Eyes Wide Shut - Movie Review

  • 01 November 2005

Rating: 4.5 out of 5

Mr. Kubrick would have been upset. I take that back. He would have been totally pissed. I'll get it out up front: Our screening was interrupted by a fire alarm, which sent the entire San Francisco press constituency outside for a full hour, and ultimately forced us to miss about five minutes of the movie, right in the middle, where it was getting juicy. Not to mention that whole digital alteration thing. Ugh.

That aside, this is one hell of a movie. A somewhat bizarre cross between A Clockwork Orange and The Shining, Eyes Wide Shut is the work of a meticulous craftsman -- a luscious and rich odyssey through the streets of New York, and into the minds of a couple of its residents.

Those residents are Doctor Bill Hartford (Cruise) and his wife Alice (Kidman), who live a pretty good life in Manhattan. But when a friend's (Pollack) party gets a little kinky - just enough to stir up some long-hidden emotions - Alice confesses to a one-night stand that never actually happened... but which she desperately wanted to.

[![]()] This sets Bill's mind in motion, sending him on something of an accidental journey through the bowels of NYC, from a brief visit with a hooker to a costume dealer who whores out his daughter to the biggest damn orgy you've ever seen. Or at least the biggest that I've ever seen.

All the while, Bill gets more and more convinced that his wife is depraved and wanton, which only fuels his desires even more. More than a journey of the eye through these lavish sets, Bill's is a journey inside the mind of the paranoid, and it gets him in a little too deep by the movie's end.

The movie isn't as raunchy as you might have heard. In fact, it almost seems tame except for the big orgy scene and a ton of naked Kidman shots. And no, Cruise does not wear a dress in the movie.

Eyes Wide Shut is a thrill to watch - if for no other reason than to try and guess who is an underground sexual deviant and who isn't (hint: everyone is, of course). It is chilling and delicious at the same time, and while the film is a bit obtuse, lacking the gripping/clever endings of the rest of Kubrick's repertoire, it's a fitting end to a brilliant career in the cinema.

Frankly, I want to see it again. Especially those lost five minutes. [Postscript: Of course, I did, and I still think EWS is a great capstone to Kubrick's magnificent career.]

Oddly, the DVD is presented in fullscreen format. Even more oddly, the disc says all over the place how it is presented in the format in which Kubrick intended. The mysteries never cease, do they?

Image caption Eyes Wide Shut

Facts and Figures

Year: 1999

Run time: 159 mins

In Theaters: Friday 16th July 1999

Box Office Worldwide: $162.1M

Budget: $65M

Distributed by: Warner Bros. Pictures

Production compaines: Warner Bros. Pictures, Hobby Films, Pole Star

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 4.5 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 78%
Fresh: 97 Rotten: 28

IMDB: 7.3 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Stanley Kubrick

Producer: Stanley Kubrick

Screenwriter: Stanley Kubrick, Frederic Raphael

Starring: Tom Cruise as Dr. William 'Bill' Harford, Nicole Kidman as Alice Harford, Madison Eginton as Helena Harford, Jackie Sawiris as Roz, Sydney Pollack as Victor Ziegler, Leslie Lowe as Illona Ziegler, Peter Benson as Bandleader, Todd Field as Nick Nightingale, Michael Doven as Ziegler's Secretary, Sky du Mont as Sandor Szavost, Julienne Davis as Amanda 'Mandy' Curran, Marie Richardson as Marion Nathanson, Vinessa Shaw as Domino, Leelee Sobieski as Milich's Daughter, Alan Cumming as Desk Clerk

Also starring: Stanley Kubrick, Frederic Raphael