“It’s impossible to tell you what I’m going to do except to say that I expect to make the best movie ever made.” – Stanley Kubrick, Oct. 20, 1971.
There are few unrealized projects in the history of cinema more tantalizingly fascinating than Stanley Kubrick’s planned feature about Napoleon. Even in 1967, at the time of its initial pre-production (the first time around), it seemed like a potentially great idea. But now, looking back with Kubrick’s entire body of work as a reference point, it truly does stand as a project this legendary filmmaker should have been destined to make. Thanks to a mammoth and comprehensive collection of materials fashioned into Stanley Kubrick’s Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made, edited by Alison Castle and published by Taschen, we can for the first time see how Kubrick prepared for the film and what he had in mind for its ultimate big-screen presentation.
There are few unrealized projects in the history of cinema more tantalizingly fascinating than Stanley Kubrick’s planned feature about Napoleon. Even in 1967, at the time of its initial pre-production (the first time around), it seemed like a potentially great idea. But now, looking back with Kubrick’s entire body of work as a reference point, it truly does stand as a project this legendary filmmaker should have been destined to make. Thanks to a mammoth and comprehensive collection of materials fashioned into Stanley Kubrick’s Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Never Made, edited by Alison Castle and published by Taschen, we can for the first time see how Kubrick prepared for the film and what he had in mind for its ultimate big-screen presentation.
- 3/3/2014
- by Jeremy Carr
- SoundOnSight
In his new book The Acoustics of Performance Halls, acoustician J. Christopher Jaffe reveals the secrets behind some of the facilities he’s worked on—little venues like the Kennedy Center and Hollywood Bowl. But it’s one thing to create perfect sound forever in a concert space geared toward Beethoven. It’s something else to make sure your Radiohead vinyl sounds good at home. So we called up the master himself and requested tips on how to maximize the home-listening experience. Jaffe obliged with the advice below. His parting words: “You can use some of the things that I mentioned, or you can...
- 11/2/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
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