THE SCOOPDirector: Stanley Kubrick
Cast: Sterling Hayden, Coleen Gray, Vince Edwards, Jay C. Flippen, Ted de Corsia, Marie Windsor, Elisha Cook Jr.
Plot: Crooks plan and execute a daring racetrack robbery.
Genre: Crime/Drama/Thriller/Film-Noir
Awards: Nom. for 1 BAFTA - Best Film from any Source.
Runtime: 85min
Rating: PG for some violence, and brief language.
TRAILER:
IN RETROSPECT
“You like money. You've got a great big
dollar sign there where most women have a heart.”
Only
Stanley Kubrick’s third feature after Fear
and Desire (1953) and Killer’s Kiss
(1955), The Killing is perhaps the
film that alerted the world to the talents of a young photographer turned
filmmaker. Part crime-noir, part thriller, The
Killing calls to attention the assuredness of Kubrick’s direction, and his
skill of crafting brilliant, structured screenplays.
The
film treats the generic heist film in a revolutionary way, with Kubrick opting
to focus on playing with its narrative structure. He tells the story of a gang
of seemingly educated crooks who plan and execute an audacious racetrack
robbery that could be worth a few millions of dollars, but tells it in such a
way that it is intentionally disorienting.
The
film’s non-linear style of storytelling gives viewers plenty of flashbacks and
flashforwards, intercut with scenes that make up its chronological backbone. This
is more evident in the film’s second and third acts, with the first act solely
used to develop the characters. Despite the film operating like a structural
experiment, Kubrick doesn’t lose sight of two other key elements that make the
film work – rich character development, and a potent sense of suspense.
The Killing stars Sterling Hayden as the leader of the
group, but the film doesn’t really have a lead character. It features an
ensemble cast with enough screen time for each character to shine, and have
sufficient closure by the end of the film.
While
the structure of the film may have played a part in creating a unique
experience that sees actors passing the baton from one to another in terms of lighting
up the screen, the characters never seem intrusive, but appear to be, directly
or indirectly, part of a well-oiled machine that drives the narrative in a
rhythmic manner.
A
narrator narrates the film, as if recounting one of the most daring heists of
all time. But the non-linear style cleverly creates strong suspense, even when
the audience is aware of how a particular situation will turn out. Running at a
compact 85 minutes, The Killing is
tightly-paced, and is one of Kubrick’s more entertaining films – this is
considering the fact that historically,
Kubrick was an innovative and controversial filmmaker first, and an
entertainer last.
Verdict:
Kubrick treats the
crime-noir genre in a revolutionary non-linear storytelling way in what is one
of the most effective American heist films ever made.
GRADE: A- (8.5/10 or 4 stars)
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