Free Essays, Free Research Papers, Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers
Essay DB Free Essays, Free Research Papers,
Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers

FREE ESSAY ON THE SHINING

College Term Papers - Instant Download

(sponsored links)

'The Shining'
A review of the film 'The Shining' by Stephen King. -- 3,038 words; MLA

Shining Path
Discusses the 'Sendero Luminoso' (Shining Path) terrorist group of Peru. -- 1,960 words; APA

Shining Through Time
An analysis of the theme of time in Kubrick's film of "The Shining". -- 650 words;

"The Shining"
A review of the movie, "The Shining", directed by Stanley Kubrick. -- 2,308 words; APA

Maoist Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path or SL)
This paper discusses the Peruvian leftist Maoist Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path or SL), one of the world's most ruthless insurgencies, who have reportedly mercilessly hacked to death by machetes many of their victims. -- 825 words; APA

Click here for more essays on THE SHINING

THE SHINING

Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980) initially received quite a bit of negative criticism.
The film irritated many Stephen King fans (and King himself) because it differed so
greatly from the novel. The Shining also disappointed many filmgoers who expected a
conventional slasher film. After all, Kubrick said it would be the scariest horror movie
of all time.1 Kubrick's films, however, never fully conform to their respective genres;
they transcend generic expectations. In the same way that 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) is
not just another outer-space sci-fi flick, The Shining is not a typical horror movie. The
monsters in The Shining originate not from dark wooded areas, but from the recesses of
the mysterious human mind-in broad daylight, at that. Perhaps Kubrick said The Shining is
the scariest horror movie of all time not because it offers a bit of suspense, blood, and
gore, but because it shines a light on the inherently evil nature of humankind on
psychological and sociological levels. 
After Kubrick bought the rights to Stephen King's 1977 novel The Shining and hired
novelist Diane Johnson to help write the screenplay, both Johnson and Kubrick read
Freud's essay on The Uncanny and Bruno Bettelheim's book about fairy tales, The Uses of
Enchantment.2 Kubrick obviously wanted to surpass the intellectual depth of contemporary
horror films such as The Exorcist and Omen. He said he was attracted to Stephen King's
novel because there's something inherently wrong with the human personality. There's an
evil side to it. One of the things that horror stories can do is to show us the
archetypes of the unconscious: we can see the dark side without having to confront it
directly. 2
In order to transfer his vision of the dark side to the screen, however, Kubrick had to
substantially alter the story in King's novel. With the help of Johnson, Kubrick threw
out most of King's ectoplasmic interventions-many ghosts, the demonic elevator, the
deadly drainpipe, the swarming wasps, and the sinister hedge animals that come to life.
Apparently Kubrick could not find special effects to animate the shrubbery in a
satisfactory manner. 2
Kubrick also dispensed with virtually all of Jack Torrance's troubled history and his
gradual descent into insanity. Jessie Horsting, author of Stephen King at the Movies,
said,  I loathed The Shining when it first came out-as Stephen still does. And the
principal reason is that in the film, you knew from the start that Jack was crazy. And
that, to me, killed the suspense. It killed the entire subtext of the book. It ruined it,
and I hated it.3
Indeed, King has often complained about Kubrick's film, saying its full title should be
Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. In 1997, King got the chance to redeem his story as
executive producer for Stephen King's The Shining. The six-hour ABC miniseries contained
King's original ghouls and spooky shrubbery. Steven Weber (of Wings) and his oversized
croquet mallet replaced the ax-wielding Jack Nicholson. Rebecca De Mornay played the sexy
Wendy from the novel, as opposed to the mousy doormat played by Shelley Duvall in
Kubrick's version. And flashbacks revealed Jack's shaky psychological history.
In order to get the rights to remake the movie, King had to sign an agreement with
Kubrick prohibiting large-scale video release and any discussion of Kubrick's film. If I
say anything about [Kubrick's movie], I'm in trouble, said King. But actor Courtland
Mead, 10, who played Danny Torrance in the miniseries, said, [Kubrick's film] was cool,
but Stephen King didn't like it. He thought Jack Nicholson was way over-the-top. 4
Like Adrian Lyne's 1998 remake of Lolita, King's remake of The Shining is more faithful
to the novel. In both cases, however, Kubrick's versions now rank higher with most
critics-not necessarily because of what Kubrick left out of his films-but because of the
depth he added to them. Even Jessie Horsting, who loathed The Shining when it first came
out, admitted, When I was able to divorce my expectations from what was on film there, I
realized that it's stylish, it is extremely well-photographed and well-thought out, and
it has its own tension. It's just not the tension I expected. 3
Kubrick toys with viewer expectations and creates a unique type of tension in The Shining
by exploring the inherently evil side of the human personality and extending the
doppleganger motif of German Schauerfilme. We first encounter Danny's shining-his psychic
ability to see the dark side of the mind-when he asks Tony about the Overlook Hotel as he
stands in front of a mirror, thereby presenting two images: one representing Danny, and
one representing Tony, a personification of the psychic part of Danny's psyche. We also
witness the emergence of Jack's evil side through a mirror, as he wakes up a month after
his move into the hotel. Only after the camera shifts when his wife enters the room do we
realize that we have been looking at a mirror image of Jack. The same mirror later
reveals that the mirror image of Danny's scrawled REDRUM is MURDER.
Dualistic imagery, mirrors, and mazes abound in The Shining as it delves into the
unconscious mind. The main purpose of one character, Bill Watson, seems to be to complete
dualistic compositions during the interview and closing day. Watson silently sits across
from Jack during the interview and represents Jack's other self, repressed for the time
being. But Jack ultimately loses his mind and becomes that other self. In the end, his
sanity exists only in the photograph from July 4, 1921. The doubling motif also applies
to the eerie Grady sisters, the temptress/hag in Room 237, Delbert and Charles Grady, and
countless other components of the film.
Mazes also play a key role in The Shining. The final chase scene takes place in the hedge
maze behind the hotel. A model of the hedge maze sits inside the hotel and provides the
medium for Jack's first shining: when he overlooks as images of Wendy and Danny walk
around in the maze. The Overlook Hotel is also a maze with its endless rooms and
hallways, as shown by Danny's tricycle travels photographed with the new Steadicam.
Kubrick hired Garret Brown, inventor of the Steadicam, to operate the Steadicam during
these shots, which are exhilarating not only because of their technical innovation, but
also because they prompt the viewer to anticipate horror around every corner.
The dualistic imagery, mirrors, and mazes all represent the schizophrenic nature of the
human personality. Inside the mind of every loving father and husband there looms a
murderous monster created by a society of repression. The Overlook Hotel draws out Jack's
monster, and he devolves to a state of primal anger, grunting like an ape-man by the end
of the film. Jack's inadequacies as a careerist and family man create much of this anger.
As his evil side emerges, Jack also becomes more abusive and sexist. He refers to his
wife as the old sperm bank, and at one point he says to her, You've been *censored*ing up
my whole life! As Jack loses himself in his imaginary world of the past, Wendy and Danny
grow closer together. In one scene, Wendy and Danny frolic outside in the snow while Jack
leers at them from inside the hotel, looking more like an evil ape-man from 2001 than an
ex-teacher and writer. The family tension increases when Wendy accuses Jack of hurting
Danny. Jack seethes with violent anger as he tells Lloyd: I wouldn't touch one hair on
his God damn little head. I love the little son of a bitch! Even though Delbert Grady
convinces Jack to correct Danny and Wendy by insulting his fragile manhood, the oedipal
theme is fully realized when the son escapes with the mother and leaves the frozen father
behind.
In The Shining, Kubrick not only comments on domestic violence and child abuse in
contemporary America, but he also critiques the society that leads to such problems.
David Cook offers a Marxist view of The Shining in which the film serves as a metaphor
for a society based on exploitation.2 During the hypocritical job interview, Jack says
his family will love being locked up in the snow. Later Jack becomes obsessed with his
work-not the maintenance of the hotel, because Wendy takes care of that-but his
interaction with the Overlook's past through the scrapbook and realistic ghosts such as
the bartender Lloyd. Jack yells about his responsibilities to his employers, who are
apparently all the best people-the ghosts of the hotel. As a puppet for his enigmatic
employers, he neglects his family and his writing as he types only one sentence-All work
and no play makes Jack a dull boy-which symbolizes his futile yet infinite attachment to
meaningless work. Thus, the Overlook Hotel acts as an intensified version of society that
allows the violence of our economic system to reveal itself through Jack's insanity.
Kubrick dealt with similar economic themes in Spartacus and Barry Lyndon as well. In
fact, the novel Spartacus equates capitalism with cannibalism, and this same analogy
reappears in The Shining. Early in the film, Jack explains to Danny that the Donner Party
had to resort to cannibalism in order to stay alive. Danny asks, You mean they ate each
other? And Jack calmly answers in a matter-of-fact tone: They had to-in order to
survive.
In neglecting his family and writing-procreation and creation, or Eros-Jack develops a
misguided desire for immortality. Thomas Nelson wrote: Jack Torrance forgets that in a
contingent universe an obsession with timelessness becomes tantamount to a love affair
with death. 5 Furthermore, Kubrick admitted that The Shining intrigued him because ghost
stories appeal to our craving for immortality.2 As an artist himself, perhaps Kubrick
uses Jack as an example of what happens when people seek meaning in alcohol and mysticism
rather than art and creation. Jack's obsession leads him toward an inevitable meeting
with Joe Black, and even time becomes distorted along the way. The screen titles move
from months to days to hours as Jack nears the moment when his mad desire for the
immortality of death-a kind of Freudian Thanatos goaded by his society-causes him to lose
all sanity.
The Shining also comments on racism in United States, with the Overlook Hotel as a symbol
for America. During the interview, an American flag and a miniature ax sit on Stuart
Ullman's desk. In addition, red, white, and blue reappear throughout the film as the
dominant color scheme for wardrobe. Ullman tells Wendy (in a line of dialogue that does
not appear in the novel): This site is supposed to be located on an Indian burial ground,
and I believe they actually had to repel a few Indian attacks as they were building it.
Indian artwork appears throughout the film in wall hangings, floor designs, carpets, and
architectural details. Jack, representing the weak, exploitative American male, shows
blatant disregard for Native American motifs as he hurls a tennis ball at them. Bill
Blakemore of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote: The Shining is explicitly about America's
general inability to admit to the gravity of the genocide of the Indians-or, more
specifically, its ability to 'overlook' that genocide. 6 America wants to forget about
its brutality toward the Indians, just as Jack wants to forget about his brutality toward
his son.
Danny's first and most frequent shining shows a river of blood gush from an elevator
shaft framed by Indian artwork, yet the river makes no noise; it is a mute nightmare. The
blood represents the bloody foundation upon which the United States was built-a
foundation that is now ignored and overlooked. The United States broke away from Great
Britain in order to escape its empiricism and values, only to become more violent and
headstrong than its ancestor, just as Jack follows his British predecessor Grady in a
repeating cycle of violence. In a striking revelation of this theme, the European poster
for The Shining read: The wave of terror which swept across America is here. The poster
did not refer to the movie's effect on American audiences because the film had not yet
been released; rather, the wave of terror which swept across America referred to the
society of the white man.
The Shining comments on racism towards African Americans as well as Native Americans.
Kubrick links Chef Hallorann (the nigger cook) with Native Americans early in the film
when Hallorann shows Wendy and Danny around the hotel. In one shot, Hallorann stands in
profile at the same angle as the Indian Chief on a Calumet baking powder can that
prominently sits on the shelf behind him. (The Calumet can later reappears when Jack
agrees to kill his family while he is locked up in the food storage.) Hallorann is the
only important minority character in the film-and also the only character who is
murdered. After Jack buries an ax deep within his chest, Hallorann falls to the floor in
the center of a Native American design. Hallorann's death is an interesting departure
from King's novel, in which Hallorann survives and becomes Danny's psychic mentor. 
As with past adaptations, Kubrick used the general setting and some elements of King's
novel, while drastically altering, ignoring, or adding other elements to create a film
that reflects a pervasive problem which Kubrick has explored at least since Paths of
Glory (1957): the inhumanity of man against man. The Shining opens to the sounds of Dies
Irae (Day of Wrath), part of the major funeral mass of the European Roman Catholic
Church. 6 And, in a way, The Shining is a funeral-for all those who have been massacred
by meaningless violence from their fellow humans.
In a final stroke of brilliance, Kubrick ends the film with a shot evocative of Michael
Snow's Wavelength1 which moves down a corridor and into a photograph, after which a
dissolve provides still closer scrutiny of the photograph. The photograph shows a
grinning Jack at the Overlook Hotel July 4th Ball in 1921. The date links America's
independence with senseless violence, and the image of Jack suggests that his sanity now
exists only in the past, while his dark side remains frozen in the snow-covered maze
outside. In addition, as the film ends, Kubrick uses the sound of applause to blend the
contemporary movie audience with the 1920s audience. The 1920s audience then begins to
chatter as filmgoers would when exiting the theater. The contemporary audience members,
therefore, usually overlook this soundtrack-just as they overlook Native American
genocide and other instances of humanity's violence against humanity. Thus, even through
its final credit sequence, The Shining attempts to disrupt the complacency and security
of the audience-to hold up a mirror to viewers to show them that they were and are the
guests at the Overlook Ball. For this reason, perhaps, Kubrick said The Shining is the
scariest horror movie of all time.

Use the Search box at the top to find Term Papers for Sale by keywords or browse Free Essays page by page
(sorted alphabetically by Essay Title):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
For college-level Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers and Book Reports, please go to the Term Papers for Sale Website


This Free Essays Web Site, is Copyright © 2008, Essay Express. All rights reserved.




Partner websites: Interior Decor Art :: Immigration Lawyer Toronto :: Laser Clinic Toronto :: Original Abstract Paintings :: Learn Violin in Thornhill :: Learn Violin in Toronto :: Buy used Yamaha piano in Toronto