The Shining Famous Monsters of Filmland Magazine

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A Shelley Duvall fears for her

life as she's backed against


_| the wall by Jack the Hacker.

YOU haven't died of curiosity yet, wonder- light-year leap ahead of the tech-effects that went
ing what THE SHINING is all about, before.
gather around, open your ears, calm your Earlier, in 1964, he gave the world that strange sci-
fears and your fearless Editor will tell you all about fi sort of black comedy, a doctorial delight to take its
it. Because, like THE EXORCIST, until you're 18 place with such other famous docs as Dr, Jekyll & Mr.
you aren't going to be allowed to see it. Hyde, Dr. X, Dr. Mabuse, Dr. Cyclops, Dr. Caligari,
Never mind; patience, and some day you'll catch up Dr. Moreau, Dr. Who, Dr. Acula: DR.
with it on terrorvision. And when you do, I hope you STRANGELOVE OR: HOW I LEARNED TO
understand it better than I did. STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB.
I promised to tell you all about it (leaving out the And (again R-rated) in the 70s he produced that
R-rated parts, of course). I'll try my best--but I have dark vision of violent decades to come, A
to admit I didn’t “get” it. And you can’t blame it on CLOCKWORK ORANGE.
creeping senility because my young assistant, who’s So Stanley Kubrick took another name to conjure
just exactly one-third my age, didn’t understand it with--FM’S own 13-year-old Stephen “Carrie” King,
either. Brian the Brain drew a blank just like I did on grown older and famous--and adapted his novel “The
the final frame. Shining” to the screen.
“This Inhuman Place” THE STORY OF THE FILM
There is a paragraph in the book (it's a big one--447 Jack Torrance (played by Jack Nicholson) is a
hardcover pages) that goes: former school teacher who is struggling to be a
“This inhuman place,” he said gutturally. “Tony published writer. He applies for a job that promises
told me...this inhuman place...makes...makes...”” He to be perfect for his purposes, in that it will make
shook his head. “Can't remember. very few demands on his time and will leave him plen-
The word little 5-year-old Danny can't remember ty of opportunity to sit at his typewriter and concen-
is-MONSTERS. trate on creating a novel.
sek CK In all fairness, the man (Barry Nelson) who inter-
views him points out that there was a certain
Stanley Kubrick. unpleasantness with a former employee. He went
A name to conjure with. If you don’t already, you berserk, killing his 2 little daughters, murdering his
will one day when you're older. Orson Welles. Alfred wife and then committing suicide. ‘‘Maybe the
Hitchcock. George Pal. Stanley Kubrick's is a name solitude of the long winter months, the isolation, the
like that because he brought 200: A SPACE loneliness, affected his mind,” the manager of the
ODYSSEY to the screen, the scientifilm that was a Overlook lodge theorizes.
“No need to worry,” Jack assures him. “Solitude is
what I'm seeking.”
“The Haunting”
The season's tourists depart from the hotel and
Jack installs himself as caretaker. Accompanying
him are his wife (Shelley Duvall, who is remarkably
believable as the terrified spouse) and 7-year-old son
Danny (Danny Lloyd in, as far as is known, his first
screen appearance).
“inka Danny is possessed of a psychic power known as
“shining”, which seems to be sort of 2-way clair-
voyance, past & futureward. He has inexplicable
split-second visions of 2 little girls in a corridor of the
lodge, of a door with a mysterious word “redrum”
printed on it in red in a childish hand, other weird
peeks at things past and things to come.
Furthermore, Danny seems to be possessed--period.
An alter ego (?) named Tony lives inside his mouth
and talks in a gruff, croaking voice when Danny
crooks & wiggles a finger like an animated
semaphore. Tony cannot be seen or caught because
when any effort is made to get at him he hides in Dan-
ny’s stomach.
Then there is the Overlook itself.
THE AMITYVILLE HORROR.
THE CHANGELING.
THE EVIL itself.
The Overlook is infused with an atmosphere of
brooding violence. An atmos-fear. Dire events have
happened here before; we sense they will occur again.
“Something Wicked This Way Comes”
As the wintry months pass in the lonely lodge, Jack
Danny Lloyd is terribly afroyd of the horrible happen- becomes more & more irritable. He snaps at his wife.
ings in Overlook lodge. He refuses to let her look at his work in progress.
One day Wendy (Mrs. Torrance) sneaks a look at
the pages piled up in her husband's manuscript box.
She is appalled at what she finds.
Blank pages?
No, they're filled alright.
With one sentence multiplied thousands of times:
“All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.”
Actually, it isn’t dull that Jack becomes-it's
devilish.
Hellish things begin to happen.
Is it hallucination or genuine living horror when he
enters the forbidden room, 237? The terror of 237: a
dead woman, her rotting corpse floating in a bathtub,
rising from the stagnant water and, zombielike, ap-
proaching a jittering Jack.
Dick Halloran (Scatman Crothers), chief chef of the
hotel, is alarmed when he tries to communicate with
the lodge and can raise no one.
The eerie events that are happening at the lodge at
about this time would raise the dead--or send the liv-
ing to death’s domain.
Jack goes insane.
His wife knocks him out and imprisons him in a
a food storage room.
The former caretaker (a deadman) lets Jack out.
A mad Jack maniacally chases his own son about in
an icy maze, intent on killing him.
Dick Halloran appears on the scene and is axed in
the chest.
Jack’s wife, shuddering in a paroxysm of horror,
backs up the stairs away from her husband, who had
we gone stark, staring insane and means to murder her
=A = he like a previous caretaker did his wife.
“Enigmatic Ending”
The Wife & The Knife make a terrifying combination Last scene of all:
in the Kubrick-King maniacal movie collaboration.
A series of cuts coming closer & closer to a foto on
the wall in the lodge showing a dance ball that took
place there in 1921.
Jack is in the picture.
Meaning?
Maybe it's explained in the book.
No--wait--someone familiar with the book told me
this scene isn't in it.
Something added by the director.
Is it possible Stanley Kubrick has done it again,
given us an “‘I leave the interpretation up to you” en-
ding a la A SPACE ODYSSEY?
The first reader who can offer the Editor a satisfac-
tory explanation will receive a 2-week vacation, all ex-
penses paid, in the Overlook lodge.
If we can find it.
During the off (your rocker) season.
In the dead of winter.
“P.S.--Perfect Support”
A word about supporting actor Joe Turkel.
He plays Lloyd.
The spectral bartender.
And he's superb.
Cool, efficient, yet subtly foreboding. He doesn't do
anything--but you sense he might. That he's an
emissary of evil--or perhaps the Devil in disguise.
Anyway, it's the kind of performance that over-
night elevates someone who's been around for years
to a new stature among his peers. Turkel would cer-
tainly be an asset to future films of fantasy & horror. Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance cracks up and goes
END crackers in the icy maze in THE SHINING.

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