted November 2, 2005 I thought that this was a very profound essay on "The Shining" that gave me a better understading of its meanings. Basically, I understood it to be an indictment of a racist and hypocritical white society that lives off the murder of less powerful peoples. Essentially Social Darwinism. Essentially the movie was predicting everything George W. Bush and the Republican party have done so far. Yeah, they've managed to get the Overlook Hotel closed due to exorbitant heating bills, put a madman in charge, and got us lost in a foreign policy maze without an exit strategy. "Heeeere's Georgie!" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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