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(GEN) Stanley Kubrick, at a Distance, Lloyd Rose | Washington Post June 28, 1987

washingtonpost.com: Kubrick 1987 Interview


        Stanley Kubrick, at a Distance

            By Lloyd Rose
            Washington Post Staff Writer
            Sunday, June 28, 1987
               

      PINEWOOD GREEN, ENGLAND – The board room at Pinewood Studios is
      disturbingly baroque. The ceiling sags with chandeliers. Gilt-edged
      paneling dresses every inch of wall. At one end a cold-eyed movie mogul,
      the late J. Arthur Rank, grins from his painted portrait. It hangs above a
      sideboard bearing an electric burner. "IMPORTANT! COFFEE MUST NOT BOIL"
      reads a label on the machine, atop of which two pots contain smoking black
      sludge. At the other end of the room, far, far away, a filigreed mirror.
      The chasm between is filled by a table and 20 padded chairs. In front of
      each, a sea-green blotter. Natural light, diffused through curtains,
      washes in from a bank of windows.
      Time passes slowly here, if at all. Portentous pops from the burner
      occasionally break the silence. Thus brewing anarchy threatens stolid
      formalism. It could be a scene out of a Stanley Kubrick film.
      At length the director of "Full Metal Jacket," an elegant vision of chaos
      during the Vietnam war, shambles in through a set of double doors, which
      spring back and forth on their hinges until they reach a point of
      equilibrium. He plops a satchel on the table and takes the chairman's
      seat. He wears an ocher corduroy jacket – unabashedly shabby, with a dark
      blue stain at the chest – khakis that ride toward his calves, and jogging
      shoes worn to a fare-thee-well (though not, it would seem, by jogging).
      Black hair sprouts from a balding head. The grayish beard is like jungle
      growth. The eyes, gazing through wire rims, look slightly surprised.
      "Has it been seven years?" he asks with the hint of a smile. His last
      movie, "The Shining," came out in 1980. "I never remember the years ... I
      don't remember dates. I usually have trouble remembering how old my
      children are. I know that one's about 28. But I'm not sure. Is she 28?
      27?"
      For Kubrick, who will turn 59 next month, time is infinitely malleable,
      though he periodically consults a digital watch. One of his avowed
      artistic goals is to explode the narrative structure of movies. He has
      also managed to explode the narrative structure of life. At one point in a
      five-hour conversation, he seems to remember that World War II ended 20
      years ago. At another point he mistakenly refers to Richard Nixon as
      president during the Tet offensive in the early months of 1968, the
      setting of his new film.
      "Was it Johnson?" he asks ingenuously.
      The release of a Stanley Kubrick movie is always an event.
      In his long absences and astonishing reappearances – he has made 12 movies
      since 1953 – he evokes the dark monolith in "2001: A Space Odyssey," his
      classic about the ascent of man from apehood to the cosmos. It's "as if
      Stanley K. were the black slab itself," critic David Denby wrote in the
      current Premiere magazine, "a force of supernatural intelligence,
      appearing at great intervals amid high-pitched shrieks, who gives the
      world a violent kick up the next rung of the evolutionary ladder."
      "Full Metal Jacket" – based on former Marine combat correspondent Gustav
      Hasford's 1979 novel "The Short-Timers" and filmed, audaciously, entirely
      in England – will probably provoke its share of shrieks.
      "I know there's going to be a lot of outraged and offended responses to
      this movie," says Michael Herr, author of the acclaimed Vietnam memoir
      "Dispatches," who spent a year working with Kubrick on the screenplay.
      "The political left will call him a fascist, and the right – well, who
      knows? I can't imagine what women are going to think of this film."
      Kubrick, as ever, is reluctant to shed light on his $17 million creation,
      the first of a three-picture deal with Warner Bros. The film, at once
      visceral and cerebral, seems to crystallize his concerns about the
      destruction of human personality (as in "A Clockwork Orange," 1971), the
      machinery of mass delusion ("Dr. Strangelove," 1964), and the undivine
      comedy of war ("Paths of Glory," 1957).
      "We were just going for the way it is," he says, unable to resist a
      chuckle, perhaps thinking about all the film buffs who will be chewing on
      it for years.
      "I certainly don't think the film is anti-American," he expands. "I think
      it tries to give a sense of the war and the people, and how it affected
      them. I think with any work of art, if I can call it that, that stays
      around the truth and is effective, it's very hard to write a nice capsule
      explanation of what it's about."
      He mentions last year's Vietnam blockbuster, with which "Full Metal
      Jacket" has inevitably been compared. "I liked 'Platoon,' " he says. "It's
      very different. I think 'Platoon' tries to ingratiate itself a little more
      with the audience. But then, I have enough faith in enough of the audience
      to think that they are able to appreciate something which doesn't do that.
      At least you're not bored. I don't know if you go to the movies a lot, but
      that's one of the biggest problems."
      Kubrick submits to interviews so seldom, and then usually under the most
      calibrated of conditions, that he has become the J.D. Salinger of movie
      mythology. "Or worse," he laments, "Howard Hughes."
      "I don't know what you've read about Stanley," says Matthew Modine, who
      plays the new film's central character, a cynical Marine combat
      correspondent nicknamed Private Joker, "but the impression I got was that
      he was this crazy lunatic who was afraid of germs and flies. It's just not
      true."
      "He's not a recluse," says Herr. "He doesn't go to parties but he sees a
      lot of people. He's a very sane guy."
      "He may think," says Hasford, who also worked on the screenplay, "that the
      public enjoys thinking of him as a mad scientist."
      In case one hasn't heard the bizarre stories, Kubrick is happy to repeat
      them, albeit with a few strategic shrugs.
      "I mean," he says, "I'm supposed to wear a football helmet and have a
      chauffeur who's told not to drive more than 30 miles an hour. In fact, I
      have a Porsche 928S, which I drive myself, like anybody else on the
      motorway, at 70 or 80 miles an hour ... I've read I have a huge fence
      around where I live. In fact, I have a car gate which is about that high
      to keep the dogs from running out on the road, where you press a button
      and the gate opens. That's described as 'an electronically operated
      security gate.' I did an interview with a guy once, and he wrote that I
      hire a helicopter to spray my garden because I don't like mosquitoes.
      Well, I mean, there are very few mosquitoes in England."
      And if he indulges a fear of flying, "there are about 50 million other
      people who don't like to fly. But with me, it tends to be attributed to
      some kind of singularly neurotic and generally incomprehensible weakness.
      In fact, I had a pilot's license. I used to fly single-engine aircraft out
      of Teterboro Airport in New Jersey." For a moment he reflects. "I don't
      know why people don't do it. Certain things get to your imagination and
      boom!" He smacks the table. "Who can define where phobias come from?"
      Born in the Bronx, a fact still evident in his speech, at once hard edged
      and homey, he has lived half his life in England, these days on a country
      estate outside London. He hasn't been back to his native land since 1968.
      He keeps up by reading newspapers and watching videotapes (often of old
      football games, his passion along with chess), screening movies in his
      projection room, talking on the phone and sending messages by modem and
      fax. "Stanley," says Herr, "is a great tool-using animal."
      Kubrick's rambling house and converted stables – which he shares with his
      third wife Christiane, pets both canine and feline, and a rotating retinue
      of assistants – are stacked with papers, books and film cans. Kubrick
      himself cuts every foot of his films – he spent 10 months on "Full Metal
      Jacket" – and half a dozen rooms are devoted to high-tech editing gear,
      run by a computer that is never turned off.
      "They say it likes to be on, it likes to be hot," he explains. "So it's
      been on since we started editing, and it's still on. It's a bit like HAL,"
      he adds, referring to the computer that turned homicidal when threatened
      with disconnection in "2001."
      His is an entirely self-contained world, from which he rarely ventures
      forth. Over the years he has marshaled a panoply of reasonable-sounding
      explanations. Traveling to no purpose is "boring," he says, the equivalent
      of "aimless wandering." Then there's the problem of pets. "It's one thing
      to leave your house," he says, "but then suddenly you've got to leave your
      dogs and cats, and there's really no one particularly to take care of them
      properly. So it starts to become inconvenient to leave the place. And I
      have no particular reason to."
      London is also a good place to make movies, with production facilities
      superior to New York's and less expensive than Hollywood's. And, after
      all, it doesn't really matter these days where one hangs one's hat. "If
      you live, say, in New York, you get the images of your neighborhood and
      your friends, but essentially it's all the electronic village stuff and it
      isn't that different now living any place, with cities being decentralized
      and computer modems and TV."
      He fails to cite the most persuasive argument – that this carefully
      composed environment is probably the only one in which his obsessive
      imagination could flourish. The image of Kubrick abroad evokes the hapless
      astronaut in "2001" struggling with a severed life-support system as he
      hurtles through the void.
      The director who explored the horror genre in "The Shining," knockabout
      satire in "Dr. Strangelove," and costume drama in "Barry Lyndon" (1975),
      insists that he never set out to put his stamp on the Vietnam War Movie.
      As always, he says, he just wanted to tell a good story.
      "There are certain things about a war story that lend itself to filming,"
      he says, "but only if the story's good. There's something about every kind
      of story. There's something about a love story with Greta Garbo in it.
      Whether it's a war story, or a love story, or an animal story ... I would
      say it's the story, not the subject."
      On finishing "The Shining," based on the novel by Stephen King, he
      launched a literary reconnaissance mission. "When I don't have a story,"
      he says, "it's like saying a lion walking around in the veld isn't looking
      for a meal. I'm always looking." In 1982 he happened on "The
      Short-Timers," in which young Marines are molded by boot camp and then
      twisted by war – and was immediately enthralled. It took him longer to
      decide that the novel was filmable. The term "full metal jacket," which
      appears nowhere in the book, describes the casing of a bullet.
      "This book," Kubrick says, "was written in a very, very, almost poetically
      spare way. There was tremendous economy of statement, and Hasford left out
      all the 'mandatory' war scenes that are put in to make sure you understand
      the characters and make you wish he would get on with the story ... I
      tried to retain this approach in the film. I think as a result, the film
      moves along at an alarming – hopefully an alarming – pace."
      Beginning in 1983, he steeped himself in Vietnam – countless movies and
      documentaries, Vietnamese newspapers on microfilm from the Library of
      Congress and hundreds of photographs from the era – as he collaborated on
      the screenplay with Herr and Hasford and looked for locations in England.
      He found a British Territorial Army base to serve as the Marine boot camp
      at Parris Island, S.C., where the movie's searing opening sequences
      unfold. For Da Nang, Phu Bai and the Imperial City of Hue, which was
      devastated by the Tet fighting, he found an abandoned gas works on the
      Thames River at Beckton, already scheduled for demolition.
      The architecture on the isolated site, about a mile square, closely
      resembled certain neighborhoods in Hue, circa 1968. It was "all in this
      industrial functionalism style of the 1930s, with the square modular
      concrete components and big square doors and square windows," Kubrick
      says. "And so we had a demolition team in there for a week blowing up
      buildings, and the art director spent about six weeks with a guy with a
      wrecking ball and chain, knocking holes in the corners of things and
      really getting interesting ruins – which no amount of money would have
      allowed you to build."
      Kubrick's Hue was finished off with grillwork and other architectural
      accents, 200 palm trees imported from Spain and thousands of plastic
      plants shipped from Hong Kong. Weeds and tall yellow grass – "which look
      the same all over the world," he notes – were conveniently indigenous.
      Four M41 tanks arrived courtesy of a Belgian army colonel who is a Kubrick
      fan, and historically correct S55 helicopters were leased and painted
      Marine green. A selection of rifles, M79 grenade launchers and M60 machine
      guns were obtained through a licensed weapons dealer.
      "It looks absolutely perfect, I think," the director says of his dusty
      rendering of Vietnam on the Thames. "There might be some other place in
      the world like it, but I'd hate to have to look for it. I think even if we
      had gone to Hue, we couldn't have created that look. I know we couldn't
      have."
      Kubrick discarded documentary realism only once in the film – for the sake
      of facing rows of naked toilets in the boot camp barracks, built on an
      interior set in London. The actual Parris Island toilets didn't have that
      sinister configuration. "We did that as a kind of poetic license," he
      says. "It just seemed funny and grotesque."
      He hired extras from the local Vietnamese community, and cast the
      principals largely from videotaped auditions. He received about 2,000
      tapes, including one from a then-unknown named Vincent D'Onofrio, whose
      performance as Private Pyle, a weak-minded recruit who spiritually melds
      with his M14, is already being touted for an Oscar nomination. But perhaps
      his luckiest discovery was retired Marine gunnery sergeant Lee Ermey, a
      Vietnam veteran and former drill instructor who was already employed as
      Kubrick's technical adviser.
      After videotaping Ermey insulting and intimidating prospective
      actor-recruits, an exercise designed to see who would react in interesting
      ways, Kubrick picked him to play the savagely efficient drill instructor,
      Gunnery Sergeant Hartman. The D.I.'s dialogue, much of it Ermey's
      invention, nearly all of it unprintable, forges new frontiers of
      ear-burning obscenity.
      "It was quite clear that Lee was a genius for this part," Kubrick says of
      Ermey, who heretofore had performed only in small movie roles. "I've
      always found that some people can act and some can't, whether or not
      they've had training. And I suspect that being a drill instructor is, in a
      sense, being an actor. Because they're saying the same things every eight
      weeks, to new guys, like they're saying it for the first time – and that's
      acting."
      Kubrick concedes that certain Marine Corps PR types might be less than
      thrilled with the depiction. "I just think the dialogue is so good it goes
      beyond the question of 'should he be saying this? Is it right or wrong?'
      The most important thing is that it's dramatically effective and
      interesting and it's true. It's both funny and frightening."
      For music, Kubrick scoured Billboard Top 100 lists of the era – using, for
      instance, Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots Are Made for Walking" for a shot of
      a hooker slinking through downtown Da Nang – and hired first-time film
      composer Abigail Mead to supply some deftly ominous ambiance.
      Vietnam, Kubrick says, was "probably the only war that was run by hawk
      intellectuals who manipulated facts and fine-tuned reality, and deceived
      both themselves and the public." History records that the Tet Offensive
      was a military defeat for the North Vietnamese, but also a pivotal
      psychological victory. In this regard, the director quotes one of his
      favorite lines from the film, spoken by a Marine lieutenant as he briefs
      correspondents for Stars and Stripes: "The civilian press are about to wet
      their pants, and we've heard that even Cronkite is about to say the war is
      now unwinnable."
      "Probably the war was always unwinnable," Kubrick says. "I'm sure it was.
      The Tet Offensive wasn't really the most appropriate time to realize that.
      They could have realized it a lot earlier."
      "Stanley is an extremely difficult and talented person," set designer Ken
      Adam once said of his stint on "Dr. Strangelove." "We developed an
      extremely close relationship, and as a result I had to live almost
      completely on tranquilizers."
      "He's a control freak," says Herr. "But he's philosophical about the
      things he can't control."
      His compulsion for detail is famous. Once, during the opening week of "A
      Clockwork Orange," he ordered a theater in New York repainted because he'd
      heard, from 3,000 miles away, that the walls were a bit too shiny. His
      sets are closed to everyone but cast and crew. He rarely shows his films
      to the studio executives until a few weeks before the release dates. He
      doesn't do audience test-screenings because they are, in his view,
      "irrelevant and potentially dangerous." It goes without saying that he has
      final cut.
      "I may have poor insight about myself," Kubrick says when asked if he is
      indeed a control freak, "but I don't think so, no. Obviously, in the
      nature of making a film, you are trying to control a lot of people. Either
      you control them or they do what they want. I suppose somebody could agree
      that if you are able to do that, and are not made uncomfortable by it, it
      appeals to you. But that's certainly not why I've made movies."
      If anything, says Jan Harlan, Kubrick's longtime executive producer, the
      director has grown "more thorough, more precise" over the years. "Stanley
      is a locomotive," Harlan adds. "He just pulls everybody along."
      Midinterview, Kubrick requests to see a transcript of his quotes. He wants
      to make sure that he can recognize his voice. Some days later, after 18
      pages of transcript are dispatched to London, he sends back 28 pages of
      corrections. He insists during a subsequent discussion that he has no
      interest in appearing spontaneous in an interview, that he sounds
      inarticulate to himself – that that's not the way he talks. (A few of his
      suggestions were incorporated into this piece.)
      He is also sensitive to the suggestion that he films endless takes.
      "I think this about takes," he says. "An actor has to know his lines
      before he can begin to act. You cannot think about your lines and act.
      Some actors – and those are usually the ones who go back to L.A. and do
      interviews about what a perfectionist I am and how they had to do a take
      70 or 80 times – don't go home after shooting, study their lines and go to
      bed. They go out, stay out late, and come in the next morning unprepared
      ...
      "So you can reason with them or explain how they're hurting themselves, or
      you can yell at them. Some of them respond, some don't, and there isn't an
      awful lot you can do about it except not work with them again."
      "He's very kind, one of the kindest people I've ever known," says Ermey.
      "But he's in a position where he can't show that side of himself. You
      can't be Mr. Nice Guy and win awards."
      "He's probably the most heartfelt person I ever met," says Modine. "It's
      hard for him, being from the Bronx, with that neighborhood mentality, and
      he tries to cover it up. Right underneath that veneer is a very loving,
      conscientious man, who doesn't like pain, who doesn't like to see human
      suffering or animals suffering. I was really surprised by the man."
      In "Full Metal Jacket" Modine's Joker, sporting a peace sign on his
      fatigues and the words "Born to Kill" on his helmet, defines this
      condition as "the duality of man."
      "The Jungian thing, sir!" he explains to an inquisitive officer.
      In the striving, middle-class Bronx neighborhood where Kubrick grew up,
      the son of a doctor, he was considered slightly Bohemian – a polite,
      soft-spoken young man with a far-off look in his eye. "As if he were
      somewhere else," recalls one of his contemporaries from William Howard
      Taft High School, where Kubrick's grades were so poor he couldn't get into
      college. Instead, at age 17, he became a photographer for Look magazine.
      He left at 21 to make documentary short subjects.
      The old neighborhood "isn't there any more," Kubrick says. "I guess the
      part I grew up in is still there, it's just different." How does he know?
      "Because people tell me. And I've seen documentaries." He describes one in
      which snipers take pot shots at firefighters.
      "My sort of fantasy image of movies was created in the Museum of Modern
      Art, when I looked at Stroheim and D.W. Griffith and Eisenstein," he
      recalls. "I was star struck by these fantastic movies. I was never star
      struck in the sense of saying, 'Gee, I'm going to go to Hollywood and make
      $5,000 a week and live in a great place and have a sports car.' I really
      was in love with movies. I used to see everything at the RKO in Loew's
      circuit, but I remember thinking at the time that I didn't know anything
      about movies, but I'd seen so many movies that were bad, I thought, 'Even
      though I don't know anything, I can't believe I can't make a movie at
      least as good as this.' And that's why I started, why I tried."
      He was 25 when he borrowed $9,000 from family and friends to make "Fear
      and Desire," his first feature. He made his second, "Killer's Kiss," two
      years later. "I was forced to do everything, literally everything," he
      says, "from photographing them, going and buying the film, keeping the
      accounts, editing them, laying in the footsteps, creating the sound
      effects, to going to the lab."
      He went from there to Hollywood, where he detected a "general sense of
      insecurity and slight malevolence ... That immediate effect on you isn't
      particularly useful in trying to make films. It's very easy to be put off
      your balance."
      He made "Paths of Glory," "Spartacus" and "Lolita" in quick succession.
      He'd just as soon have "Spartacus" hacked from his oeuvre. "I don't know
      what to say to people who tell me, 'Boy I really loved "Spartacus." Gee, I
      think that's my favorite film,' " Kubrick says of the only movie on which
      he was just a hired hand.
      Some critics since have noted a strange detachment in his films, an
      observation that leaves him baffled. "I don't even think that's a
      particularly valid comment," he says. "It's more in the department that
      those normal signals – ingratiating and reassuring signals that most films
      make sure they give, and which are usually false – are not in the films."
      Kubrick, in any case, has little use for critics.
      "I wouldn't like to have to write an appreciation of a movie that I liked,
      because I think it's so elusive, and the things that critics are forced to
      do – make connections and conceptualizations of it – seem at best minor,
      and at worst fairly irrelevant to what seems almost inexpressibly
      beautiful about the movie."
      He can still be a fan. "Your expertise only clicks in when the thing isn't
      good," he says. "When a film really works, you're captured by it and
      you're just sitting there responding to it and enjoying it."
      Occasionally, Kubrick will respond almost to point of tears. "Close to it,
      but don't ask me which ones. There aren't that many movies that try to
      bring you to tears that are that good."
      For the next three months, he must maintain his composure. He will be
      supervising the dubbing and subtitling of "Full Metal Jacket" for
      international release. Then he will retreat from the limelight, no doubt
      to return once again.
      "The structure of making films is nice and enjoyable, and I like to make
      films," he says. "But there are certain virtues and benefits to doing
      other things – like living."
         

      © Copyright 1987 The Washington Post Company
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