You can always choose to
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — The Shining
eweland — 10 years ago(March 04, 2016 03:47 PM)
You can always choose to
OVERLOOK
what really happened in the past.
It's up to you to decide.
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Kubrick's film -
will always be the definitive version of
THE SHiNiNG
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Barbed_Wire_Strawberry — 10 years ago(March 08, 2016 01:14 AM)
The point is rich white america will
always
see blacks that way. Their fortunes were made on the backs of slaves and they have sustained until today, though they often change their names and faces and there will always be Jacks to play the patsies.
Totally appropriate use and completely jarring. A clear turning point in the film where so much hostility and hatred is just bubbling under the veneer of silence and open space.
Buy The Ticket, Take The Ride -
drxcreatures — 9 years ago(October 23, 2016 07:43 PM)
Grady wasn't rich. Though, he did not like Halloran.
http://www.cgonzales.net
&
http://www.drxcreatures.com -
MissMargoChanning — 3 years ago(September 20, 2022 09:37 PM)
Kubrick's film - will always be the definitive version of THE SHiNiNG.
And King's book will always BE THE DEFINITIVE!
As I recall, That scary N WORD was in THE BOOK!
@cryptoflovecraft
Just checking out this old thread…
The Woke just get worse as time goes on.
You asked a pretty question; I've given you the ugly answer.
Fasten Your Seatbelts….
It's Going To Be A Bumpy Night! -
psdhart — 9 years ago(April 07, 2016 03:06 AM)
The film takes place in 1980, not 1950
. I was a kid during those years, and we never said that word in the Western part of the U.SMaybe down South they say that word, but not out West. My dad didn't use it either, and he was from California. My best friend didn't use it, and he was originally from Missouri.
In that scene, he was back in the 1920's -
drxcreatures — 9 years ago(October 23, 2016 07:41 PM)
"I don't think it was necessary. The film takes place in 1980, not 1950. I was a kid during those years, and we never said that word in the Western part of the U.S. Maybe down South they say that word, but not out West. My dad didn't use it either, and he was from California. My best friend didn't use it, and he was originally from Missouri."
It was said by an evil ghost in the '1920s'.
http://www.cgonzales.net
&
http://www.drxcreatures.com -
NewportBox100 — 10 years ago(March 29, 2016 04:23 AM)
Watch Saturday Night Fever and Pulp Fiction. The whites really go ham with the n word in those films. But trust me, I'm white and come from the South. Almost all white people I know still talk like that to this very day. That's just the way of the world!
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nigelpryor-11440 — 9 years ago(April 30, 2016 08:20 AM)
Yes it was necessary.. And wowww these modern times we are living in are so politically correct.. It's really annoying to be honest.. Noone can speak their mind anymore or say what they really think without people f'ing rioting.
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eweland — 9 years ago(May 22, 2016 08:56 AM)
All of the language in this film is necessary. There's nothing more chilling than realizing your husband's novel reinforces the vague threat you've had, that he's intending to kill you, and your son.
OMG.
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Kubrick's film -
will always be the definitive version of
The Shining. -
WiseKing — 9 years ago(October 25, 2016 07:37 PM)
I hate safe, plus horror rids safe by law of genre. It did give life to the bathroom scene. It was also shock in a different form rather than something visual. It didn't have to be said, but he didn't have to kill those two girls either. The rudeness is matched, mirroring what offenses about life. Free will has no bounds. It was said, you could stop him.