Before Dr. Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and A Clockwork Orange there was The Killing. Stanley Kubrick’s second foray into film noir instantly became a classic and ultimately, Kubrick’s springboard into Hollywood. The story is simple–a group of small-time criminals, including a corrupt cop in debt to a mobster, a sharp shooter, and an inside man, all led by Johnny Clay (Sterling Hayden) pull off the perfect heist of the winnings from a race track.
Kubrick combines cinematic elements with a newsreel motif that creates a realistic mise-en scene and quickened pace. The Killing is not about the story, but of the experience. You feel that you are really there with Johnny pulling on rubber clown masks and robbing a race track. This is the first instance in Kubrick’s repertoire were he starts to immerse the viewer into the world that he creates. Kubrick is one of the cinemas most immersive filmmakers making the audience feel that they are in the War Room, or a dystopian London, or in a haunted hotel, or in a crummy race track in Los Angeles. The Killing is Kubrick’s early masterpiece.
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