REVIEW

DVD Review: Eyes Wide Shut

Written by Tony Dayoub
Published April 23, 2008
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At the time, having already been a student of Kubrick's films, I wasn't surprised at the final result.  Eyes Wide Shut is essentially a detached examination of jealousy and the dangers inherent in giving in to your sexual impulses in modern society.  It is examined through the eyes of an upper-class WASP couple, Dr. Bill Harford (Cruise) and his wife, Alice (Kidman).  Her name is a clue that much of the movie takes place in a languid dreamlike wonderland after Dr. Bill falls through the Nicole Kidman in Eyes Wide Shutjealousy rabbit-hole.   The world is one in which Dr. Bill can ask for a beer at a bar, and doesn't have to specify the brand.  He can show his medical license and get instant access to some of the most exclusive information.  Dr. Bill learns valuable lessons as he is repeatedly confronted with moral tests in this realm:  Don't get involved with your patients (Marie Richardson) or you might end up with an unstable stalker.  Don't have sex with a hooker (Vinessa Shaw) or you might fall prey to AIDS.  Don't get involved with a minor (Leelee Sobieski) or you might be taken advantage of by her pimp (Rade Serbedzija).  Don't visit a strange ritualistic costume party or you endanger the life of a call girl (Julienne Davis) trying to save your life.

In the theatrical release, there was plenty of nudity, not much sex, and the sex that did appear in the film was conveniently blocked by digital images of onlookers to preserve the story and allow the film to play in American theaters.  The music in the film is beautiful and foreboding.  The cinematography is impeccable.  Sydney Pollack's performance as Dr. Bill's friend, Victor, is exemplary, especially considering the film was originally shot with Harvey Keitel in the role, before being replaced after he couldn't return for reshoots.  And Nicole Kidman is stunning as the coy Alice who consciously or not uses jealousy to manipulate her husband.

The DVD has been improved by the fact that it is the first release of the film in widescreen.  The images are presented beautifully as Kubrick intended.  The DVD does contain a few interesting documentaries on Kubrick, and how this was to be his final film.  You gain great insight into the family man he was.  And there's an interesting survey of his unproduced film ideas.  Interviews with Cruise, Kidman, and Spielberg are holdovers from the last DVD version of the film.  While reverential, these interviews do capture the filmmaker's sensibility.

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Tony Dayoub is a screenwriter and film critic whose reviews can be found at Cinema Viewfinder. He recently covered the 46th New York Film Festival. Coverage of the festival and current releases can be found at Cinema Viewfinder.
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DVD Review: Eyes Wide Shut
Published: April 23, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Video
Writer: Tony Dayoub
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Comments

#1 — April 23, 2008 @ 15:53PM — El Bicho [URL]

I enjoyed the film also and thought it had a lot of interesting things to say about marriage, sex, and the masks we wear. It certainly says more than marriage is safe.

The lights that streamed down the wall at the party were great as is the soundtrack. I should crack that out. Haven't listened to it in a while.

"It is hard to accept the couple in the film will work things out when we know that in life they broke up."

First, I don't see what leads you to believe the couple will work things out, but if you can't release the actors from their real life, I don't see how can you enjoy any movie with a known celebrity in it?

#2 — April 23, 2008 @ 16:19PM — Tony Dayoub [URL]

El Bicho,

"First, I don't see what leads you to believe the couple will work things out, but if you can't release the actors from their real life, I don't see how can you enjoy any movie with a known celebrity in it?"

IMHO, I think the reason this film is different is that Kubrick was most likely capitalizing on the actors' real=life relationship to inform the film's characters, and to substitute the use of exposition in viewer's minds as they saw the movie.

Now as to why I think things will work out, it is because Kubrick chose to end it when the family unit has been reunited and is out shopping instead of ending it earlier in the previous scene when Alice is in tears over finding out what Dr. Bill was up to all night.

Thanks for the comments.

#3 — April 23, 2008 @ 20:22PM — Michael Clayton [URL]

As an ardent supporter of Kubrick, I must admit it took a repeat viewing of the film before I came around and finally recognized the brilliance of Kubrick's vision of the film. Many of the elements of the film remind me of the Nathaniel Hawthorne short story "Young Goodman Brown"; I would venture to suggest this is probably the closest anyone has come to adapting that tale as a film.

#4 — October 14, 2008 @ 02:46AM — joe

Quote: "The DVD has been improved by the fact that it is the first release of the film in widescreen. The images are presented beautifully as Kubrick intended."
The first sentence is a matter of opinion. The second is simply INCORRECT; Kubrick intended it to be in 1.33:1 (aka 4:3 or academy ratio). He seems to have preferred it to "widescreen" for certain films. Perhaps, because this film shot mainly in intimate interiors, urban scenes, and other "vertical" environs; but this only conjecture. What is not conjecture, is the fact he intended the film to be presented in "academy" not "letterbox"; these are the facts. Research and fact checking are an important JOURNALISTIC RESPONSIBILITY.

#5 — October 14, 2008 @ 13:16PM — Tony Dayoub [URL]

Joe,

I appreciate your comments, and upon further research find that his longtime assistant, Leon Vitali asserts the same point you are trying to make in an interview with The Digital Bits on 5/4/01:

"Bill Hunt: ...And our understanding is that there were only three Kubrick films that were intended to be seen in a widescreen aspect ratio...

Leon Vitali: Correct. There was Spartacus and 2001. And then there was Lolita, which was 1.66. The important thing to know about Stanley, is that he wanted all of his films shown on video - anything that wasn't a theatrical presentation - in the original camera ratio that he shot it in. He wanted you to see the films exactly as he saw them when he looked through the camera lens and composed them on set. He was no fan of 1.85, because he felt that you were losing part of the image he composed. Now he knew that, with a film like The Shining or Full Metal Jacket, that they would have to be shown in theaters in 1.85 format. But for video, he could present the full frame as he composed it - that's what he wanted."

So my apologies for the misinformation, and I stand corrected.

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