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Film Review Of Stanley Kubrick's 'The Shining'

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Based on Stephen King’s horror novel of the same name, Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining features hallways filled with butchered daughters, and their guts and blood splashed down the hall. Horror and realism fuel Kubrick’s notoriously disturbing films and The Shining stands clear-cut amongst them. Although in the case of this movie, Kubrick shifts emphasis from visual horror to psychological fear and instills mounting dread from the sequence of disturbing events. Kubrick states, “one of the things that horror stories can do is show us the archetypes of the unconscious; we can see the dark side without having to confront it directly.” Never falling flat, The Shining provides a psychological horror masterpiece complete with brilliant acting, tight camera angles, haunting score, and unanswered questions. In The Shining, recovering alcoholic and novelist, Jack Torrance, becomes the winter caretaker with his wife Wendy and son Danny at the Overlook Hotel in Colorado in hopes to cure his writer’s block. As the film progresses, snow piles high outside, and Jack’s mental health begins to deteriorate as he starts to succumb to the seductions of the hotel telling him what to do. Danny begins to have psychic visions of the hotel’s previous events, and Wendy believes that Jack has been hurting Danny. Furious about the accusation Jack goes insane, finally falling prey to the influences of the hotel, and concludes that he must murder Wendy and Danny. Jack then grabs an ax and begins to

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