“YOU
EITHER CARE OR YOU DON’T CAREâ€
By
Raymond Benson
[Much
of this review is culled from a Cinema Retro 2018 review by the author
of the Kino Lorber DVD release.]
Tony
Zierra’s fascinating documentary that premiered at Cannes in 2017 (and was
released theatrically in 2018) is about an unsung hero in the lore of legendary
filmmaker Stanley Kubrick—Leon Vitali, who describes himself not as an
“assistant,†but as a “filmworker.â€
Vitali,
now in his seventies, began his career as an actor in the 1960s, appearing in
various British films and television programs. After being impressed with
Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey and A Clockwork Orange, Vitali told a
friend, “I want to work for that guy.†He managed to get an audition for
Kubrick’s next picture, Barry Lyndon,
and landed the key role of Lord Bullingdon, the main antagonist of the film.
Vitali received much praise for his performance, but instead of continuing an
acting career, he made an extraordinary left turn. He asked Kubrick if he could
work behind the camera from then on.
Kubrick
grilled Vitali on his sincerity, and then he hired the actor as an additional
casting director for The Shining. Vitali’s
task was to go to America and find a little boy to play Danny in the classic
horror movie. The young actor turned out to be Danny Lloyd, who, as an adult,
appears in Filmworker as a talking
head. This is a treat for fans of the The Shining, for Lloyd, a private
person today, rarely emerges from his reclusiveness.
Throughout
the making of The Shining, Vitali
served as little Danny’s handler and guardian, and ultimately began to perform
more tasks for the demanding filmmaker. For the next twenty-plus years, Vitali
learned every aspect of the filmmaking business, especially the color
correction processes for film that led to his overseeing the restoration of
Kubrick’s pictures, and many other jobs. In short, he became an indispensable
ally and assistant. As one interviewee put it, Vitali became Kubrick’s
“right-hand man, along with the other hand, the legs, the shoulders, body…†(He
also played the mysterious, masked “Red Cloak†leader of the orgy sequence in Eyes Wide Shut.)
Filmworker takes the viewer
through Vitali’s years with Kubrick, commented upon by the likes of Ryan
O’Neal, Matthew Modine, Danny Lloyd, Lee Ermey, Marie Richardson, Stellan
Skarsgård, and others, plus film executives Julian
Senior, Brian Jamieson, Steve Southgate, and Vitali’s family. We learn a lot about
Kubrick’s process, as well as what kind of person
he was. While it’s well-known that the filmmaker was a perfectionist, few
realize that he was a genuinely warm, soft-spoken, animal-loving man.
Viewers
may wonder why Vitali committed so much of his life to Kubrick. As Vitali
demonstrates, the “maestro†could be intensely demanding and did not suffer
excuses. “You either care, or you don’t care,†was a mantra of Kubrick’s, and
Vitali adopted it for himself as well. In the end, we get a portrait of not only
what working for Kubrick was like, but of a man who went above and beyond what
most people would consider healthy devotion. That said, considering the mentor
was Kubrick, this was also a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to learn from and
serve an exceptional artist.
Kino
Lorber’s new pristine Blu-ray is a port-over from the previous DVD release, and
it is indeed an improvement. It comes with 5.1 Surround sound and 2.0 lossless
stereo , the theatrical trailer, and a short supplement Q&A with Vitali and
director Zierra on stage after a screening of the film.
Filmworker is a must for the
Stanley Kubrick fan, and, in general, for students and devotees of filmmaking.
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