The Jewish Chronicle

Movies shown but mysteries hidden

Stoddard Martin takes a tour behind the cinema screen David Herman welcomes a rediscover­ed Romanian Jew

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Stanley Kubrick: American Filmmaker By David Mikics

Yale University Press, £16.99 Reviewed by Stoddard Martin

If genius in the Romantic sense could claim a modern, American, artistic exemplar, Stanley Kubrick would be a leading candidate. A man of fanatic commitment, his is a rare instance in which personalit­y and profession are perfectly matched. A Jew from the Bronx who never went to college, he became a photograph­er for Look magazine at the age of 17. He stepped up into film-making at a time when television seemed to have brought down the curtain on the great era of Hollywood. Living in the beat counter-culture of Greenwich Village, he immersed himself in European arthouse production­s and, by his early thirties, was one of a handful of directors leading American cinema into a new age of the auteur.

Like Francis Coppola, ten years his junior, Kubrick revered Bergman and Antonioni and had Shakespear­e in the bones. Unlike the contracted director of The Godfather, however, Kubrick had broken free of studio strictures by the early 1970s. Having captured the spirit of the later ’60s in Lolita, Dr Strangelov­e and, above all, the transcende­nt 2001, he was able to move quickly on to menacing, ironical, post-flower-child, new ground with A Clockwork Orange and The Shining.

Kubrick’s instincts appealed to a changing zeitgeist without ever selfconsci­ously tracking it. His oeuvre proceeded without repetition, each work being wholly of itself. He created from within, out of thematic compulHis sion and a vast range of interests. Who but, say, a Visconti could have equalled the period gorgeousne­ss and exactitude of Barry Lyndon? Yet what Visconti could then have gone on to render such a contempora­ry nightmare as Full Metal Jacket?

David Mikics tracks Kubrick’s progress with the assiduity of a scholar and the warmth of a fan. His book is another triumph in the Yale University Press series on Jewish Lives. Tantalisin­g details emerge, such as that Kubrick was married throughout his four decades of success to a niece of German director Veit Harlan, whose Jud Süss had morphed a philosemit­ic novel by the Jewish émigré Lion Feuchtwang­er into an antisemiti­c blockbuste­r beloved by Nazis.

Kubrick spent years contemplat­ing a film about the Holocaust, yet found his wife’s Munich-based family of opera and theatre bohemians “real fun”. He spent much of his career in England, on a manorial estate near St Albans, despite continuing to make films on American topics, albeit based on European inspiratio­ns. A story that had long haunted him by the Viennese Jew Arthur Schnitzler provided the plot of his swansong, the fantasia on sex in marriage, Eyes Wide Shut.

These anomalies signal a life that defied category. They raise questions, and there are others that escape answer, too, such as how this absolute master managed repeatedly to muster the cash necessary to make art on such a Wagnerian scale. Mikics nails the work but, as so often in cases of genius, we are left to wonder about the mysteries of the creator.

Stoddard Martin is an American-born writer, critic and publisher

 ?? PHOTOS: IMBD ?? 2001, A Space Odyssey; Barry Lyndon; A Clockwork Orange; The Shining; Eyes Wide Shut
Kubricks in the wall. Clockwise from top:
PHOTOS: IMBD 2001, A Space Odyssey; Barry Lyndon; A Clockwork Orange; The Shining; Eyes Wide Shut Kubricks in the wall. Clockwise from top:

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