Check Out Vladimir
Nabokov's Unpublished Screenplay Notes For Stanley Kubrick's
'Lolita'
Indie
Wire (blog)
While
Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey" and "The Shining" tend to dominate
online conversations about his work, with no shortage of
...
While Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A
Space Odyssey" and "The Shining" tend to dominate online
conversations about his work, with no shortage of supercuts and tributes to
choose from, one of the more overlooked films in his filmography is his
adaptation of Vladimir
Nabokov's (still) controversial and sensational "Lolita." But what
started as a spirit of collaboration between Nabokov and Kubrick, quickly
fragmented, with both geniuses at odds with how to bring the story to the big
screen.
Vice has a
pretty good breakdown of what happened (among other things, Nabokov's first
draft of the screenplay ran over 400 pages long), but this quote by the writer
sums it up: “A few days before, at a private screening, I had discovered that
Kubrick was a great director, that his 'Lolita' was a first-rate film with
magnificent actors, and that only ragged odds and ends of my script had been
used.” Indeed, Kubrick gutted Nabokov's script, rearranged the order, told
his actors to improvise and much more, but it's not like Nabokov didn't know
what he was doing.
In these
unpublished screenplay notes, you can see Nabokov working things out as the
draft developed. Check it out below, click
here for more, and
let us know if Kubrick would've been wise to try and stick more closely to
Nabokov's vision.
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