Barry Lyndon By Robert Horton
In 1975 the world was at Stanley Kubrick's feet. His films Dr. Strangelove,
2001: A Space Odyssey, and A Clockwork Orange, released in
the previous dozen years, had provoked rapture and consternation--not
merely in the film community, but in the culture at large. On the basis of
that smashing hat trick, Kubrick was almost certainly the most famous film
director of his generation, and absolutely the one most likely to rewire
the collective mind of the movie audience. And what did this radical,
at-least-20-years-ahead-of-his-time filmmaker give the world in 1975? A
stately, three-hour costume drama based on an obscure Thackeray novel from
1844. A picaresque story about an Irish lad (Ryan O'Neal, then a major
star) who climbs his way into high society, Barry Lyndon bewildered
some critics (Pauline Kael called it "an ice-pack of a movie")
and did only middling business with patient audiences. The film was
clearly a technical advance, with its unique camerawork (incorporating the
use of prototype Zeiss lenses capable of filming by actual candlelight)
and sumptuous production design. But its hero is a distinctly
underwhelming, even unsympathetic fellow, and Kubrick does not try to
engage the audience's emotions in anything like the usual way.
Why, then, is Barry Lyndon a masterpiece? Because it uncannily
captures the shape and rhythm of a human life in a way few other films
have; because Kubrick's command of design and landscape is never
decorative but always apiece with his hero's journey; and because every
last detail counts. Even the film's chilly style is thawed by the warm
narration of the great English actor Michael Hordern and the Irish songs
of the Chieftains. Poor Barry's life doesn't matter much in the end, yet
the care Kubrick brings to the telling of it is perhaps the director's
most compassionate gesture toward that most peculiar species of animal
called man. And the final, wry title card provides the perfect Kubrickian
sendoff--a sentiment that is even more poignant since Kubrick's premature
death.
Academy Awards
Barry Lyndon received Academy Awards
for Art Direction/Set Decoration (Roy Walker - Art Direction, Ken Adam -
Art Direction, Vernon Dixon - Set Decoration), Cinematography (John
Alcott), Costume Design (Ulla-Britt Soderlund, Milena Canonero) and Music
Scoring Awards (Best Original Song Score or Adaptation Score; Leonard
Rosenman). Barry Lyndon also received Academy
Awards nominations for Best Picture (Stanley Kubrick - Producer),
Directing (Stanley Kubrick), and Writing (Best Screenplay adapted from
other material; Stanley Kubrick). |