In chess, what happens sometimes, is that you have an idea that looks good at first and ends up being bad, but it can open up your horizon for new ideas, possibly better ones, that you wouldn't have seen otherwise. In this analogy one could say that seeing or making mistakes can in some cases open a door to greatness, but it's still a matter of discipline and intellect to spot that greatness behind the mistake.
Just dropping by to say, a) I love this, and b) this video reminded me very much of an experience I had with another director, Alfonso Cuaron, who interestingly enough is also an obsessive chess player. in 2005, I was lucky enough to spend some time watching him at work on set on Children of Men. After a shot was in the can, Alfonso would often go straight to a chess board, together with whoever was the volunteer/ victim of the moment, and stay there for sometimes the entirely of the set-up for the next shot. At one point the fire alarm went off, together with all of the sprinklers. Many of the props on set were paper drawings, so obviously this was a disaster. I was just a visitor, but I pitched in to help get everything removed to safety, and had just started to lift something when I had to jump out of the way as a man came barreling past at top speed, clutching something in his hands. 'Alfonso' someone said. 'Saving his chess game.'
UA-cam kept recommending me part 3, but I figured it would be best if I watched part 1 and 2 first. I'm really glad I did, great video series, you've earned a subscriber
Kubrick is one of my favourite directors, his style is very different from the other directors, it was very interesting to learn a little of the facts of his life and work. Thank you for high-quality video. P.S: Sorry for my English. I'm trying to learn English and use your videos , they are very interesting but it is not always easy , but thank you for the information.
Glad you liked it! Thanks for taking the time to comment-- your English is fine! I spend a lot of time on the subtitles, which I think can be auto-translated if needed.
That shot at 6:17 is worth pausing on. That's two men who were immensely influential to audience and critics alike, both bringing advice to the project they were on. Nicholson was an actor, writer, and producer himself, breaking new ground almost every time out of the gate.
Yeah. I was looking around for someone to tell me whether or not I could film in there, but I couldn't find anyone who worked there so I just started filming and only included a short clip.
I have always dreamed of being a director and am about to release my first full feature film in the next few months, and I wanted to tell you that this channel has given me so many ideas and been such a help to me. Thank you for posting all these great videos you have. You are really helping a lot of cinefiles, whether they be film makers themselves or aspiring critics or just casual viewers with a passion. Thank you for all the great work you do. Keep it up, my friend :)
The African-American man shown playing Kubrick is Tony Burton who played boxing trainer Duke in the Rocky films. During the filming of The Shining, Burton beat Kubrick in a game of chess. Kubrick was so incensed that he expanded Burton's part in the movie so he would have to stay on the set and give Kubrick another opportunity to get revenge.
A sophisticated game for a sophisticated director making sophisticated movies. Now I get Kubrick's comment he wish to make a movie a year like Woody Allen but he couldn't. Paraphrasing.. I wonder if he ever had the chance to play against the great Bobby Fischer.
Woody Allen himself is a prolific writer, so he moves ahead quicker than most anybody. But, he also admitted that production on a set is always a set of compromises against what you'd like to happen--so pretty much what SK said--that you have to make intuitive choices, because there's no time or money left to analyze the shot.
Creativity and art are non convex problems, one needs scaffolds if there exists a notion of optimisation, which by definition is what Maths was all along. Most indie to commercial blockbusters can be placed in the spectrum of what they're trying to optimise, Box office, collective experience or self satisfaction.
Chess, like golf, taught me a great deal about how people think. QUESTION: Not being a student, but an admirer, of Kubrick is there any notation anywhere of him ever catering ideas of making a Western?
Great video ! Although to be nitpicky, the french interview is an interview with Michel Ciment, probably at Kubrick's home, recorded just so Michel could write a better article + written interview for a French magazine later on, It wasn't for the radio I believe.
yeh i have to play chess to be great director like stanley kubrick but sorry my game is 9ball billiard like great filipino billiard genuis like kubrick , EFREN" MAGICIAN " REYES (1999 CARDIFFWALES UK 9-BALL BILLIARDS WINNER ,AGE 49YRS OLD) ALSO PLAY CHESS IN HIS YOUTH AND IMPLEMENT IN HIS BILLIARDS WINS ALSO INNOVATOR , MAYBE CHESS & BILLIARDS LOOK DIFFERENT FORMAT BUT STILL SAME USING STRATEGY & DECISION MAKING!
Interesting bit about the origin of Dr. Smithslov's name, didn't know that. Since HAL's conclusion of the match with Frank was essentially incorrect --- which Kubrick was obviously aware of --- some see that as the first sign that HAL was having problems.
World Chess Championship 1972 in Reykjavík Fischer vs Spassky is beginning of the end when Soviet collapsed as superpower, Soviet pure billions dollars (rubles) into hockey and other sports but especially chess clubs that was all Soviet prestige or shining gem of Soviet regime and amateur American won against all soviet union system. Reykjavík Summit of Gorbachev and Reagan of 1986 is clinical death of Soviet Union.
The chess board at 5:21 makes no sense to me. It looks like the beginning of a game where the white rook stands in the wrong position and the white queen is out of the game. What is going on there?
Anyone catch that he gave Shelley Duvall his queen before they began the match? Looks like he was trying to handicap himself and giving her a fighting chance.. Wonder if it worked??
Ed Bishop Pan Am Pilout/UFO TV Strayker King of the Westerns King of the Cowboys Roy Rogers Queen of the B's Marie Windsor King and Queen of TV Lucy Ricky Desilou Startrek LockWood Pawn Shop Pulp Sir Arthur C Clark Knighted , Camelot Crater KIng Arthur Sir Alec Guiness Knighted, Plays Jedi Knight Doubley Kight Saber Saw Sir Mick Jagger Knighted I see a Red Door FMJ and on and on You are playing Chess
If you turn up the background music just a touch more, you can call this a musical montage. sheesh. Oh....and you're even playing that idiotic music over the top of the Kubrick's fascinating interview on Chess? Please!
my thoughts exactly, and it almost feels like he is using music because "he thinks there should be music" rather than something that enhances the experience of the video
Disappointing: an interesting idea and indeed Kubrik was good at chess. But absolutely no explanation of any *visual* influence on his work, just on the process of film-making (time pressure) - which is such an obvious constraint on all human action that its a point not worth making particularly when other points COULD have been made re: visuality such as tone, contrast, space waste of time to watch this. Disliked.
He was more creatively influenced by his own history with photography. Kubrick, like those photographers that influenced him, were focused on capturing a fluid moment in time; a moment which gave tension to the actions of the subject in the picture. He didn't get anything 'creative' from chess, but it did foster in him the idea that being methodical and patient will make for the most rewarding outcome. His movies reflect the patience and forethought that he learned from chess. This is why he made so few movies, but each took masterful planning in order to be filmed. If it weren't for his love of chess, each of his films would be visually impressive for composition (from photography), but far less impressive in plot and structure (from chess).
"Chess is more for preventing you from making mistakes than...giving you ideas." -Kubrick
In chess, what happens sometimes, is that you have an idea that looks good at first and ends up being bad, but it can open up your horizon for new ideas, possibly better ones, that you wouldn't have seen otherwise. In this analogy one could say that seeing or making mistakes can in some cases open a door to greatness, but it's still a matter of discipline and intellect to spot that greatness behind the mistake.
This should have millions of views, it's great!
Thank you!
@@CinemaTyler chess is a Indian game
Well done. Kubrick continues to fascinate me, even after fifty years.
This is my favourite channel on UA-cam now. I am amazed and grateful for the depth of your analysis. Thank you so much.
Thank you! I'm almost finished with Episode 3 of The Kubrick Files. Keep an eye out!
Just dropping by to say, a) I love this, and b) this video reminded me very much of an experience I had with another director, Alfonso Cuaron, who interestingly enough is also an obsessive chess player. in 2005, I was lucky enough to spend some time watching him at work on set on Children of Men. After a shot was in the can, Alfonso would often go straight to a chess board, together with whoever was the volunteer/ victim of the moment, and stay there for sometimes the entirely of the set-up for the next shot. At one point the fire alarm went off, together with all of the sprinklers. Many of the props on set were paper drawings, so obviously this was a disaster. I was just a visitor, but I pitched in to help get everything removed to safety, and had just started to lift something when I had to jump out of the way as a man came barreling past at top speed, clutching something in his hands. 'Alfonso' someone said. 'Saving his chess game.'
This is an amazing anecdote haha, thanks!
I don't play chess anymore as I got discouraged by the IMB computer figuring winning strategies out of algorithms. Naw, it's no fun anymore!
Great as usual, thank you! Can't wait for more
Thanks!
UA-cam kept recommending me part 3, but I figured it would be best if I watched part 1 and 2 first. I'm really glad I did, great video series, you've earned a subscriber
Thank you! More is on the way!
Kubrick is one of my favourite directors, his style is very different from the other directors, it was very interesting to learn a little of the facts of his life and work. Thank you for high-quality video.
P.S: Sorry for my English. I'm trying to learn English and use your videos , they are very interesting but it is not always easy , but thank you for the information.
Glad you liked it! Thanks for taking the time to comment-- your English is fine! I spend a lot of time on the subtitles, which I think can be auto-translated if needed.
With subtitles easier to watch videos, thank you for this opportunity.
Love the Kubrick series!!
just want to thank you for your videos.this channel is one of the most interesting things on youtube i have ever seen!
Thanks so much! I'm glad you enjoy them!
That shot at 6:17 is worth pausing on. That's two men who were immensely influential to audience and critics alike, both bringing advice to the project they were on. Nicholson was an actor, writer, and producer himself, breaking new ground almost every time out of the gate.
Always love seeing a new video from you! Great work!
Thank you!
Best video series on UA-cam
There's not nearly enough people watching this video.
Fee free to share it with your friends ;)
No surprise there. Most of them are busy having their brains fried by mainstream media.
dude! GREAT video again! Thank YOU for truly taking the time to make these VERY worth the watch !!
Thanks so much!
+CinemaTyler did you shoot the footage at the Marshall Chess Club yourself?
Yeah. I was looking around for someone to tell me whether or not I could film in there, but I couldn't find anyone who worked there so I just started filming and only included a short clip.
+CinemaTyler respect man. I respect your dedication. The world needs this.
I have always dreamed of being a director and am about to release my first full feature film in the next few months, and I wanted to tell you that this channel has given me so many ideas and been such a help to me. Thank you for posting all these great videos you have. You are really helping a lot of cinefiles, whether they be film makers themselves or aspiring critics or just casual viewers with a passion. Thank you for all the great work you do. Keep it up, my friend :)
This makes me so happy to hear! It's people like you that make this all worthwhile. :)
More videos about Kubrick please! Your videos are so entertaining to watch! :D
More is on the way!
Great video. The background music is nice, but often makes it hard to hear Kubrick during the radio interviews. Love your channel.
Thanks for the feedback!
Another Christmas morning!!! Love your work sir, please keep it up. It is truly appreciated. We need to get the word out about CT
Thanks so much!
some new insights gained, thanks for the work!
Glad you liked it!
those opening animations are really slick, nice work
Thanks! I've been learning After Effects recently. It's such a complex program, but it can really do some great things.
Cool, I would like to learn it as well. What program do you usually use?
I usually use Adobe Premiere, but now that I've been doing more motion graphics, I've been using a good amount of After Effects.
These videos are really brilliant
The African-American man shown playing Kubrick is Tony Burton who played boxing trainer Duke in the Rocky films. During the filming of The Shining, Burton beat Kubrick in a game of chess. Kubrick was so incensed that he expanded Burton's part in the movie so he would have to stay on the set and give Kubrick another opportunity to get revenge.
What a great story! I wish I had put that in the vid!
A sophisticated game for a sophisticated director making sophisticated movies. Now I get Kubrick's comment he wish to make a movie a year like Woody Allen but he couldn't. Paraphrasing.. I wonder if he ever had the chance to play against the great Bobby Fischer.
Woody Allen himself is a prolific writer, so he moves ahead quicker than most anybody. But, he also admitted that production on a set is always a set of compromises against what you'd like to happen--so pretty much what SK said--that you have to make intuitive choices, because there's no time or money left to analyze the shot.
This is a very cool and informative channel
Thanks!
keep doing these please
More is on the way!
Thank you for the video. Very interesting. I did not know about the passion Kubrick chess. Too I love this game .
Thanks! This one was really fun to research!
thanks man, very interesting ;)
Thank you once again good man.
Thanks!
Creativity and art are non convex problems, one needs scaffolds if there exists a notion of optimisation, which by definition is what Maths was all along. Most indie to commercial blockbusters can be placed in the spectrum of what they're trying to optimise, Box office, collective experience or self satisfaction.
That opening quote possibly explains why it took Kubrick so long to make a movie.
This is a really great and interesting video, liked and subscribed =)
0:49 Ack... the king is never captured!!
I love this video, super interesting.
Chess, like golf, taught me a great deal about how people think.
QUESTION: Not being a student, but an admirer, of Kubrick is there any notation anywhere of him ever catering ideas of making a Western?
Great video, thanks! Subtitles are very usefull (i don't speak english much and sometimes it's a ploblem to follow). Make more!
Thanks! I'm so glad they could be of help! More is on the way!
Great video !
Although to be nitpicky, the french interview is an interview with Michel Ciment, probably at Kubrick's home, recorded just so Michel could write a better article + written interview for a French magazine later on, It wasn't for the radio I believe.
Thanks for the clarification-- I didn't know that!
Really good keep it up
Thanks! Will do!
As always, you did a great job! When are we going to see your stories? I hope it is one day soon.
Thanks! I hope so too!
Love this Kubrick series!
Thanks!
Great video
Where/how did u get the dust, mud and hair overlay at 0:28?
It's from the free preset here: ua-cam.com/video/QTPWDI5cbXc/v-deo.html
thank you. Love your work. You're a great example of giving educational content and being creative at the same time :))
yeh i have to play chess to be great director like stanley kubrick but sorry my game is 9ball billiard like great filipino billiard genuis like kubrick , EFREN" MAGICIAN " REYES (1999 CARDIFFWALES UK 9-BALL BILLIARDS WINNER ,AGE 49YRS OLD) ALSO PLAY CHESS IN HIS YOUTH AND IMPLEMENT IN HIS BILLIARDS WINS ALSO INNOVATOR , MAYBE CHESS & BILLIARDS LOOK DIFFERENT FORMAT BUT STILL SAME USING STRATEGY & DECISION MAKING!
Thank you for video, and special thanks for subtitles! (English is not my native language and it`s hard to understand aurally) :)
Thanks! Glad they could help!
thank you)
Thanks for watching!
Interesting bit about the origin of Dr. Smithslov's name, didn't know that. Since HAL's conclusion of the match with Frank was essentially incorrect --- which Kubrick was obviously aware of --- some see that as the first sign that HAL was having problems.
World Chess Championship 1972 in Reykjavík Fischer vs Spassky is beginning of the end when Soviet collapsed as superpower, Soviet pure billions dollars (rubles) into hockey and other sports but especially chess clubs that was all Soviet prestige or shining gem of Soviet regime and amateur American won against all soviet union system. Reykjavík Summit of Gorbachev and Reagan of 1986 is clinical death of Soviet Union.
yo from Evgen , thx 4 your work's!
Thanks!
Great video. Very informative. But at the end when kubric is talkin, its hard to hear because the music in the background is too loud.
The chess board at 5:21 makes no sense to me. It looks like the beginning of a game where the white rook stands in the wrong position and the white queen is out of the game. What is going on there?
best youtuber
Thanks!
y'all didnt mention how he kept George C Scott in check wif da chess :) awesome tho! KUBRICK!!!
i didn't know black people liked Kubrick, nice.
More Great Stuff_!
Thanks!
Anyone catch that he gave Shelley Duvall his queen before they began the match? Looks like he was trying to handicap himself and giving her a fighting chance..
Wonder if it worked??
Playing chess help you direct 🎥
This video makes me want to play chess.
Guess I'm learning Chess
WOW
Kubrick should have made a movie about Bobby Fischer. It would be much more awesome than the garbage we got with Tobey Mcguire
DeeTunez sounds a lot like Boards of Canada in this video.
hello from badcomedian (russian guy that makes videos about russian movie)
Hi! Thanks for checking out my videos!
+CinemaTyler thank you for your videos they are great ;)
More Kubrick....
More is on the way!
Well, time to pick up chess again.
Great video, but that music... arghhhh
@ 5:16 can you imagine playing a game with Shelley Duvall? jeeez that would be the longest three minutes of your life
😂😄😆
Maybe that's why it looks like he gave her his queen as a handicap. I've done the same thing with my niece.. And she's 8.
Ed Bishop Pan Am Pilout/UFO TV Strayker
King of the Westerns
King of the Cowboys Roy Rogers
Queen of the B's Marie Windsor
King and Queen of TV Lucy Ricky Desilou Startrek LockWood
Pawn Shop Pulp
Sir Arthur C Clark Knighted , Camelot Crater KIng Arthur
Sir Alec Guiness Knighted, Plays Jedi Knight Doubley Kight Saber Saw
Sir Mick Jagger Knighted I see a Red Door FMJ
and on and on You are playing Chess
depends on the context... If the film should be serious... analyse mistakes
if not... play on the mistake... exaturate them so they seem intentional
If you turn up the background music just a touch more, you can call this a musical montage. sheesh. Oh....and you're even playing that idiotic music over the top of the Kubrick's fascinating interview on Chess? Please!
The French translator is fine, the music's too loud.
my thoughts exactly, and it almost feels like he is using music because "he thinks there should be music" rather than something that enhances the experience of the video
The King in the animation is set up on the wrong side, on D1. It should be on E1. Big faux pas to any chess player.
Did I really screw that up? I could've sworn that I looked it up several times to make sure. Dang.
It is actually correct since it is the Black King and it is properly placed on a white square, e8.
Are you KaptainKristian?
Seventh
actors are pawns! nothing more
Disappointing: an interesting idea and indeed Kubrik was good at chess. But absolutely no explanation of any *visual* influence on his work, just on the process of film-making (time pressure) - which is such an obvious constraint on all human action that its a point not worth making particularly when other points COULD have been made re: visuality such as tone, contrast, space waste of time to watch this. Disliked.
And sadly, it missed the greatest Kubrick reference to chess of them all, the trial scene from Paths of Glory
He was more creatively influenced by his own history with photography. Kubrick, like those photographers that influenced him, were focused on capturing a fluid moment in time; a moment which gave tension to the actions of the subject in the picture. He didn't get anything 'creative' from chess, but it did foster in him the idea that being methodical and patient will make for the most rewarding outcome. His movies reflect the patience and forethought that he learned from chess. This is why he made so few movies, but each took masterful planning in order to be filmed.
If it weren't for his love of chess, each of his films would be visually impressive for composition (from photography), but far less impressive in plot and structure (from chess).
Your background music really ruins your vids.
Kubrick is the Lady Gaga of cinema. Brimmed with occult symbolism, huge production budgets, and boring to the gates of hell.