Stanley Kubrick is one of the titans of modern cinema, a director who found his feet in the postwar studio system, yet soon grew into one of the definitive exemplars of the auteur: writing, directing and producing his films, even operating the camera – gaining renown for his control, exactitude and precision. In the opening flourish of the documentary Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures (Jan Harlan, 2001), we see a montage of newspaper articles on Kubrick, the same words popping up time and time again: ‘eccentric’, ‘reclusive’, ‘obsessive’, ‘meticulous’, ‘perfectionist’.
Born in 1928, Kubrick was raised in New York City, in the Bronx. He cut his teeth as a photographer, first for his school newspaper, then, from the moment he finished high school, working for Look magazine.1 While photographing…
