The Shining. Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall

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MOVIESCENE

3 жыл бұрын

The Shining (1980) Directed by Stanley Kubrick
Starring: Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd
The Shining is a 1980 psychological horror film produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick and co-written with novelist Diane Johnson. The film is based on Stephen King's 1977 novel of the same name and stars Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Scatman Crothers, and Danny Lloyd.
#TheShining #JackNicholson #StanleyKubrick #BestScene #MovieScene

Пікірлер: 637
@jackspry9736
@jackspry9736 22 күн бұрын
RIP Shelley Duvall (July 7, 1949 - July 11, 2024), aged 75 You will be remembered as a legend.
@jedicraftmaster2426
@jedicraftmaster2426 18 күн бұрын
Rest In Piece. An amazing actress and will go down in history for one of the greatest performances of all time and not just that but as a fighter and advocate. She will be missed
@vinzelrato
@vinzelrato 13 күн бұрын
she is a gem of an actress. Like one out of a billion. And I do mean it
@beardedphilosopher2158
@beardedphilosopher2158 2 жыл бұрын
Jack said that Shelley Duval was the most talented actress he ever work with
@calliethomas2296
@calliethomas2296 2 жыл бұрын
Awwww that’s so sweet. Shelly is extremely talented
@howtoeataham
@howtoeataham 2 жыл бұрын
She did an awesome job in the movie. Kind of pisses me off seeing how people nominated her for a razzie and said her acting was bad.
@Nameless-pt6oj
@Nameless-pt6oj 2 жыл бұрын
The nomination was rescinded.
@renastemocin1462
@renastemocin1462 Жыл бұрын
We will never ever see a acting performance of those 2 again. Perfection.
@beardedphilosopher2158
@beardedphilosopher2158 Жыл бұрын
@@renastemocin1462 sad but true
@OfficerDok1996
@OfficerDok1996 2 жыл бұрын
This is me after a 15 hour shift
@cheekyegg
@cheekyegg 2 жыл бұрын
and 10 pints
@johnspinelli9396
@johnspinelli9396 Жыл бұрын
@@cheekyegg both for me 😂
@AdamRuley
@AdamRuley Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 any man can act like this after a shift
@Psyfi85
@Psyfi85 Жыл бұрын
This
@thomasswinney3420
@thomasswinney3420 Жыл бұрын
Holy shit so accurate
@fray3dendsofsanity
@fray3dendsofsanity 11 ай бұрын
The best part of this movie is how terrifying it is despite being in broad daylight or well lit rooms in many scenes. Many horror movies rely on darkness
@leonpaelinck
@leonpaelinck 10 ай бұрын
He even turns on the lights for the finale
@RevCo78
@RevCo78 10 ай бұрын
Midsommar does the same.
@sirnoname6943
@sirnoname6943 8 ай бұрын
The dusty atmosphere makes it scarier
@trolleriffic
@trolleriffic 7 ай бұрын
That makes it scarier. A lot of horror films rely on threats that hide in the darkness so we get a feeling of safety from being in the light, but this film takes that away.
@toastymaster4445
@toastymaster4445 6 ай бұрын
The rotting woman in Room 237 is a good example. In every other horror movie her and the whole scene would be very dimly lit or almost completely dark, while in this movie she and the Room is brightly lit, showing us all the horror
@nymet2454
@nymet2454 23 күн бұрын
Shelly could really act, that's a hard scene to pull off. RIP Shelly Duvall.
@Kilo416
@Kilo416 Жыл бұрын
I love when he mocks her with the "As soon as possible" line, the acting here is absolute gold
@EstebanGunn
@EstebanGunn Жыл бұрын
It's a mixture of angry, crazy, hateful, and mocking.
@fransayer3125
@fransayer3125 Жыл бұрын
Yeah me and my little brother used to rewind that bit time and time again. When we used to watch this when our Dad went out.
@mcsquilliams7044
@mcsquilliams7044 Жыл бұрын
Just watched this scene about 100 everything about it is perfect cinematography 🔥dialogue 🔥acting 🔥 one of the best scenes if not the best Jack Nicholson scene ever!!
@cameronpickard7456
@cameronpickard7456 Жыл бұрын
and also you think MAYBE he should be taken to a doctor LOL
@glamdolly30
@glamdolly30 Жыл бұрын
@@EstebanGunn That speech would be nothing special, in the mouth of another actor - Jack Nicholson was superb as Jack Torrance, he breathed life and fire into him, creating one of the big screen's most legendary villains.
@muhmuhmenace
@muhmuhmenace Жыл бұрын
When he says “I’m not gonna hurt you. Wendy. Darling. Light of my life!” What an actor.
@Dzanarika1
@Dzanarika1 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@somedorkydude6483
@somedorkydude6483 11 ай бұрын
"Im not going to hurt you im just going to have an epic gamer momment"
@generalgrievous3731
@generalgrievous3731 9 ай бұрын
@@somedorkydude6483 *Cuts to the bathroom scene where he says, "A nigger?"*
@vespermartinis
@vespermartinis 10 ай бұрын
03:47 - “You’ve had your whole fucking life to think things over. What good’s a few minutes more gonna do you now?”. This line, in my opinion, is the scariest line in this scene. The switch from anger to mocking is so skilful.
@bubblegumKUSH
@bubblegumKUSH 9 ай бұрын
#domesticviolence
@omenrama
@omenrama 7 ай бұрын
@@bubblegumKUSH exactly, thats what he really thinks of his wife. She loves this fucking dude so much she is in tears with confusion, and that what he thinks of her - that she is worthless. Wow.
@90sNickfan91
@90sNickfan91 5 ай бұрын
This is the funniest movie I've ever seen in my entire life
@edwardguillen9704
@edwardguillen9704 11 ай бұрын
Jack Nicholson is INSANE in this scene, an absolute mad-man.
@williamhayes2960
@williamhayes2960 8 ай бұрын
According to Stephen King, he was from the very beginning of this movie. Guess the mask finally slipped off.
@allenfreeland6494
@allenfreeland6494 7 ай бұрын
Insane is right and he made me laugh like crazy
@lukenorth7127
@lukenorth7127 2 ай бұрын
@@williamhayes2960Yes, the movie and the novel are very different in several respects. For one, Jack Nicholson’s Jack Torrance was a dirt bag from the beginning, whereas Jack Torrance in the novel seemed to be holding it together - barely - before he started working at the Overlook.
@BabylonCentral
@BabylonCentral Ай бұрын
It is the Hotel.
@danhpr3476
@danhpr3476 2 күн бұрын
I think he makes perfect sense.
@Catdaddy510
@Catdaddy510 11 ай бұрын
Everyone talks about how hard Jack Nicholson worked on this part but nobody gives the stuntman who just rolled down the stairs any credit 😂
@halflifeguitarist4224
@halflifeguitarist4224 10 ай бұрын
for real though theres no way that stuntman didn't get hurt doing that. Incredible shot though, looks insanely realistic because it pretty much is LOL
@wat_chump
@wat_chump 7 ай бұрын
⁠What about the scene in John Wick 4 where John Wick falls down the stairs? The stairs in that scene were wayyy longer And also the stairs were made of concrete
@TeamLuka
@TeamLuka 4 ай бұрын
And knowing "Ten Take Stanley" Kubrick like we all do, that poor sucker probably had to crash those stairs at least 10 times! 😆
@HanruFeng
@HanruFeng 2 ай бұрын
@@TeamLuka I saw on another comment section that the number of takes is three figures, but this is KZfaq, so take it with a grain of salt
@Keith_M00N66
@Keith_M00N66 Ай бұрын
And the stairs from "The Exorcist" ?? Pretttttyyyy long and hard, from memory the "fake" Father Karras has been hurt during his fall....
@YassuYasen
@YassuYasen Жыл бұрын
the way he mocks her!! scary and funny in the same time this is just gold.
@jerramaurice7836
@jerramaurice7836 Жыл бұрын
“As soon as possible” 🤪🤪🤪
@YassuYasen
@YassuYasen Жыл бұрын
@@jerramaurice7836 this phrase with that crazy attitude The best idea to encounter your spouse delay or friend time 😅
@castortroy1727
@castortroy1727 Жыл бұрын
Nicholson is one of my favorite classic Hollywood icons in history. 😂 In Stanley Kubrick's loosely based film adaption of Stephen King's the Shining, like in King's novel of the Shining and the more faithful blacksheep TV miniseries adaption, the supernatural forces of the Overlook Hotel including all of the Overlook Hotel's trapped, imprisoned evil human souls of its dead former guests and staff, demons and poltergeists as well as the sentient/self-aware demonic entity of the Overlook Hotel itself which was always alive and self-aware as a sentient, living, breathing evil eldritch entity-location with a sentient mind, animated supernatural power and demonic spirit of its own, the Management, Nicholson's Jack Torrance was A1 batshit crazy/insane and mentally ill and abusive before traveling to the Overlook Hotel in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado from Boulder, Vermont originally and then Denver, Colorado. And Nicholson's Jack Torrance, opposite of his novel counterpart Jack Torrance that was a fairly good, decent man and loving father and husband to Wendy and Danny Torrance, despite Jack's many flaws and mistakes as a hot-headed alcoholic from an abusive childhood background that Jack and his three siblings and their mother suffered from their alcoholic, hospital surgeon employed, violent and insane father Mark Anthony Torrance, and despite Jack's flaws including his past accidental, unintentional physical abuse/assault on Danny in Danny's younger childhood years one to two years before the story in the Shining starts, while attempting to discipline/spank Danny in a drunken rage and loss of self control and his volatile temper. Jack in the book imo was also born mentally ill and imbalanced, worsened by his traumatic, abusive childhood from his dead drunken father and tormentor/abuser and Jack's alcoholism which he inherited but genuinely loved his family and was easily corrupted by the evil, malicious supernatural influence and demonic possession of the Overlook Hotel's sentient demonic entity and animated supernatural force and power, the Management/the Manager/the Caretaker, which was a demon that originated from a Thinny imo and personal fan theory, a dimensional portal in Stephen King's Dark Tower book series described as an interdimensional portal in which living human beings, creatures and spirits can cross over into other dimensions and worlds. I believe the Overlook Hotel was built on a Thinny, described in appearance as a tear over the Earth. I believe the Manager demon came from and through the Thinny and possibly harnessed the portal in order to possess the entire Overlook Hotel's building structure and location since the Hotel's construction first began. Jack was brainwashed, manipulated and influenced by the Hotel's imprisoned evil human souls of its dead former guests and staff including late former winter caretaker Delbert Grady, who brutally butchered and massacred his own family including his wife and their two physically identical/twin sister daughters due to Grady going insane from cabin fever and isolation from months confined within the demon possessed, sentient, ghost, demon and poltergeist haunted titanic Overlook Hotel and the supernatural influence and demonic possession of the Overlook Hotel itself (its sentient demonic spirit, the Management ) and the Hotel's malevolent ghosts of its dead former inhabitants. Which Grady and his eight and ten year old daughters could see or interact with having the telepathic powers of the Shining as well, albeit to a less intense extent than Danny Torrance or Dick Hallorann. As did Jack Torrance himself. Hence why and how the Hotel's demonic entity, the Manager, and its enslaved human souls of Grady, Lloyd the bartender, late former corrupt owner Horace Derwent, who was a self made billionaire playboy, entrepreneur and accountant with mafia ties that purchased the Overlook Hotel in its prime but state of structure decay from abandonment and neglect, which Derwent renovated, reopened under Derwent's then new ownership and management and celebrated with the Hotel's eternal and endlessly replayed/relived phantom masquerade costume Ball which Derwent hosted at the Overlook Hotel in the summer of the 1940's (1921 in Kubrick's film version) to celebrate his new Hotel's Grand reopening, renovation and new ownership and management. The Hotel's evil spirits brainwashed, manipulated and influenced Jack as Jack's descent into insanity from cabin fever and isolation was borderline complete, convincing Jack, especially after influencing Jack to drink and get drunk from the Hotel's spiritually animated ghost liquor real enough in the mortal living world for Jack to not only envision but ingest and make Jack intoxicated quickly, to murder his wife and 5 year old child. The Management and its ghosts possessed Jack's physical body and isolation deranged, drunken, demon and ghost possessed mind to make Jack kill Wendy and Danny for the Management to absorb and possess his son's telepathic powers to break free and expand its diabolical supernatural power and entity as well as the Hotel's imprisoned evil human souls, demons and poltergeists, farther beyond the Overlook Hotel's walls and grounds of its building the Manager possessed, absorb more mortal souls and their psychic energy and powers if they shined as well, kill and possess more people on Earth and cause destruction and become a God like entity imo. In the book Jack briefly regained his sanity and self control in his final stage of demonic possession to warn his child to run away from himself (Jack/the Hotel and its many malevolent human ghosts inside of Jack's body) telling Danny he's sorry and loves him before the Hotel killed the real Jack Torrance by smashing Jack's face in with the wooden Roque mallet. In Kubrick's film version, Nicholson's Jack Torrance was not only insane from the beginning, but a reincarnation of a former groundskeeper of the Overlook Hotel in the 1920's. And Nicholson's Jack had no redemption or salvation in the end and was reclaimed by the Management, its supernatural legion of ghosts, demons and poltergeists after freezing to death and endlessly relived Derwent's eternal 1940's (1920's in Kubrick's film adaption) Fourth of July costume Ball.
@castortroy1727
@castortroy1727 Жыл бұрын
Up until the malicious, murderous, evil human spirit of dead ex-winter caretaker Delbert Grady (mortally reincarnated in his second life on Earth as Charles Grady when alive, as Jack Torrance in Kubrick's classic Hollywood movie adaption of Stephen King's the Shining was a reincarnation of a former groundskeeper/Caretaker of the Overlook Hotel in its prime years in the roaring twenties (early 1920's) era of Horace Derwent's Grand lavish 1920's (1940's in the novel) Fourth of July unmasking costume party Derwent celebrated in his younger middle aged years of his mortal life as a living human to celebrate his reopening, renovation and new ownership of the Overlook Hotel that Derwent personally purchased with his millions of billions of dollars from his self made business empire, Derwent Enterprises, which Derwent was founder and CEO head chief business executive over. In Kubrick's film version of the Shining, as confirmed by Grady releasing the imprisoned, trapped, fully deranged and demon and ghost possessed Jack Torrance, who was already a bad, twisted, evil man, who was born mentally ill, emotionally unstable, and more outwardly violent and directly/intentionally abusive towards Wendy and Danny, and merely went more completely insane from his combination of months of cabin fever and isolation as Jack in Kubrick's film adaption was already in the final stage of a psychological/psychotic breakdown before coming to the Overlook Hotel with his wife and telepathic son, and the supernatural influence and demonic possession of the Overlook Hotel's sentient demonic entity, the Management, which was the demonic supernatural force/entity that possessed the Overlook Hotel's building structure and location since the Hotel's beginning construction in the late 1800s/finished in the early to mid 1900's. Nicholson's Jack Torrance, in contrast to Jack Torrance in King's novel that loved Wendy and Danny with his entire mortal being despite his human flaws and mistakes as a recovering alcoholic, short tempered, born mentally ill and childhood abuse trauma warped individual that accidentally, unintentionally broke Danny's arm attempting to spank a younger child/toddler Danny in a drunken, enraged stupor. And redeemed his mortal human soul in the end of King's novel adaption of the Shining, his original literary classic paperback, by fighting the demonic possession and bodily control of the Overlook Hotel's self-aware demonic entity of the Manager, the demonic entity that possessed the Overlook Hotel's building structure and location since its beginning, and it's supernatural legion of imprisoned evil human ghosts of the Hotel's dead former guests and staff, telling Danny to run away from him/the Manager and its enslaved malevolent human souls inside of Jack's body, apologized to his son for Jack's selfish actions in his final stage of insanity from cabin fever, isolation and the Hotel's supernatural influence and demonic possession by allowing the Manager/Caretaker and its malevolent human ghosts of the Hotel's dead former inhabitants, which the Hotel's sentient, demonic, spiritually animated supernatural power (the Management) manifested its power as the imprisoned, trapped ghosts of Lloyd the bartender, late former winter caretaker Delbert Grady, who served eternally as the Hotel's butler and waiter for the fellow ghosts and dead former guests and staff of the Overlook Hotel's past in its endlessly relived, eternal masquerade unmasking costume Ball hosted by Harry Derwent in the 1940's in the book and 1920's in Kubrick's film adaption. Plus influenced Jack to relapse and begin drinking again from its animated phantom liquor to make Jack drunk in his final stage of his psychological breakdown from isolation and the Hotel's influence and possession, convinced to kill his wife and son so the Management, its human ghosts, demons and poltergeists could possess Danny's telepathic power and gift to break free of the Overlook Hotel's building structure and grounds into the world beyond the Overlook Hotel and even the state of Colorado itself, kill and possess more mortal human beings, cause ultimate death, destruction and carnage, absorb mortal human souls and their telepathic powers if they had the telepathic gift of the Shining, to make its demonic spirit more powerful into a titanic God like diabolical entity like Pennywise the clown/It in the fictional Stephen King universe of his connected books and characters of the king verse. Only It lived under the small logging Yankee town of Derry, Maine, being an evil alien-demonic entity/monster hybrid (cross breed/half-breed demonic entity and extraterrestrial/alien monster) that physically manifested Its final physical feeding form on Earth as a gigantic black spider alien-demon cross breed monster, the closest the living mortal human mind can see to Its true form, which was actually a titanic, eternal glowing core/Lovecraft styled eldritch entity composed of orange, superhuman and supernatural immortal powerful destructive lights. AKA the Deadlights which existed in the fictional alternate universe of the Macroverse beyond earth and our mortal universe and solar system galaxy, endlessly opposing the good, benevolent entities of the giant Turtle that vomited the entire mortal universe before the barriers to the Macroverse and the unknown "Other," above the Turtle, which I believe was an unnamed, mystery ridden personification entity of the common religious styled "God," the benevolent, angelic creator and God entity/force that was the creator of the Macroverse, the mortal universe of Earth and its surrounding planets in the galaxy and the mortal, living human race, whom the Other and the Turtle worked through and alongside via the Losers Club kids in Derry to beat and eventually kill Its physical body and feeding form on Earth of the giant alien demon hybrid spider monster. It possessed the entire Maine town of Derry and the majority of Derry's local native residents and inhabitants and influenced or possessed individuals, most already bad or evil people like Henry Bowers the psychotic greaser gang leader and sadistic, vicious, short fused and sociopathic neighborhood and grade school bully, with Bowers already going insane from his psychotic ex-Marine neo-nazi skinhead father's physical bodily abuse, torture and corrupting, racist, sexist, murderous influence combined with Its supernatural influence and demonic possession of Henry to do Its dirty work and It influenced or spellbound the residents of the town to not notice or turn a blind eye to crimes, attacks, and murders It influenced.
@YassuYasen
@YassuYasen Жыл бұрын
@@castortroy1727 thanks I didn't know all of that, that he went thru all of that ... u just made me admire him more and thanks for going thru all of that typing and so it must took you alot of time and effort and I'm grateful for that.
@Jackal_El_Lobo34
@Jackal_El_Lobo34 2 жыл бұрын
I love the subtle detail of how the music stops briefly after Jack breaks from his insanity for moment when he notices that Wendy is swinging the bat but then kicks in again when he starts taunting her sadistically.
@StudMacher96
@StudMacher96 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 so funny man
@MrMcsia
@MrMcsia 9 ай бұрын
4:23 The sounds she's making give me the chills. Her fear and despair is so blood-real. Shelley Duvall deserved an Oscar nomination for this!
@patrickclynes5881
@patrickclynes5881 9 ай бұрын
She suffered making this movie apparently...take after take and so on...check out...the making of the shining vids online...eye opener stuff
@scaramonga
@scaramonga 9 ай бұрын
Kubrick worked her to the bone, till she was emotionally drained, and eventually damaged her beyond repair. A good role, but it came at a terrific cost to her wellbeing.
@47hundo86
@47hundo86 8 ай бұрын
Ive never seen it as an adult i just remember it being on tv sometimes growing up but is theres something to her character? Is she meant to be this slow? Genuinely asking ima watch it tho
@Murgatroydian
@Murgatroydian 6 ай бұрын
The character (and Shelly apparently) was debilitated by fear and trauma making her seem so.
@Flash-sr8hm
@Flash-sr8hm Ай бұрын
​@47hundo86 she isnt "slow". She's trapped, literally, in a no escape situation with a man who has lost his mind.
@Crazymike1975
@Crazymike1975 23 күн бұрын
Rest in Peace Shelley Duvall
@marytate6637
@marytate6637 23 күн бұрын
I'm writing that today is Thursday July 11, 2024 and Shelley Duvall died today at age 75.
@jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
@jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 Жыл бұрын
God, do you have any idea how difficult it is to do what Jack did in this scene? Unbelievable really
@LINJ638
@LINJ638 Жыл бұрын
He is sadistic to the core. PERIOD.
@stephvandykeozzy
@stephvandykeozzy Жыл бұрын
The thing is, the hotel is haunted and the ghosts have influenced him. Not only that but due to the fact that him and his family have been stuck inside during the whole winter due to a blizzard.
@ragingriccor9999
@ragingriccor9999 Жыл бұрын
Well, it is easy to imitate Jack’s every line in this scene. But let’s just say that Jack didn’t do this scene, or that you had no idea that he did this scene. Given either one of those scenarios, it’d be quite unlikely anyone would think to perform on their own the way Jack did.
@Psyfi85
@Psyfi85 Жыл бұрын
Indeed, although it is perhaps a recreation of..Stanley. We all know he took his secrets to the grave and I think this scene possibly represents Christiane “finding out” about his involvement with NASA, “a contract” “what would happen to my future if I fail” etc. Certainly makes one wonder.
@CALLAHAN19
@CALLAHAN19 Жыл бұрын
No it was nothing to him,, it wasn't difficult for Nicholson at all...
@leevanqueef2658
@leevanqueef2658 9 ай бұрын
I love how she swings the bat in an 'oh so desperate and pathetic way. Showing her complete vulnerability in the scene. And then, at the climax of the scene, it changes to a more purposeful 'swing' that gives her the scene. Truly remarkable acting.
@messybuttons7525
@messybuttons7525 20 күн бұрын
She shocks herself at first because she actually does it … then she leans into it and really hurts him. Imagine hurting the person you love. There’s a hesitancy, a want to believe he won’t hurt her .. but she knows he will and lets go and goes for it.
@ramishagreene8819
@ramishagreene8819 22 күн бұрын
R.I.P shelly duvall
@Nameless-pt6oj
@Nameless-pt6oj 23 күн бұрын
Rest in Peace, Shelley Duvall (1949-2024)
@nitawhite5227
@nitawhite5227 Жыл бұрын
Imagine this man with those facial expression coming at you up the stairs talking about I'm not gonna hurt you I'm just gonna bash your brain out. Jack's facial expressions are top tier and unmatched. I wonder if there's a smidgen of a mad man really in the dude to be able to play crazy so well.
@castortroy1727
@castortroy1727 Жыл бұрын
Right. Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance, like Nicholson's character of Jack Napier/the Joker in the original 1989 Batman, was insane from the beginning and merely went more insane from cabin fever and isolation combined with the supernatural influence and demonic possession of the Overlook Hotel's sentient demonic entity, the Management, the demonic entity that possessed the Overlook Hotel's building structure and location since it was built in the book by Stephen King, Kubrick's loosely based film adaption and the less favored, more book faithful TV miniseries, and its imprisoned evil human ghosts of the Hotel's dead former guests and staff. Whereas Jack Torrance in the book, despite his flaws, loved his wife and son, Wendy and Danny, and redeemed himself before he died in the end. Nicholson's Jack Torrance, aside from being a reincarnation of a former groundskeeper of the Overlook Hotel in the 1920's, as Charles Grady, the late former winter caretaker that went insane from cabin fever and isolation, as well as having some extent of the Shining alongside his twin daughters, which allowed the Hotel's demonic spirit, the Manager/Caretaker and its ghosts to influence and possess Grady to make Grady kill his wife and their two daughters, was a reincarnation of Delbert Grady, the butler of the Overlook Hotel in the 1920's.
@SirFooplesTheThird
@SirFooplesTheThird Жыл бұрын
It also doesn't help that Nicholson had to do just as many takes as Duvall had to. I think everyone would go insane doing the same thing 127 times
@Burzurk1987
@Burzurk1987 Жыл бұрын
It’s called being a great actor.
@user-ln4gd6hx7e
@user-ln4gd6hx7e 9 ай бұрын
When Jack Nicholson plays a normal charecter, that's him acting.
@sealteamryx6758
@sealteamryx6758 2 жыл бұрын
Jack is very committed... he literally went insane for this roll. They had to freeze him to death and bring him back to life to get him back to normal. So dedicated
@jannathompson2262
@jannathompson2262 Жыл бұрын
😂
@patrickc3419
@patrickc3419 5 ай бұрын
If it were Daniel Day Lewis, he would have demanded that Duvall literally hit him with an actual baseball bat.
@childeaterieatkidz4208
@childeaterieatkidz4208 2 жыл бұрын
Jack wanted to give Shelly a hug and tell her she was doing amazing when Stanley Kubrick demanded no one spoke to her. Just cause a man looks crazy and evil doesn't mean he is. Kubrick was the real monster of this movie.
@glamdolly30
@glamdolly30 2 жыл бұрын
Jack Nicholson loves women - Oh I know he has a reputation for affairs, but I mean he genuinely loves women. He was raised by strong women (his mother and his grandmother), and that's why he respects and likes the female of the species. On the 'behind the scenes' video Kubrick's daughter Vivian made, if you look carefully you can see Jack comforting Shelley Duvall when she lays on the floor feeling ill after a gruelling scene (yes, Kubrick was deliberately cruel to her, to get this highly strung performance. Jack's a real gent - he's incredibly funny too! It's a measure of the great actor he is that his broad range allows him to play dark characters like Torrance, who is the polar opposite of himself.
@calliethomas2296
@calliethomas2296 2 жыл бұрын
Kubrick was such a monster, where Jack is the most perfect man alive
@thatoddone321
@thatoddone321 2 жыл бұрын
@@glamdolly30 Well said!
@nickohira1397
@nickohira1397 Жыл бұрын
@@glamdolly30 same I was raised by my mum and have a strong respect for people and more with women
@jasonh6207
@jasonh6207 Жыл бұрын
Shelly Duvall denied that Kubrick ever did anything like that, and was infact very nice to her. This is a stupid Internet urban legend.
@OldSchoolCurt
@OldSchoolCurt Жыл бұрын
Shelly Duvall knocked this performance out of the park!
@dvd541
@dvd541 8 ай бұрын
They don’t make movies like this anymore, absolute masterpiece
@stevencoardvenice
@stevencoardvenice 8 ай бұрын
I said same thing. Masterpiece
@PritchardDirector
@PritchardDirector 5 ай бұрын
mine will be.
@dvd541
@dvd541 5 ай бұрын
@@PritchardDirector I hope so!!
@patrickc3419
@patrickc3419 5 ай бұрын
That’s so weird that initially in 1980, the reviews for it were awful! ???
@zacharytipton9998
@zacharytipton9998 28 күн бұрын
Yeah they do, it’s called “The Lighthouse”
@Nick64266
@Nick64266 28 күн бұрын
I just had the wildest moment while watching this. I had taken some “gummies” and couldn’t stop laughing when Jack out of nowhere says “Have you ever thought about MY responsibilities?!” It’s so out of left field and over exaggerated. And Wendy even being caught off guard saying “What are you talking about?!” sealed the deal as one of the most hilarious things I’ve seen in a while 😂
@guthax30
@guthax30 Жыл бұрын
God...i know from experience: this is dead-on what a drunk looks like when he's in a bad mood. The constant sarcastic mocking of what she's saying is dead-on. The total and complete selfishness and self absorption jack displays...everything. This is the perfect depiction of the worst of alcoholics.
@bubblegumKUSH
@bubblegumKUSH 9 ай бұрын
It really is
@endearingart
@endearingart 6 ай бұрын
You’re not wrong necessarily but Jack’s performance here is definitely more calculated which makes it scarier
@ShaherLuna
@ShaherLuna 3 жыл бұрын
Jack Nicholson is the best actor
@fashionqueen7323
@fashionqueen7323 2 жыл бұрын
He really is 💯
@LavaSharkTiff9514
@LavaSharkTiff9514 2 жыл бұрын
I agree 👍
@somedorkydude6483
@somedorkydude6483 Жыл бұрын
Have you ever heard of Corry in the house
@calliethomas2296
@calliethomas2296 Жыл бұрын
@@somedorkydude6483what does that have to do with Jack Nicholson? Btw I love that show 😂
@firenze5555
@firenze5555 10 ай бұрын
I love at 3:08 when he is ranting and says he's signed a letter of agreement, "A CONTRACT!" and the expression and gesture Nicholson makes - just a legend!
@brennan4159
@brennan4159 9 ай бұрын
Love it. My favorite part.
@inomrasmith
@inomrasmith 8 ай бұрын
Same I keep repeating it
@briantrujillo6002
@briantrujillo6002 22 күн бұрын
Rest in Peace Shelley Duvall ✝😔
@TeamLuka
@TeamLuka 4 ай бұрын
This is absolutely one of the greatest scenes in movie history. Between Shelly and Jack's chemistry, the terrifying music, the breathtaking cinematography and camerawork, and direction, nothing can touch it. (That goes for the whole film)
@DixieNormous06
@DixieNormous06 Жыл бұрын
At 2:46, Jack flashes 6,6,6 with his hand and then points to himself.
@ChrisBrown-ir6sf
@ChrisBrown-ir6sf 6 ай бұрын
Indicating he is possessed by a demon ?
@whosoever5409
@whosoever5409 9 ай бұрын
The little laugh Jack does after he delivers the line at 4:16 is so funny to me lol he’s such a terrifying yet amusing and charming villain!
@mudflapsmoviereviews
@mudflapsmoviereviews 9 ай бұрын
Jack Nicholson's best role ever!! He was phenomenal!
@hks20psi
@hks20psi 22 күн бұрын
R.I.P. Shelley! Wonderful performance here.
@bilicana
@bilicana 23 күн бұрын
Rip Shelley 😢❤
@prettyprincess28
@prettyprincess28 23 күн бұрын
Rip Shelley🕊️
@jlau9268
@jlau9268 Жыл бұрын
I know this scene is meant to be creepy and suspenseful and it is but there are parts where i just have to laugh, like when he imitates her saying "as soon as possible" 😂
@originalkingalpha5116
@originalkingalpha5116 11 ай бұрын
Exactly!😂 Also when he gives off a little giggle after threatening to bash her brains right dafuq in.🍻😂
@jlau9268
@jlau9268 11 ай бұрын
@@originalkingalpha5116 Yes lmao darling love of my life i said i'm not gonna hurt you, i'm just gonna bash your brains in! 🤣🤣
@magallanesagustin4952
@magallanesagustin4952 10 ай бұрын
Another creepy scene with a comedic moment is when Jack talks to Grady in the bathroom. Jack's face after he mentions Grady's murder-suicide is fucking hilarious.
@originalkingalpha5116
@originalkingalpha5116 10 ай бұрын
@@magallanesagustin4952 Yeah Jack was like "Mind telling me about your little mishap, buddy?"😂😂😂
@paultabili6731
@paultabili6731 9 ай бұрын
My own personal take is that this movie is a VERY black comedy.
@mspc7401
@mspc7401 6 ай бұрын
Whenever Jack Nicholson is angry in a particular movie scene, he always does an excellent job at it. 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@thetactician1060
@thetactician1060 2 жыл бұрын
You've had your whole fucking LIFE to think things over 🤣🤣🤣 One of the best films in movie history
@ErinJeanette
@ErinJeanette Жыл бұрын
The way the music comes creeping back in when he smiles at what he's written and sounds like a spider as he comes towards her. So scary.
@richardsiciliano7117
@richardsiciliano7117 Жыл бұрын
You've had your whole fucking life to think things over..... What a great line.
@Poobell1
@Poobell1 Жыл бұрын
got to be one of the best scenes in movie history the tension finally boiling over is brilliant
@sleyaraze8916
@sleyaraze8916 11 ай бұрын
They both are such phenomenal actors!! Omg
@backwardsfive719
@backwardsfive719 Жыл бұрын
2:13 idk why that line from Jack makes me laugh hard. It just does 😂💀
@bubblegumKUSH
@bubblegumKUSH 9 ай бұрын
Me too !
@johnspinelli9396
@johnspinelli9396 8 ай бұрын
Because it is funny lol
@ZachAsaD
@ZachAsaD Жыл бұрын
This scene is my all time favourite, Stanley was a genius I’m a bit obsessed with his work at the moment, I feel like nothing will ever come close
@renastemocin1462
@renastemocin1462 Жыл бұрын
Il proof you wrong see you in 15 years
@ZachAsaD
@ZachAsaD Жыл бұрын
@@renastemocin1462 I hope so. I’ve always said there’s a golden age coming
@NathanAlexander_Love
@NathanAlexander_Love Жыл бұрын
I love how the music changes after Wendy says “I just need a chance to think things over.”
@Beltzer0072
@Beltzer0072 23 күн бұрын
Just found out about Shelley, Jack Nicholson said she was the hardest working actress he ever worked with. Rest peacefully.
@bobjilesen8450
@bobjilesen8450 2 жыл бұрын
Insane scene! Love Nickolson acting. Its sooo good.
@CALLAHAN19
@CALLAHAN19 Жыл бұрын
My uncle looked just like Jack in the early 1980s an it was a perfect time to when that movie came out he would stick his head around the door an say things that scared the shit out of other family members.. He recently died in 2018
@chardeputy5149
@chardeputy5149 8 ай бұрын
Best line in movie "you've had your whole fkn life to think things over. What's a few more minutes gonna do you now?" Luv it!
@BlueLeopard200
@BlueLeopard200 23 күн бұрын
RIP Shelley Duvall
@piovillanueva3980
@piovillanueva3980 7 ай бұрын
How Kubrick never won an Oscar for directing will forever be beyond me. Greatest of all time.
@ryanstout110
@ryanstout110 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the reasons Why the shining is my favorite movie of all time.
@darthkahn45
@darthkahn45 8 ай бұрын
I feel some people don't get why this is seen as one of the scariest movies ever made. Thinking you measure it on jumpscares and the like. No, the scary thing about the Shining is the potential, however small for someone you love and trust completely could, one day, for seemingly no reason at all...become Jack. And it's happened. There are real life cases of it happening where a mother, father, husband, son has just killed their family for no apparent reason.
@stevencoardvenice
@stevencoardvenice 5 ай бұрын
Exactly
@stevencoardvenice
@stevencoardvenice 5 ай бұрын
He's losing his mind
@Baseds_Backup_Account
@Baseds_Backup_Account 10 ай бұрын
Greatest film ever made that has stood the test of time and always will forever just like horror itself tbh.
@MrKlasse01
@MrKlasse01 Жыл бұрын
He plays the original psychopatic role in this movie. Jack N. was the king,
@ambermank2791
@ambermank2791 3 жыл бұрын
i love this scene so much
@castortroy1727
@castortroy1727 Жыл бұрын
I believe Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance was batshit crazy from the start. Having been suffering a hidden, repressed psychological breakdown spiral before accepting the Caretaker's job. Whereas Jack Torrance in the novel by Stephen King and the less favored TV miniseries was a decent, fairly good man at core despite his many human flaws and mistakes, that loved Wendy and Danny. In the book Jack redeemed his soul, fought the Overlook Hotel's demonic possession of the Hotel's sentient demonic entity, the Management and its evil human ghosts to tell his son he loved him, apologized for his actions that allowed the Hotel to use him and telling Danny to run away before the Hotel and its ghosts kill the real Jack by bludgeoning him to death with the wooden Roque mallet. As opposed to a fireman's axe. Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance simply was already psycho but functional and went completely psychotic more so due to isolation, cabin fever, the supernatural influence and eventually the demonic possession of the Overlook Hotel's sentient demonic entity that possessed the Hotel's building structure, the Management, and the Hotel's ghosts of its dead former guests and staff who inhabited the Overlook Hotel and some whom died within its structure. But Jack in Kubrick's film more so went along with the Hotel and its evil spirits willingly and allowed the Hotel's demonic spirit and ghosts to take him over without resistance. Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance was also a reincarnation of a former groundskeeper of the Overlook Hotel in the 1920's. As proven in the final photo pre-credits. As Charles Grady was a reincarnation of Delbert Grady, the Overlook Hotel's butler in the 1920's.
@bgoodfella7413
@bgoodfella7413 9 ай бұрын
Thx for the in depth analysis. I havent read Stephen Kings book or watched the TV mini series but it sounds incredibliy lame compared to Stanley Kubricks masterpiece.
@rickyray2794
@rickyray2794 2 ай бұрын
@@bgoodfella7413 Dr Sleep is also amazing.
@JustSomeCanadianGuy
@JustSomeCanadianGuy Жыл бұрын
The way he walks in and watches her for a few seconds before saying "How do ya like it?" Now that's fuckin' creepy.
@suvituomi5510
@suvituomi5510 19 күн бұрын
RIP Shelley Duvall, absolute legend❤😢
@Genevieve111
@Genevieve111 8 ай бұрын
Jack is in a League of his own... Brilliant... Brilliant... Brilliant... 💕
@smithsj227
@smithsj227 9 ай бұрын
This scene right here really illustrates why I think the movie is far more terrifying than the book. Don't get me wrong I enjoyed the book a lot but Jack in the book is far more sympathetic than movie Jack. Book Jack is a flawed but ultimately good man slowly being driven mad by the hotel exploiting his demons. Movie Jack is already a monster when we meet him, he's just suppressing it, and the hotel convinces him to let loose and act on his pent-up rage toward his family. In this scene, he's tormenting Wendy and loving every second of it, he's not possessed by anyone or anything, this is simply who he is behind the mask, he's unabashedly basking in it, he doesn't have to hide it anymore, and she's completely at this monsters mercy. THAT is fucking terrifying.
@campbell9825
@campbell9825 9 ай бұрын
On my rewatch of this movie I paid a lot of attention to Jack’s mannerisms and you are completely right. At a first glance Jack appears normal at the beginning but every time he speaks to his wife you can sense some deep hatred buried under his supposedly normal dialogue. If he wasn’t already a monster he would’ve fought back against the spirits in the hotel, but he obeyed them gladly
@smithsj227
@smithsj227 9 ай бұрын
​@campbell9825 Yeah, I don't know if you've read the book but book Jack actually fights the spirits. The book is great but I think the movie has more layers to it
@campbell9825
@campbell9825 9 ай бұрын
@@smithsj227 interesting, I’ve been meaning to check the book out but haven’t gotten around to it yet
@smithsj227
@smithsj227 9 ай бұрын
@@campbell9825 It's worth a read, it's almost a complete different story
@Whimsy_Wonders101
@Whimsy_Wonders101 Жыл бұрын
Finally, someone understamds how great this scene is
@criseriksonB0121
@criseriksonB0121 8 ай бұрын
I like the gentle “How do you like it?” From Jack! So peaceful, but so scary
@assasinator1980
@assasinator1980 Жыл бұрын
I wanna see shining again. I wanna see how my brain reacts to it after years of losing 100% of my sanity , while still managing to keep it together. His character is very relatable.
@ranasaint
@ranasaint Жыл бұрын
does he dies here?
@SentienceGeneration
@SentienceGeneration Жыл бұрын
I really hope she is doing okay, she's so pretty. She didn't deserve to be abused by the director.
@nirvanagirllovesrock
@nirvanagirllovesrock 9 ай бұрын
​@@Timmy_DawgsI really hope that's not you in your pfp
@wybren
@wybren 22 күн бұрын
She dead Jimmy. Dead.
@despacito_spajder953
@despacito_spajder953 2 жыл бұрын
0:18 when an instrument is played so wrongully it's frightening
@cnrsz8435
@cnrsz8435 5 ай бұрын
One of the best actings, one of the best films
@snavs420
@snavs420 Жыл бұрын
Wendy...darling...LIGHT of my LIFE!
@OrbvsTomarvm
@OrbvsTomarvm 8 ай бұрын
two actors and a director right at the top of their game.
@Johnny53kgb-nsa
@Johnny53kgb-nsa 8 ай бұрын
The director pushed, and pushed her so hard to get her absolute best performance from her that he wanted to see, that it nearly drove her over the edge.
@Shell_Michelle
@Shell_Michelle Жыл бұрын
He's an amazing actor
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr944
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr944 9 ай бұрын
Ever done print work?
@Shell_Michelle
@Shell_Michelle 9 ай бұрын
@@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr944 Nope
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr944
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr944 9 ай бұрын
You should consider it. That is if you aren't totally financially comfortable.@@Shell_Michelle
@stevencoardvenice
@stevencoardvenice 5 ай бұрын
She's good too
@MalonsMilk
@MalonsMilk 9 ай бұрын
Shelley is amazing in this scene and shows all the hall marks that the abuse she is taking from jack has been played out before to a lesser extent. Watch how she holds the bat, barely able to swing it properly as she’s frightened of readjusting her hands and frightened of the consequence of actually hitting him. By the time she’s got to the top of the stairs she’s managed to get a proper hold of the bat and her resolve to actually slug him has hardened. I also like the way she knows what she really wants to say will get her in trouble with him as its actually been her that is taking care of the boilers and the hotel and not jack at all.
@scooterjamj5995
@scooterjamj5995 2 жыл бұрын
2:38 of course you are!
@wingochan9400
@wingochan9400 Жыл бұрын
In my opinion, when Jack says "How do you like it?" so calmly, that always gives me chills. I just think that's the scariest quote in this video. But that's just my opinion.
@castortroy1727
@castortroy1727 Жыл бұрын
It wasn't solely the countless typed papers that Jack typed endlessly throughout the Torrance Family's winter season stay in the demonic supernatural force-entity possessed, Native American burial ground cursed (Canon only to Kubrick's loosely based film adaption of King's the Shining, as the Hotel wasn't built on an Indian burial ground in the book and the blacksheep faithful to the book TV miniseries adaption of the Shining in the 90s) ghost, demonic entity and poltergeist haunted Overlook Hotel) but the fact Jack Torrance, Nicholson's portrayal, was already secretly mentally ill and emotionally unstable, and was already suffering a mental breakdown before traveling to the Rocky Mountains of Colorado with his wife and 5-year-old gifted, telepathic child and Jack merely went more insane and fully psychotic and homicidal once at the Overlook Hotel due to several months of isolation and cabin fever trapped inside the possessed, sentient/self aware and haunted grand Rocky Mountain Resort Hotel showplace of the world as once labeled by former owner Horace Derwent. Combined with the supernatural influence and demonic possession of the Management/the Manager/Caretaker, the sentient demonic entity of the Overlook Hotel itself, which was a demonic spirit that possessed the Overlook Hotel's building structure and location since it was constructed originally from the beginning. And the Hotel's imprisoned evil human souls of its dead former guests and staff. Only Nicholson's Jack Torrance was batshit crazy from the start, went completely insane from cabin fever and demonic possession of the Overlook Hotel's demonic spirit, the Manager and its many malevolent human ghosts. Jack in Kubrick's film drinking again and getting drunk off the Hotel's supernatural force animated phantom liquor was just icing on the cake to help the Management and its ghosts possess Jack to both kill Wendy and Danny Torrance to possess Danny's psychic abilities and powers of the Shining, alongside its human souls, demons and poltergeists to break its power free of the Hotel's walls and building structure and location to expand its/their power and supernatural entities into the world beyond and become a God like entity and also in Kubrick's loosely based film adaption, the Overlook Hotel's demonic spirit and its ghosts wanted to reclaim a reincarnated Jack Torrance as the reincarnation of the Overlook Hotel's dead past former groundskeeper/Caretaker in the 1920's era of Derwent's lavish 1920's (1940's in the book) unmasking costume Ball on the fourth of July. As Charles Grady, the dead former winter caretaker that went insane from the combination of cabin fever, isolation and the Hotel's influence and demonic possession of its sentient demonic entity that possessed the Overlook Hotel's building structure, the Manager, and its ghosts of the Hotel's late former guests and staff who could interact with and influence or possess Grady himself, as well as his family or two twin daughters at least, because Grady and his daughters possessed the telepathic power and psychic abilities of the Shining, but to a far less powerful extent than Danny or Hallorann. Same goes for Jack himself in the book, Kubrick's film adaption of Stephen King's the Shining and the 97 less favored but novel faithful TV miniseries. Causing Grady, in addition to a psychological breakdown from cabin fever and isolation for several long months, also being a Still active alcoholic that brought months worth supply of hard liquor to the Rocky Mountain demonic entity possessed and sentient Overlook Hotel for the entire winter until Spring and was binge drinking and drunk severely in his final breakdown, demonic supernatural force and ghost possessed, homicidal massacre of his wife and Grady's two psychic twin daughters with an axe before the Hotel allowed or made Grady commit suicide via double barreled shotgun in his mouth. In Kubrick's film version, the late former caretaker, Charles Grady, was a reincarnation of Delbert Grady, the butler and waiter of the Overlook Hotel in its prime years in the 1920's. 1940's in the novel. As Jack Torrance was a reincarnation of the Hotel's groundskeeper in the roaring 20's era of Horace Derwent's reopening, renovation, newly claimed ownership and management of the Overlook Hotel which Derwent celebrated with his costume masquerade Ball. In the book, the reincarnation bit was excluded.
@castortroy1727
@castortroy1727 Жыл бұрын
Jack Torrance in Kubrick's film adaption of Stephen King's the Shining novel was simply a secretly mentally ill, emotionally unstable, violent, abusive sociopath and indifferent to his own actions and mistakes that caused Jack's failures in life including his prep school/college teaching position, which was never explained in Kubrick's film version but in the book Jack battered a rich student for slashing his tires for failing the stuttering rich pretty boy prep because of the kid's (George Hatfield's) stuttering disability. Jack Torrance in the book loved Wendy and Danny and genuinely showed and expressed remorse and regret for his past actions of accidentally abusing Danny physically via breaking his child's arm in a drunken rage attempt to spank him, inadvertently running over an abandoned bicycle on the highway alongside Jack's best friend, colleague and would be boss at both the preparatory college school and over the Overlook Hotel in Colorado on the Board committee of directors, AL Shockley, who was Jack's drinking buddy before both quit cold turkey. In the book Jack redeemed himself in the end, apologized to his son, told Danny he loved him and to run away from Jack and the demonic entity of the Manager/Caretaker/the Management that possessed the Overlook Hotel itself as well as Jack Torrance, Delbert Grady, and several other past former caretakers but solely those who were psychic with the telepathic gift of the Shining or the Hotel used their psychic family members in the building structure of the Overlook Hotel the Manager demon possessed. Before the Manager and its imprisoned supernatural legion of malevolent human ghosts of its dead former guests and staff, killed real Jack by bludgeoning Jack to death with the wooden Roque mallet, forcing Jack under its demonic possession and regained bodily control to bash his entire face and skull in to fully possess Jack's corpse and reveal its spiritual composition of the Hotel's malicious, twisted, greedy human souls that all possessed Jack alongside the Manager itself before Danny's eyes. Regardless, Jack's mortal soul remained trapped behind to haunt the Overlook Hotel in Doctor Sleep, the Stephen King sequel novel of Doctor Sleep and the movie adaption of King's Dr. Sleep as a direct sequel to Stanley Kubrick's loosely based but classic 1980 Hollywood movie adaption of the Shining. Jack Torrance in Kubrick's film version had no redemption in the end, didn't try to fight the Hotel's possession alongside its ghosts, and died a madman and an evil, selfish, murderous, twisted, inhuman embodiment of a once human being and mortal man.
@portraita2679
@portraita2679 Жыл бұрын
I have to admit. I really love old movies like this, especially for the acting, its story, its writing, and its tone. Well, maybe for the make up (such as for zombies type movies), editing (such as for something hard to do), special effects (such as action pack movies), and technologies (such as futuristic type movies), movie nowadays are ahead than the past, and really indulge our eyes with that, but for its storyline, sometimes it looks too shallow. Not all of them, but some. I think, I'd like old movies like this, which without need for special effects or technologies, but maybe less make up and editing. Just pure high class acting that indulge our eyes and also our mind. That'd be perfect. If only just good acting (even without super CGI or anything else) could repsesents that it's a movie genre itself.
@Lenny-Maze1984
@Lenny-Maze1984 Жыл бұрын
Artwork Masterpiece
@assordante2205
@assordante2205 Жыл бұрын
Whats a tragedy is how this woman so so incredibly EMOTIONALLY ABUSED to get her to be this frantic, hysterical, strung out. I forget the details, but google will tell you about it.
@nagarjun385
@nagarjun385 2 ай бұрын
Damn!! Both Jack and Shelly were killing it. I don't like how people tell that Duvall is only there to scream but she's as phenomenal as Nicholson's
@sinbad799
@sinbad799 Жыл бұрын
The most fantastic scene on The Shining
@marymoran8859
@marymoran8859 Ай бұрын
Great acting , great atmosphere.......everything about this scene , this movie is SUBLIME!!!!!!!!!
@doctorsleep1980
@doctorsleep1980 18 күн бұрын
Rest in peace Shelley.. you were genuinely great and as Stephen King said underused..
@jbard9892
@jbard9892 Жыл бұрын
Watching Jack scream "Oh God Damn" before taking a bat to the skull has to the most rewarding moment in american film or television until Ralph Cifaretto ate that linoleum tile.
@Jeff-sp7bg
@Jeff-sp7bg Жыл бұрын
Heeyyyy George hamilton!!
@HorrorNightmarefigurefilmz
@HorrorNightmarefigurefilmz Жыл бұрын
I love when Jack Nickholson plays Jack Torrance
@sober_katz
@sober_katz 8 ай бұрын
what made this scene even more terrifying for me was that i know those facial expressions and that mocking tone all too well from when my mom was angry. kinda brought me back to the childhood memories i really want to forget
@LoudaroundLincoln
@LoudaroundLincoln Күн бұрын
Part of what I love here is the actual work going on in the scene. Concentrating on walking backwards upstairs and staying in the moment probably takes a fair bit of effort.
@lMike2Dopel
@lMike2Dopel 2 жыл бұрын
4:54 WENNNDDDDDAAAAYYYYY 😂
@grandemoonlight5127
@grandemoonlight5127 4 ай бұрын
4:25 always stood out to me the most and I’ll explain why. Wendy is face to face with the love of her life, the man she loves the most but he’s not fully there. He is slowly turning into this egocentric and psychotic monster the overlook hotel has turned him into. She’s absolutely horrified out of her mind for her own safety and Danny’s, thinking to herself how is she going to get out of this? How is she going to escape? To the man she loves with her every breath completely change into another person has got to be insane to witness. The one who is supposed to protect her with his life is now trying his best to kill her. You can clearly see the desperation in her eyes and heart wrenching expression as if she is asking him “what happened to you?” This scene breaks my heart more than terrify me
@christingeorge8345
@christingeorge8345 Жыл бұрын
Her acting is also great
@seasonedsevencolours
@seasonedsevencolours 8 ай бұрын
This scene couldn't have been same without Shelly Duvall's act. Great play throughout this movie ❤
@noelhaynes9608
@noelhaynes9608 4 ай бұрын
The way this scene plays out between Jack and Wendy; it makes me think of an abused wife who's trying to fight off her abusive husband and succeeding at getting away from him.
@lonl123
@lonl123 8 ай бұрын
I know Shelly was mistreated during this shoot, and it messed her up...but goddamn she gives an amazing performance, the look of fear on her face is extremely convincing.
@marymoran8859
@marymoran8859 2 жыл бұрын
Phenomenal actors
@Lalalalalalala67
@Lalalalalalala67 14 күн бұрын
These actors were so talented !! Rip to both of them❤
@jim6820
@jim6820 2 ай бұрын
Working with Stanley Krubrick from what I’ve heard can be very stressful. Always a perfectionist.
@user-xg1qv6jl8p
@user-xg1qv6jl8p 2 күн бұрын
Poor Wendy 😢 The chemistry between Shelly and Jack is flawless 🎉
@alexp448
@alexp448 Жыл бұрын
Probably one of the best horror film scenes of all time. The fear on Shelly Duval's face is real and haunting, Jack Nicholson is unbelievable. Stanley Kubrick is probably one f the best directors of all time.
@baguil02
@baguil02 Жыл бұрын
Probably?
@YKKY
@YKKY 10 ай бұрын
The fact that he bullied her is not important, I get it
@user-cm1di8iy4b
@user-cm1di8iy4b 21 күн бұрын
My favorite Horror Movie of all time coming from being born in ‘77!
@HelenTudor-Douglas
@HelenTudor-Douglas 9 ай бұрын
Never noticed that Shelley Duvall was using an actual Carl Yastrzemski bat. Remember how high Carl held that bat before coming down to swing at the ball? He had a style like, well, the same as Shelley Duvall had in this movie!!! ⚾🤣
@jackbingham8980
@jackbingham8980 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love the way Jack treated Shelley in the bat scene
@sinbad799
@sinbad799 Жыл бұрын
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
The Earlier Caretaker's Name was Delbert Grady
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