View allAll Photos Tagged theshining
Guess from what movie this came from?! For a better look
For FF's With your SO theme. To please blame the boyfie for my idiot face, this was his idea. lulz
Catching up!
Explored July 26-highest position 211
a clockwork orange
music from stanley kubrick's "a clockwork orange"
soundtrack (cassette)
warner bros. (1971)
zck4 46127
stanley kubrick : la cinémathèque française exhibition souvenir mug
"The National Historic Landmark sits at an elevation of 5,960 feet within the Mount Hood National Forest and is accessible through the Mount Hood Scenic Byway. Publicly owned and privately operated, Timberline Lodge is a popular tourist attraction that draws two million visitors annually. It is notable in film for serving as the exterior of the Overlook Hotel in The Shining."
"The lodge and its grounds host a ski resort, also known as Timberline Lodge. It has the longest skiing season in the U.S., and is open for skiers and snowboarders all 12 months of the year." wiki
"Located twenty miles east of the city of Portland, Oregon and the northern Willamette River valley, the Mt. Hood National Forest extends south from the strikingly beautiful Columbia River Gorge across more than a million miles of forested mountains, lakes and streams, and, of course, iconic Mt. Hood." www.fs.usda.gov
Um I think I know why - you guys are scary!!!!
One of those really good scary movies!!! Some of the best highlights from The Shining are these twins, "Here's Johnny!!" and REDRUM - if you've not seen The Shining, tonight would be a really good movie choice :D
Monster Month 2009
In honor of the coolest month and Holiday of the year, I will strictly be shooting monster/horror movie/Halloween inspired toy shots all month long.
All Photos © Jason Jerde - All Rights Reserved
Please do not copy, distribute or use my photos in any way, without consent.
How Stanley Kubrick's Editing Conveys a Horrifying Supernatural Vision in The Shining
by Adam Polselli
Copyright © 1980 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.
Spooky Empire Ultimate Halloween Weekend
#Spooky15
Hyatt Regency Orlando
9801 International Drive
Orlando, FL 32819, US
halloween, halloween decorations, gachas, gatchas, trick or treat hunt, halloween costumes, clothes, mesh, skins, free, freebies, haunted house, food, contest, dance, kids, carnival, furniture, party, clothes for mesh bodies, contests
“All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy!”
I’ve NEVER seen this movie. Perhaps I should one day.
Setup Shot: www.flickr.com/photos/grizzelle/4792537986/
Strobist INFO:
Shutter Speed 1/160
Aperture 3.5
ISO 100
Lens – Canon 70-200mm
Focal Length 130mm
White Bal – Flash Sync
580exII at 1/32 (35mm) with snoot aimed at subject’s head from approx 3 ft above (slight angle in).
Flashpoint Monolights 1220 at 1/66 power with gridded approx 2ft from subject face partially covered by a strip of painters tape (to break down a little more light)
Total Lights setup - 4
Evening 6:50pm
Subject – Jack
The historic Colorado hotel, The Stanley Hotel, is known to be haunted and inspiration for Stephen King's The Shining. On this day, it serves as backdrop for a wedding.
Personally I think this is one the photos I have put the least effort into and so it suprises me that people favourite it. My opinion never seems to match the peoples views that comment on my work
The Jack Torrance typewriter from the 1980 movie "The Shining," part of the Stanley Kubrick exhibit in 2013 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Xica & Xuxa: "Come play with us, Danny".
My lovely bf built this hallway for the twins. It definitely kicks the Shining costume up a notch.
Except for the last two, all the photos in the video were shot in June 2012. The last two were shot in June 2019 on a visit to Crater Lake National Park.
The Timberline Lodge on Mount Hood shown in the video may look familiar to fans of Stephen King. It served as the exterior of the Overlook Hotel in Kubrick's movie version of "The Shining."
I greatly enjoyed Portland's Japanese Garden nestled in the hills above the city. I've included several photos of this special place in the video.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
My 5th Entry for the 2017 Brickset Brickheadz Competition!
These are based on the TV Movie IT and the Movie The Shining based on the Novels by Stephan King.
These ones were fun to make!
I especially like the way Pennywise looks!
And the best part is, these 2 are actually made from all existing pieces!
VanDusen Garden in Vancouver, Canada carries on the tradition with one of only six Elizabethan hedge mazes in North America. The maze is made of 3,000 pyramidal cedars -- Thuja occidentalis 'Fastigiata' to be specific -- all planted in the autumn of 1981 and slowly grown into the form of the maze one finds today.
Top-left panel: an old Remington typewriter, abandoned and weather-beaten. Essentially a junk now.
Bottom-left panel: my three year old HP Pavilion notebook. Hopefully, it wouldn't become junk anytime soon.
Right panel: well, this is what Jack typed all day in "The Shining"
Hit 'F' if you like
Something is up with me. I've been trying to recreate scary movie scenes lately.
I tried doing a Here's Johnny from The Shining. I must say it came out really well. Actually it came out so well I decided not to put it up anywhere. I was scary. So, instead we have this today. Not one of the most original ideas I've had.
The blur in the hand is intentional (just in case you are wondering..)
These scary pictures (if you may) are just a build up to my Magnum Opus (ha ha!) that I've been planning for some time now.
Hope you had awesome Sunday. I'm too tired to type anything else today.
Do check out -->
P.S.: Clicking links would open pages in new windows. So go crazy.
02/11/09
I've been hiding away writing a novel, do you like how it's coming along... ?
...now where's that axe gone?
As some of you may have guessed I've been rather busy recently, and whilst I've been taking a shot a day...but finding time to process and upload it has been a struggle. Life is calming down this week so I wont get behind again... I promise ;D
...and yes I really typed this out...and yes there were mistakes if you look closely you might be able to see the tipp-ex!
Lightroom: crop, white balance, brish tool to pick out text , sharpen, save to JPG.
No getting around it, We have large hotels in this town. As with other hallway shots I've done, it's always nice to see that I can hand hold a 1/2 second exposure and still get a halfway sharp image. I guess it's the thrill of the hunt.
Posters featuring Jack Nicholson as he appeared in "The Shining" advertise a Stanley Kubrick exhibit at the Seoul Museum of Art
Actually, this is Stanley Kubrick's Adler typewriter. There is another theory that was presented in "Room 237" that actually is worth reading about, but the way it is presented in the film makes it come off as yet another crackpot tinfoil hat conspiracy theory. The topic in question is the book "The Wolf at the Door: Stanley Kubrick, History and the Holocaust," an intelligently written (and exhaustively researched) book by Geoffrey Cocks, a professor of history and psychology at Albion College in Albion, Michigan. Dr. Cocks' basic thesis is that Kubrick had been putting hidden messages into his films, not just "The Shining," that point out aspects of the Holocaust. Even if one doesn't buy into his thesis, the book in an interesting read, presented in a highly trained scholarly way. "The Shining" gets more chapters in the book, as Dr. Cocks suggests that what Jack Torrance is doing for those ghosts that inhabit the Overlook Hotel is similar (in an allegorical way) to what the common everyday German did in their routine office jobs, far away from the true horrors that went on elsewhere during WWII. I may not be offering a proper defense of Dr. Cocks' book in this brief description here, but the typewriter seen in the photo is suggested by Dr. Cocks to be a key element in drawing those parallels.