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In Reply to: Stanley Kubrick reprospective in Frankfurt on the Main... posted by patricku on June 15, 2004 at 10:15:13:
Simply, his IQ was relatively high. I have read that persons with IQs more than 20 points above others will not be understood those with lower intelligence.Ok, that may be a copout, and a also a failure for him to not realize that fact. My take is that is that it will take many years before the general population realizes the excellences of many of his films.
Follow Ups:
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Just the resulf of your own free will - no one forced you to keep your handle unregistered.
NT
all of Mr. Chaplin's works are very accessible. You are confusing intelligence with elitism.I would also think that most great directors are of above average intelligence. Bergman, Fellini(sp?), Kurosawa, Capra, Stevens, Nicholas Ray, John Boorman, and (name your favorite here) are just a few examples. They would need be in order to handle both the cinema aspects as well as the storytelling.
IMHO, Kubrick did not make a single wholly successful film after "Clockwork Orange." He substituted length and setting for good storytelling and lost much of his audience. It's a shame that his career ended with "Eyes Wide Shut." He started out so brilliantly and ended up as Zalman King with a bigger budget.
I for one consider "Barry Lyndon', "The Shining" "Full Metal Jacket",
and, yes, "Eyes Wide Shut" to be unqualified successes. All quirky and Kubreckian, yes, but all genius level films.
"Full Metal Jacket" is a near-classic, as is "The Shining." And I would call them excellent but certainly not "unqualified successes." I do find "Barry Lyndon" beautiful to look at but deadingly dull. I find "Eyes Wide Shut" to be horribly pretentious and thoroughly disengaging.A film about an unpleasant subject can be thrilling, as Kubrick himself proved with his spendid "A Clockwork Orange" and "Paths of Glory."
Still, since he made so few films, of which nearly half I consider classic, he still goes down in my book as one of the all-time best directors.
other genuises, has dynamic, divergent creative intelligence that can't be objectively measured sufficiently by pencil-paper tests. Chris Harding of Australia, founder of
International Society for Philosophical Enquiry devised tests to measure 'divergent thinking', but they didn't fare well as far as
objective measurements. Personality-temperment-motivation factors are
important as well as intellect too. - AH.
.
That would get Stanleys mother boo hoo hooing and wringing her melanky rookers...
What didst thou in thy mind have?
Yarblockos droogy, off to the Corova for a nightcap
'Appy Polly lodges
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