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Lolita (1962)
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Reviews Counted:38
Fresh:37
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8/10
Runtime: 3 hrs 32 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's controversial LOLITA is a wicked satire of sexual obsession, sadomasochism, and fetishism. When mild-mannered professor Humbert Humbert (James... Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's controversial LOLITA is a wicked satire of sexual obsession, sadomasochism, and fetishism. When mild-mannered professor Humbert Humbert (James Mason) arrives in the small town of Ramsdale, New Hampshire, he is immediately set upon by his landlady, Charlotte Haze (Shelley Winters), and her adolescent daughter, Lolita (Sue Lyon). Although Humbert gets involved with Charlotte, it is Lolita with whom he becomes obsessed. When Charlotte sends her daughter away to summer camp (the aptly named Camp Climax), Humbert becomes consumed with jealousy. He finally takes Lolita out of camp and heads out alone with her. He is pestered along the way by Clare Quilty (played magnificently by Peter Sellers), who threatens to expose him. But nothing can break the hold Lolita has over Humbert. From the opening credits sequence--a close-up of a man's hand (with a wedding ring) carefully polishing a young girl's toenails--Kubrick's biting, darkly comic LOLITA burns with sexual energy as it follows the debasement of an intelligent, worldly man in a series of carefully choreographed long takes that boil over with psychosexual tension. Although little physical contact is shown, Kubrick hints at it beautifully, especially in the drive-in scene in which both Charlotte and Lolita grab on to Humbert's hands. And yet given the serious nature of the subject matter, Kubrick pauses long enough to include a riotous slapstick scene of Humbert and a bellhop struggling over a cot as Lolita sleeps quietly on the bed, as well as Quilty playing Ping-Pong with a seemingly endless supply of balls. Stanley Kubrick's highly controversial masterwork is a fascinating look at pedophilia and sexual taboos that lead to obsession and murder. [More]
Starring: James Mason, Shelley Winters, Peter Sellers, Sue Lyon
Starring: James Mason, Shelley Winters, Peter Sellers, Sue Lyon, Jerry Stovin, Gary Cockrell, Diana Decker, Marianne Stone, William E. Greene, Shirley Douglas, Lois Maxwell
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Screenwriter: James B. Harris, Stanley Kubrick
Producer: James B. Harris
Composer: Nelson Riddle
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Reviews for Lolita
A fascinating if problematic early film from Stanley Kubrick, perhaps the most obsessive of the great auteurs of the 1960s.
The picture has a rare power, a garbled but often moving push toward an off-beat communication.
While it doesn't quite rate the five-star status that some of Kubrick's later films attained, LOLITA is a definite must-have for the Kubrick collector
While it's far too long at over 2 1/2 hours, these characters are so juicy and delicately balanced (this was 1962 and pedophilia was hardly accepted on film) they're a true must-see.
A wonderful evocation of the book's humorous aspects, but -- censors be darned -- very little of its passion and sexuality.
Where Nabokov was witty, Kubrick is sometimes merely snide, but fine performances (particularly from Peter Sellers, as the ominous Clare Quilty) cover most of the rough spots.
Far too subtle in its sexual intentions to reach what the novel was after.
Kubrick made excellent film even in such circumstances, and today's audience may still enjoy it, which is another proof of its timeless quality.
Considering censorship issues in 1962 and the fact that Peter Sellers is miscast, Kubrick's version does justice to Nabokov's provocative novel, benefiting immensely from James Mason's towering performance in the lead.
Far more satisfying than his later works (one hesitates to call them mere movies).
The movie suffers from the limitations of what could be revealed about Humbert Humbert's feelings for his little Lolita, but his lust and panic are still acutely conveyed.
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