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Shining

Titre original : The Shining
  • 1980
  • 12
  • 2h 26min
NOTE IMDb
8,4/10
1,2 M
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
301
30
Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall in Shining (1980)
Trailer 1
Lire trailer0:54
17 Videos
99+ photos
DrameHorreurDrame psychologiqueHorreur psychologiqueHorreur surnaturelle

Une famille se rend dans un hôtel isolé pour l'hiver, où une présence spirituelle et maléfique incite le père à la violence, tandis que son fils télépathe fait l'expérience d'horribles visio... Tout lireUne famille se rend dans un hôtel isolé pour l'hiver, où une présence spirituelle et maléfique incite le père à la violence, tandis que son fils télépathe fait l'expérience d'horribles visions du passé et du futur.Une famille se rend dans un hôtel isolé pour l'hiver, où une présence spirituelle et maléfique incite le père à la violence, tandis que son fils télépathe fait l'expérience d'horribles visions du passé et du futur.

  • Réalisation
    • Stanley Kubrick
  • Scénario
    • Stephen King
    • Stanley Kubrick
    • Diane Johnson
  • Casting principal
    • Jack Nicholson
    • Shelley Duvall
    • Danny Lloyd
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,4/10
    1,2 M
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    301
    30
    • Réalisation
      • Stanley Kubrick
    • Scénario
      • Stephen King
      • Stanley Kubrick
      • Diane Johnson
    • Casting principal
      • Jack Nicholson
      • Shelley Duvall
      • Danny Lloyd
    • 2.4Kavis d'utilisateurs
    • 400avis des critiques
    • 68Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Film noté 66 parmi les meilleurs
    • Récompenses
      • 6 victoires et 9 nominations au total

    Vidéos17

    The Shining
    Trailer 0:54
    The Shining
    The Shining
    Trailer 1:30
    The Shining
    The Shining
    Trailer 1:30
    The Shining
    In Memoriam 2024
    Clip 2:53
    In Memoriam 2024
    Stream & Scream: The Best Haunted Houses
    Clip 4:35
    Stream & Scream: The Best Haunted Houses
    How "The Umbrella Academy" Survives 1960s Dallas in Season 2
    Clip 3:36
    How "The Umbrella Academy" Survives 1960s Dallas in Season 2
    'The Shining' | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:51
    'The Shining' | Anniversary Mashup

    Photos626

    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche
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    + 620
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Jack Nicholson
    Jack Nicholson
    • Jack Torrance
    Shelley Duvall
    Shelley Duvall
    • Wendy Torrance
    Danny Lloyd
    Danny Lloyd
    • Danny
    Scatman Crothers
    Scatman Crothers
    • Hallorann
    Barry Nelson
    Barry Nelson
    • Ullman
    Philip Stone
    Philip Stone
    • Grady
    Joe Turkel
    Joe Turkel
    • Lloyd
    Anne Jackson
    Anne Jackson
    • Doctor
    Tony Burton
    Tony Burton
    • Durkin
    Lia Beldam
    Lia Beldam
    • Young Woman in Bath
    Billie Gibson
    • Old Woman in Bath
    Barry Dennen
    Barry Dennen
    • Watson
    David Baxt
    David Baxt
    • Forest Ranger 1
    Manning Redwood
    Manning Redwood
    • Forest Ranger 2
    Lisa Burns
    • Grady Daughter
    Louise Burns
    • Grady Daughter
    Robin Pappas
    • Nurse
    Alison Coleridge
    • Secretary
    • Réalisation
      • Stanley Kubrick
    • Scénario
      • Stephen King
      • Stanley Kubrick
      • Diane Johnson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs2.4K

    8,41178.7K
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    Résumé

    Reviewers say 'The Shining' is lauded for its atmospheric tension, innovative camera work, and Jack Nicholson's performance. Kubrick's direction and psychological horror elements are often highlighted. Criticisms include deviations from the novel, underdeveloped characters, and perceived lack of coherence. Shelley Duvall's performance divides opinions. Pacing and length are contentious, with some finding it slow and others appreciating the build-up. Despite mixed views, it remains influential in horror.
    Généré par IA à partir de textes des commentaires utilisateurs

    Avis à la une

    bob the moo

    A classic horror from a master director

    When Jack Torrance (Nicholson) is offered a job as winter caretaker for the Overlook Hotel he accepts it as an opportunity to work on his novel in an isolated environment. He is told stories of the last caretaker going mad and butchering his family but isn't deterred. He arrives at the Overlook Hotel with his wife (Duvall) and child Danny (Lloyd) and is shown around the hotel by the cook (Scatman Crothers) who has the gift of perception. The cook warns Danny that the hotel can be of particular danger for those with the gift. It's only a matter of time before Jack begins to act increasingly erratic.

    This is one of Jack Nicholson's finest roles, his increasingly unhinged character is amusing and terrifying in almost equal measures. Duvall plays the role of the terrorised wife quite well - she does look like she's genuinely filled with fear - but doesn't have much else to do. Lloyd is excellent as the boy, although he doesn't have too much emotion to express. However no doubt that this is Jack's show.

    The story doesn't stick to King's novel and is better for it; this is Kubrick's Shining. The film has plenty of genuinely scary moments but manages to keep a creepy atmosphere all through - especially as the ghosts come out and Jack begins to move between his reality and the reality that is gradually claiming him.

    Kubrick is excellent here, his cold direction adds to the overall creep factor of the film. It's one of the best examples of his masterful touch.

    Overall this is an excellent horror movie - because the focus is on horror and fear rather than gore alone (as with modern horrors). Jack is excellent in one of his best roles ever and the whole package is delivered in a cold creepy manner by a sadly lost director.
    10Sleepin_Dragon

    Forty years on, and it's still outstanding.

    Kubrick, King and Nicholson, the writing was literally on the wall, and I don't mean RedRum, forty years on, and The Shining is still a masterpiece.

    Kubrick takes King's fantastic book, and builds on it, bringing the story to life in his own inimitable way. It's dark, it's bleak, it's terrifying, a masterpiece in storytelling. You watch as the central character's mental collapse is played out in a spine chilling fashion.

    Gorgeous camera work, incredible visuals, that opening is iconic. So many incredible, visual moments, the twins, lift, barman etc, no wonder it's been parodied multiple times over the years, famously by The Simpsons.

    An iconic role for Jack Nicholson, he is incredible, well supported by a terrific cast.

    It's a classic, 10/10.
    9FlickJunkie

    Amazing achievement in filmmaking and the art of terror.

    Chilling, majestic piece of cinematic fright, this film combines all the great elements of an intellectual thriller, with the grand vision of a director who has the instinctual capacity to pace a moody horror flick within the realm of his filmmaking genius that includes an eye for the original shot, an ice-cold soundtrack and an overall sense of dehumanization. This movie cuts through all the typical horror movies like a red-poker through a human eye, as it allows the viewer to not only feel the violence and psychosis of its protagonist, but appreciate the seed from which the derangement stems. One of the scariest things for people to face is the unknown and this film presents its plotting with just that thought in mind. The setting is perfect, in a desolate winter hideaway. The quietness of the moment is a character in itself, as the fermenting aggressor in Jack Torrance's mind wallows in this idle time, and breeds the devil's new playground. I always felt like the presence of evil was dormant in all of our minds, with only the circumstances of the moment, and the reasons given therein, needed to wake its violent ass and pounce over its unsuspecting victims. This film is a perfect example of this very thought.

    And it is within this film's subtle touches of the canvas, the clackity-clacks of the young boy's big wheel riding along the empty hallways of the hotel, the labyrinthian garden representing the mind's fine line between sane and insane, Kubrick's purposely transfixed editing inconsistencies, continuity errors and set mis-arrangements, that we discover a world guided by the righteous and tangible, but coaxed away by the powerful and unknown. I have never read the book upon which the film is based, but without that as a comparison point, I am proud to say that this is one of the most terrifying films that I have ever seen. I thought that the runtime of the film could've been cut by a little bit, but then again, I am not one of the most acclaimed directors in the history of film, so maybe I should keep my two-cent criticisms over a superb film, to myself. All in all, this movie captures your attention with its grand form and vision, ropes you in with some terror and eccentric direction, and ties you down and stabs you in the heart with its cold-eyed view of the man's mind gone overboard, creepy atmosphere and the loss of humanity.

    Rating: 9/10
    Jimm7y

    Jack Torrance Meets David Bowman

    What can I say about the scariest movie I have ever seen that has not already been said by others more articulate than yours truly? Do not view this film expecting to see a screen version of the Stephen King novel. Rather, this is a Stanley Kubrick film, and to fully appreciate it one should judge it within the context of Kubrick's entire body of work as a serious filmmaker. Thematically, THE SHINING relates most closely to 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, though flourishes of PATHS OF GLORY, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE and BARRY LYNDON do manage to figure prominently in the film's overall technique.

    In a nutshell (no pun intended), Jack Nicholson and Shelly Duvall co-star with Oregon's Timberline Lodge - enlisted to portray the exterior of the Overlook Hotel - in a story that appears on the surface to be about ghosts and insanity, but deals with issues of child abuse, immortality and duality.

    What the film might lack initially in terms of coherence is more than made up for in technique. Garrett Brown (the male voice in those old Molson Golden commercials), inventor of the Steadicam, chases young Danny Lloyd through hotel corridors and an amazing snow maze, providing magic-carpet-ride fluidity to scenes that ten years earlier would have been impossible to accomplish. If the film starts off too slow, remember who the director is. This man likes to take his time, and the results are well worth it: incredible aerial shots of the Overlook Hotel; horrific Diane Arbus-inspired twins staring directly at us; portentous room 237 and its treasure trove of terrible secrets; elevators that gush rivers of blood in slow-motion; Jack Torrance's immortality found via the hotel (akin to David Bowman's journey through the Space Gate); and some of the best use of pre-existing music ever assembled for a motion picture.

    It would take a book to examine and defend the film's strong points and drawbacks. If you've never seen it, you owe it to yourself to watch it alone with the lights off, with no interruptions, and make sure that it's raining. This is a cinematic experience that changed my life at the age of 14. Makes a great double feature with Robert Wise's 1963 thriller THE HAUNTING.
    chaos-rampant

    Eeriness surpassed by class

    Sometimes all good horror needs is a good idea. But sometimes, rarely indeed, a horror masterpiece will reach us by the hand of a Kubrick, with the adept, elusive touch of a great artist to guide the vision, and we know what separates it from all else.

    Okay, the story has enough promise that even a hired gun would have to try to fail. Heck, even Stephen King himself didn't fare so bad. It's how Kubrick perceives King's universe however, how he fills the frame with it, that renders THE SHINING a feast for the senses.

    Horror that will reach us through the mind and body alike, an assault as it were, tending eventually its pitch to a crescendo, yet curiously not without a delicate lull.

    Kubrick's cinema is, as usually, a sight to behold. We get the adventurous camera that prowls through the lavish corridors of the Overlook Hotel like it is some kind of mystic labyrinth rife for exploration, linear tracking shots exposing impeccably decorated interiors in symmetric grandeur. The geometrical approach in how Kubrick perceives space reminds me very much of Japanese directors of some 10 years before. In that what is depicted in the frame, the elements of narrative, is borderline inconsequential to how they all balance and harmonize together.

    Certain images stand out in this. The first shot of Jack's typewriter, ominously accompanied by the off-screen thumps of a ball, drums of doom that seem to emanate from the very walls or the typewriter itself, an instrument of doom in itself as is later shown. A red river flowing through the hotel's elevators in a poetry of slow motions. Jack hitting the door with the axe, the camera moving along with him, tracking the action as it happens, as though it's the camera piercing through the door and not the axe. The ultra fast zoom in the kid's face violently thrusting us inside his head before we see the two dead girls from his POV. And of course, the epochal bathroom scene.

    Much has been said of Jack Nicholson's obtrusive overacting. His mad is not entirely successful, because, well, he's Jack Nicholson. The guy looks half-mad anyway. Playing mad turns him into an exaggerated caricature of himself. Shelley Duvall on the other hand is one of the most inspired casting choices Kubrick ever made. Coming from a streak of fantastic performances for Robert Altman in the seventies (3 WOMEN, THIEVES LIKE US, NASHVILLE), she brings to her character the right amounts of swanlike fragility and emotional distress. A delicate, detached thing thrown in with the mad.

    Stephen King Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

    Stephen King Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

    See how IMDb users rank the feature films based on the work of Stephen King.
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    Production art
    Liste

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Because Danny Lloyd was so young, and since it was his first acting job, Stanley Kubrick was highly protective of the child. During the shooting of the movie, Lloyd was under the impression that the film he was making was a drama, not a horror movie. In fact, when Wendy carries Danny away while shouting at Jack in the Colorado Lounge, she is actually carrying a life-size dummy, so Lloyd would not have to be in the scene. He only realized the truth several years later, when he was shown a heavily edited version of the film. He did not see the uncut version of the film until he was seventeen, eleven years after he had made it.
    • Gaffes
      During the long shot of the Overlook Hotel in the beginning (right before The Interview title card), the maze cannot be seen, though throughout the rest of the movie it is rather close to the hotel.
    • Citations

      Jack Torrance: Here's Johnny!

    • Crédits fous
      The party music plays over the closing credits. After it ends, we hear the Overlook Hotel ghosts applaud. They then talk amongst themselves until their voices fade away.
    • Versions alternatives
      ABC edited 4 minutes from the film for its 1983 network television premiere.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Hai-Kubrick (1999)
    • Bandes originales
      The Shining (Main Title)
      Written by Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind

      Performed by Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind

      Based on "Dream of a Witches' Sabbath"

      From Symphonie Fantastique by Hector Berlioz (traditional requiem "Dies Irae")

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    FAQ46

    • How long is The Shining?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is the name of the actor who played the Man in the Bear Costume?
    • If Stephen King hated this movie, why did he completely back a Direct Sequel to this movie?
    • Did the movie events happen the very next winter after Grady killed his family? If not, who was the caretaker in between and what happened during those winters?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 octobre 1980 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El resplandor
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Timberline Lodge, 27500 E Timberline Road, Government Camp, Mount Hood, Oregon, États-Unis(Overlook Hotel exterior)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Warner Bros.
      • Hawk Films
      • Peregrine
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 19 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 45 634 352 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 622 337 $US
      • 26 mai 1980
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 47 979 920 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 26min(146 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono

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