This dude has never made a movie based on an original screenplay

This dude has never made a movie based on an original screenplay.
This fact alone removes him as a contender for greatest director of all time.

Attached: Kubrick_on_the_set_of_Barry_Lyndon_%281975_publicity_photo%29_crop.jpg (1210x1477, 904.17K)

its called filmmaking not screenwriting

Name a director who has.

this dude made the top kino of all time with barry lyndon
this fact alone makes him the greatest director of all time

Need I say more?

Attached: l-intro-1652977075.jpg (1600x899, 299.77K)

>takes novel
>makes much interesting movie
>author seethes for year

El goblino

Attached: images - 2022-08-02T012911.735.jpg (652x471, 27.42K)

Nice bait.

Fear and Desire is a 1953 American anti-war film directed, produced, and edited by Stanley Kubrick, and written by Howard Sackler.[3] With a production team of only fifteen people, the film was Kubrick's feature directorial debut. Though the film is not about any specific war, it was produced and released during the height of the Korean War.

The screenplay was written by Howard Sackler, a classmate of Kubrick's at William Howard Taft High School in the Bronx, New York; Sackler later won the Pulitzer Prize for his 1968 drama The Great White Hope. Virginia Leith, who played The Girl in this film, would soon play Jan in the 1962 cult classic The Brain That Wouldn't Die.[7] Paul Mazursky, who would later receive recognition as the director of such films as Harry and Tonto and An Unmarried Woman, was cast as the soldier who kills the captive peasant.[3]

Funds for Fear and Desire were raised from Kubrick's family and friends, with most of it coming from Martin Perveler, Kubrick's uncle and the owner of a profitable pharmacy.[8] The film's original budget has been estimated at $10,000.[3]

Killer's Kiss is a 1955 American crime film noir directed by Stanley Kubrick and written by Kubrick and Howard Sackler. It is the second feature film directed by Kubrick, following his 1953 debut feature Fear and Desire. The film stars Jamie Smith, Irene Kane, and Frank Silvera.[2]

The film is about Davey Gordon (Jamie Smith), a 29-year-old middleweight New York boxer at the end of his career, and his relationship with his neighbor, taxi dancer Gloria Price (Irene Kane), and her violent employer Vincent Rapallo (Frank Silvera).

This was Kubrick's second feature. Kubrick removed his first film Fear and Desire from circulation over his dissatisfaction with it. Kubrick directed it between the ages of 26 and 27, and had to borrow $40,000 from his uncle Martin Perveler, who owned a chain of drug stores in Los Angeles.[3]:78 Killer's Kiss, originally titled Kiss Me, Kill Me,[4] was also financed privately through family and friends, but because Fear and Desire did not recoup its production budget, Perveler did not invest this time. Most of the initial budget was covered by Morris Bousel, a Bronx pharmacist who was rewarded with a co-producer credit.[3]:95

Enter

Attached: 1659422013321.jpg (470x652, 43.03K)

This nigga saw one malick movie and said imma do the opposite lmao

In fact, that only affirms he is the greatest. The idea that some bum fuck director happens to be a master writer--an entirely different craft, is like one in a billion. Even the screenwriting directors ITT are embarrasing compared to great literature.

his brother had one interesting story with memento. he had batman and the prestige to work with. all his original scripts, like inception dunkirk and tenet, are absolutely terrible.

he is mediocre.

a great writer in cinema is an extreme rarity. bergman, rohmer, people like that.

just telling the reality here.

Anyone who makes steve king mald is an alright guy in my book desu.

The way he literally thrashed the original novels by writing on them, adding and deleting and cutting out pages proves otherwise. Try to read any of them and compare. He'd acquire the rights to the source material, hire a screenwriter for a 1st treatment and then send the guy home and rewrite the script daily. Exceptions: 2001 and EWS, where he seems to have had closer collaborators.

Why did King mald? He sold his novel rights.

He rather famously hates Kubrick's adaptation, it's kinda funny because the movie is just objectively superior to the novel, and I say that having actually read it.

The Rian Johnson of his day

Great artists have always had other works as source material. Almost none of Shakespeare’s works are original either.

And then he went on to support the extremely shitty tv adaptation, he’s a hack who is only remembered because of the superior adaptations of his stories, otherwise he would just be another dime a dozen forgotten 80s horror writers.

Watch more movies

Attached: 1659425226366.jpg (1080x1440, 317.96K)