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The Shining, by K. J. Donnelly

Nathan Abrams considers an attempt to unravel the mysteries of Kubrick鈥檚 cult masterpiece

Published on
June 20, 2019
Last updated
August 19, 2019
Source: Shutterstock

The Shining, argues K. J. Donnelly, is 鈥渢he most well-known cult film鈥. Whether it has earned that moniker is debatable, but Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 1980 film has certainly inspired reams of scholarly analysis, YouTube fan videos, blogs and a documentary devoted to unlocking its purported secrets, Rodney Ascher鈥檚 Room 237 (2012). Vivian Kubrick鈥檚 film Making 鈥淭he Shining鈥 (1980) incorporates the only extant footage of her father at work. There鈥檚 even a podcast dedicated to parsing the film 2 minutes and 37 seconds at a time. This outpouring, or deluge 鈥 millions of words written and uttered by thousands of people 鈥 has reached an 鈥渁lmost Biblical level of exegesis鈥, Donnelly says, giving it the status of 鈥渜uite possibly the most scrutinised film of all time鈥. This raises the question: do we need yet another book on The Shining and has its author done enough to justify its publication?

Before I answer that question, one must ask: what is it about this seemingly simple 鈥済host story鈥 that has inspired such devotion? Part of the mystery lies in its creator. Kubrick has earned the (undeserved) reputation of being a hermitic, Howard Hughes-like, paranoid individual, cut off from the world. So allegedly reclusive and anonymous was Kubrick that a man could get away undetected with impersonating him for several years.

Meanwhile, he has been canonised, Donnelly points out, as an 鈥渋nfallible perfectionist鈥 with 鈥渙verwhelming, God-like control and agency鈥, so any continuity errors or ambiguities in his films are interpreted as coded messages. And The Shining is full of them: the hotel鈥檚 structural impossibilities, the hedge maze that is not visible in the opening establishing shot, the scrapbook that goes nowhere, the uneasy tension between the psychological and the supernatural, to cite just a few. These have spawned a host of theories, that The Shining is about the Holocaust, the genocide of the Native Americans 鈥 or Kubrick鈥檚 confession for having faked the moon landings.

To give a taste of the book鈥檚 analysis, Donnelly notes how Roger Luckhurst (author of the first English-language book specifically on the film) misspelled hotel manager Stuart Ullman鈥檚 name as 鈥淯llmann鈥. This, Donnelly suggests, makes him 鈥渁ppear more Germanic and less Jewish鈥 and is 鈥渁 subliminal spelling mistake, registering the unconscious impact and undercurrent of transposed Holocaust memory in The Shining鈥. Such laser-like criticism is most welcome but is ironically and immediately undercut by the author鈥檚 own misspelling of Kubrick鈥檚 wife鈥檚 uncle 鈥 the notorious Nazi film-maker Veit Harlan 鈥 as 鈥淰eidt鈥, registering his own 鈥渦nconscious impact and undercurrent of transposed Holocaust memory鈥 in The Shining, for Conrad Veidt famously played Major Strasser in Michael Curtiz鈥檚 Casablanca (1942).

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Although Donnelly聽largely聽omits some newer scholarship from his coverage, I did learn one or two things. One of the most prominent musicians used in the film, singer Al Bowlly, was killed by a Luftwaffe bomb in 1941. The very same section of Bartok鈥檚 Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta was used in a 1968 Doctor Who story, 鈥淭he Web of Fear鈥 鈥 a show we know Kubrick watched.

Nonetheless, despite the criticisms, Donnelly鈥檚 succinct book (a mere 128 pages) provides a useful trail of crumbs for navigating through the particularly labyrinthine scholarship and criticism surrounding this film.

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Nathan Abrams is professor of film studies at Bangor University and the author of Stanley Kubrick: New York Jewish Intellectual (2018) and Eyes Wide Shut: Stanley Kubrick and the Making of His Final Film (with Robert Kolker, 2019).


The Shining
By K. J. Donnelly
Wallflower Press
144pp, 拢11.99
ISBN 9780231187237
Published 3 July 2018

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Still keeping us in suspense

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