Until I watched the video Stanley Kubrick’s Boxes, and visited the London School of Communication, I had no idea that Stanley Kubrick was so obsessive in his work. I was aware he had directed Clockwork Orange, 2001 Space Odyssey and The Shining, but that was as far as my knowledge went.
First of all, watching the previsit video, I learnt that Stanley Kubrick had an obsessive attention to detail. He would send people off with a detailed brief to photograph particular areas and themes for his films. For example, his nephew Manuel Harlan, had been sent off to photograph various themes in preparation for Eyes Wide Shut, and he estimated he took some 30,000 photographs. He confirmed that Kubrick actually looked at every image. On one occasion Kubrick asked his nephew to photograph a whole street, but because he didn’t want any tilt on the buildings, Harlan had to carry a 12’ step ladder from which to take the photographs, and to keep on moving it along the street as he progressed. The photographs were then taped together to form one long image.
This was just one example of the detail that Kubrick asked of his assistants in order to create a film. He had such an eye for detail that on one occasion and model had been built of a New York street. Kubrick took one look at it, and said the dimensions were incorrect. The assistant disagreed, but was sent back to New York to remeasure the buildings. As Kubrick suspected the measurements of the model were out, by a very small amount, and this mattered to him.
Watching the video, I could see that Kubrick’s obsessive nature meant that he accumulated boxes and boxes of material. Nothing was ever thrown away, and everything was carefully catalogued. Finally, a few years after Kubrick’s death, the family decided to donate all the material to the London College of the Arts, and it is now housed in a specially built archive at the London College of Communication.
I felt it was a privilege to be allowed to see just a small amount of material from the Kubrick archives. To actually see and touch original scripts, annotated by Kubrick, and to go through the photographs, all carefully labelled and stored in an index box was fascinating. The enlarged image of all the extras in a scene from Spartacus, each one holding up a number, thus enabling Kubrick to instruct each one exactly how to pose for the scene, showed once again his obsession for detail and perfection.
Sadly, the Kubrick family had requested that no photographs should be taken of any of the items on display, but nevertheless, it was a very memorable experience, and viewing those items has kindled an interest in his career and films which I never had before the visit.














