Bobby Roberts
Banned

Today would have been Kubrick's 85th birthday.
I don't even know if it's arguable that he's one of the most influential directors that ever lived. His styles show up in all manner of movie that you wouldn't think could hold a Kubrick influence, and yet, there it is, in works by Wes Anderson, and Christopher Nolan, and Gus Van Sant, and Steven Spielberg, and so on and so on.
Started as a teenage photographer, cut his teeth on War and Noir and then ascended to flat-out cinematic genius with 2001.
What's your favorite Kubrick? Is there a single Kubrick that most will agree was his "Best?"
I'm personally gonna be watching The Shining tonight. Either that or The Killing - which I still have on Criterion laserdisc
Feel free to post screenshots from your favorite scenes, because - and it's said a lot, but it's especially true with Kubrick - every single frame he shot was a portrait.
edit: Seems only right Hal should get some say in this.
On the occasion of Stanley Kubrick’s 85th birthday, BFI sight and sound magazine writer Nick Wrigley explores the director’s favourite films and viewing habits with the help of Kubrick’s right-hand man, Jan Harlan.
Interview with Harlan : http://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/...ews/right-hand-man-jan-harlan-stanley-kubrick
Stanley Kubrick's favourite films list (includes surprises like "white men can't jump" and how also how he didn't like "wizard of oz" ):
http://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/polls-surveys/stanley-kubrick-cinephile