Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980) pushed Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall to their psychological limits during a grueling 13-month shoot where Kubrick's perfectionism demanded up to 70 takes per scene—the baseball bat scene alone required 127 takes, and Duvall's visible exhaustion and terror in the finished film were largely real. Stephen King famously disliked the adaptation for stripping away the novel's supernatural elements and his character's redemption arc, but Kubrick's cold, architectural approach to horror created an entirely different kind of masterpiece focused on isolation, madness, and the violence lurking beneath the American family. The Overlook Hotel was constructed as an intentionally impossible space—hallways that lead nowhere, windows that couldn't exist—creating a subliminal sense of wrongness that viewers feel before they can articulate it. The film's endless reinterpretation, documented in the documentary Room 237, has made it perhaps the most analyzed horror film ever made, with theories ranging from Native American genocide metaphors to the faking of the Apollo moon landing.
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