Lolita (2007)
Lolita Image Cover
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Director:Stanley Kubrick
Studio:Warner Home Video
Writer:Vladimir Nabokov
Rating:4.0 (120 votes)
Date Added:2009-04-13
Last Seen:2016-02-19
ASIN:B000UJ48VI
UPC:0012569648661
Genre:Art House & International
Release:2007-10-23
Location:0745
Duration:152
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Languages:English
Features:Black and White
Custom 1:CopiedR
Stanley Kubrick  ...  (Director)
Vladimir Nabokov  ...  (Writer)
 
James Mason  ...  
Shelley Winters  ...  
Sue Lyon  ...  
Gary Cockrell  ...  
Jerry Stovin  ...  
Oswald Morris  ...  Cinematographer
Anthony Harvey  ...  Editor
Summary: When director Stanley Kubrick released his film adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's controversial novel about a hopelessly pathetic middle-aged professor's sexual obsession with his 12-year-old stepdaughter, the ads read, "How did they ever make a film of "Lolita"?" The answer is "they" didn't. As he did with his "adaptations" of "Barry Lyndon", "A Clockwork Orange", and, especially, "The Shining", Kubrick used the source material and, simply put, made another Stanley Kubrick movie--even though Nabokov himself wrote the screenplay. The chilly director nullifies Humbert Humbert's (James Mason's) overwhelming passion and desire, and instead transforms the story, like many of his films, into that of a man trapped and ruined by social codes and by his own obsessions. Kubrick doesn't play this as tragedy, however, but rather as both a black-as-coffee screwball comedy and a meandering, episodic road movie. The early scenes between Humbert, Lolita (a too-old but suitably teasing Lyons) and her loud, garish mother (Shelley Winters in one of her funniest performances) play like a wonderful farce. When Humbert finally fulfills his desires and captures Lolita, the pair hit the road and Kubrick drags in Peter Sellers. As the pedophilic writer Clare Quilty--Humbert's playful doppelgänger and biggest threat--Sellers dons a series of disguises with plans of stealing Lolita away from her captor. It's here more than anywhere that Kubrick comes closest to the novel. He extends Nabokov's idea of the games and puzzles played between reader and writer, Quilty and Humbert, Lolita and Humbert, etc., to those between filmmaker and audience: the road eventually goes nowhere and Humbert's reality is exposed as mad delusion. Perhaps not a Kubrick masterpiece, or the provocative film many wanted, "Lolita" still remains playfully fascinating and one of Kubrick's strongest, funniest character studies. "--Dave McCoy"