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In 1963 Stanley Kubrick declared, “Dr. Strangelove came from my desire to do something about the nuclear nightmare.” Thirty years later, he was preparing to film another story about the human impulse for self-destruction. Unfortunately, the director passed away in 1999, before his project could be fully realized. However, fellow visionary Steven Spielberg took on the venture, and A.I. Artificial Intelligence debuted in theaters two years after Kubrick’s death. While Kubrick’s concept shares similarities with the finished film, there are significant differences between his screenplay and Spielberg's production.
In Kubrick’s Story, Spielberg’s Film: A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Julian Rice examines the intellectual sources and cinematic processes that expressed the extraordinary ideas of one great artist through the distinctive vision of another. A.I. is decidedly a Kubrick film in its concern for the future of the world, and it is both a Kubrick and a Spielberg film in the alienation of its central character. However, Spielberg’s alienated characters evolve through friendships, while Kubrick’s protagonists are markedly alone. Rice explores how the directors’ disparate sensibilities aligned and where they diverged.
By analyzing Kubrick’s treatment and Spielberg’s finished film, Rice compares the imaginations of two gifted but very different filmmakers and draws conclusions about their unique conceptions. Kubrick’s Story, Spielberg’s Film is a fascinating look into the creative process of two of cinema’s most profound auteurs and will appeal to scholars of film as well as to fans of both directors.
Rice, a retired English professor, takes a deep dive into the 2001 film A.I. Artificial Intelligence, concentrating on its background as a Stanley Kubrick project taken over by Steven Spielberg after Kubrick’s death. The writing is dense and scholarly, yet consistently inviting to the non-specialist. Throughout the text, Rice teases out the film’s thematic concerns and their resonances with other films in both Spielberg and Kubrick’s oeuvres, particularly Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the work that created the initial bond between the two filmmakers; 2001: A Space Odyssey, Kubrick’s other, notably bleaker reflection on artificial intelligence; and the apocalyptic vision of Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove. Rice’s work is eclectic and wide-reaching, with equal insight brought to bear on A.I.’s roots in Arthurian legend, Joseph Campbell’s concept of the hero’s journey, and Jungian archetypes, as well as its legacy as a cautionary tale about global warming. This eloquently written book will foster a deeper appreciation for a unique posthumous collaboration between two celebrated filmmakers, even for readers who aren’t fervent fans of the film itself.
If there was ever a movie with a back-story worthy of a fascinating book, it's A.I….[I]t's a deeply detailed analysis of each director's narrative and visual ideals, delving deep into both filmographies to pull out similar imagery and themes which may have ultimately shaped the film that was finally released (two years after Kubrick's death). The author's recurring argument is that the directors shared more common ground than their reputations suggest.While A.I. is indeed analyzed in great detail - both narratively and aesthetically - other chapters look back to such work as Close Encounters, Dr. Strangelove, even the original novel of Pinocchio, in search of recurring themes like the apocalypse and parent/child relationships…. [For] those whose appreciation of either director extends beyond their films' mere entertainment value.
To all of us who have been obsessing about Stanley Kubrick’s and Steven Spielberg’s collaboration on A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001), that mysterious and a seminal work of modern science fiction, even more relevant today than seventeen years ago when it first came out, it is obvious that the film would eventually gain respect, after being dismissed by most critics at the time. And indeed, the interest in the film is hardly over. But even I was surprised to find out that the film would inspire such a dense academic book, so many years after it came out. Julian Rice is an expert on Kubrick, who has been advocating the theory that Kubrick was far from a cynical misanthrope, as he has generally been presented. In this book of film analysis, which focuses on the importance of the themes and labyrinthine symbolism of the images of A.I., especially in the context of them being a fascinating amalgam of two distinctive artistic visions, he extends the claim even further. And even if the question of who was responsible for which part of the film, and if the more “sentimental” parts were Spielberg’s, while more “cold” ones were Kubrick’s, has been answered years ago, when we got hold of the eponymous Stanley Kubrick Archives, the implications of Rice’s book regarding this are never less than fascinating. So it did turn out that the sentimental parts were actually Kubrick’s. And his original ending was going to be even more a “happy ending”. On the other hand, the harrowing Holocaust references, which constitute the film into its rightful purpose and elevated its meaning, were mostly Spielberg’s. However, Rice’s reply to these questions is that it doesn’t really matter who did what. Both filmmakers shared philosophical concerns that pushed them towards this collaboration. But it is the resulting vision that made the film what it is. A.I. is where the auteur theory is at its most dubious and completely falls apart.
The main thesis of the book is that A.I. is a sublimation of the themes which occur in previous Kubrick and Spielberg films. Starting with the outcry for sanity, which was Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove and the optimistic and all-encompassing outlook of 2001: A Space Odyssey, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and more intimate, yet not less impactful E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, all these films are about the fundamental nature of humanity and humanity’s potential for maturity - Kubrick referred to it as “transfiguration”. More precisely, Rice builds a case that all these films are about transcending of the tyrannical compulsions, such as Oedipal attachment and sibling rivalry. A.I., more directly than the other ones, goes deeply inside the human psychology in order to find the root issue and it presents us with the darkest possible outcome of humanity’s inner conflict!
His interpretation of the controversial last act of the film, in which the robot boy David encounters his mother’s replica, after longing for her for two thousand years, is especially eye opening. His one last day with her was often accused of being Spielbergian cop-out in order to have a happy ending. The main defense of the last act, however, has been that it cannot be a happy ending since the boy dies together with his mother. But thanks to Rice’s book I am not sure anymore if that is what happens at all. Also, the very question if the ending was a happy one becomes redundant. The ending is an optimistic one insofar as David (standing in for humanity) has become a real boy, like Pinocchio, through the act of letting his mother go and turning into a nurturer, instead of eternally and selfishly demanding his mother’s love. It is a bitter one because the film shows that every human has to learn this lesson on their way to becoming an adult. Furthermore, it is a terrifying one because the film shows that what is at the stake is actually the survival of human kind. This moment of transfiguration towards maturity is already evident in 2001’s Star Child. But in A.I., due to how artificial intelligence has been turning into a staple of our technology, the implications of failing to mature are devastating. As a ray of hope there is, however, the human spirit itself, often expressed in creativity and art, which is functioning as a strong antithesis to the destructive energy of the uncompensated Oedipal loss. By its definition, creativity is capable of deprogramming the robotic enclosure of human mind, be it racism, nationalism, denial of global warming and other short-circuit narratives that are driving our species towards the extinction.
Copyright © 2018 Edo Muric.