Fear and Desire

Stanley Kubrick's rarely-seen anti-war classic...a nightmarish phantasmagoria of unforgettable images!
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Format:  DVD-R
item number:  7AGVW
Made-on-Demand
Also released as:
Fear and Desire for $24.20
Fear and Desire for $10.80

DVD-R Details

  • Run Time: 1 hours, 2 minutes
  • Video: Black & White
  • Encoding: Region 0 (Worldwide)
  • Released: September 29, 2020
  • Originally Released: 1953
  • Label: Alpha Video

Performers, Cast and Crew:

Starring &
Directed by

Entertainment Reviews:

Fresh80%

TOMATOMETER
Total Count: 15

Spilled36%

AUDIENCE SCORE
User Ratings: 1,551
Rating: 4/10 -- A dismal expression of a lousy script... every bit the work of a young kid with lots of ideas and no clue what to do with them. Full Review
Antagony & Ecstasy
Mar 31, 2014
Although some visuals are striking chiaroscuro, the film still comes across as tyro self-conscious, a belaboring of theme by one not yet sure of his art. Full Review
ReelTalk Movie Reviews
Mar 22, 2012
... Fear and Desire shows that Kubrick's polished vision didn't emerge from a void. He had to start out with a rough draft first. Full Review
The Atlantic
Feb 21, 2018
Kubrick does show some brash invention and a yearning to experiment with angles. Full Review
Combustible Celluloid
Oct 31, 2013
Rating: 2/4 -- ...an exceedingly thin premise that's employed to sometimes striking yet often underwhelming effect by Kubrick... Full Review
Reel Film Reviews
Mar 6, 2018
Rating: 2.5/4 -- [While it] may not be an essential piece of the Kubrick canon, it is certainly an essential piece of film history. Full Review
From the Front Row
Aug 6, 2019
For all its heavy-handed gloom and stylistic unevenness, Fear and Desire has a certain fierceness that's hard to shake. Full Review
Slant Magazine
Mar 17, 2012

Description by OLDIES.com:

Four soldiers find themselves behind enemy lines after their plane is shot down during the war. Desperate to elude the enemy, the men attempt to build a raft. They are approached by a strange peasant girl speaking a language unfamiliar to them. Rather than try to communicate, they tie the beautiful girl to a tree. As the hours drag on, the increasingly-anxious soldiers are driven to the brink of madness by their fear of being captured...a fear that will drive them to do unspeakable things...

In 1953, twenty-four-year-old Stanley Kubrick was still best known as a photographer for Look magazine. What he really wanted, however, was to be a filmmaker. With the financial assistance of his wealthy uncle Martin Perveler, the owner of a chain of drug stores, Kubrick amassed $10,000 to shoot Fear and Desire, from a script written by his friend Howard Sackler (later to win a Pulitzer Prize for his play The Great White Hope, made into a movie in 1970 starring James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander.) Filming took place in the San Gabriel Mountains with a production crew of just 15 people. Actors included Paul Mazurksy, at the time performing in an off-Broadway production of He Who Gets Slapped, and artist's model Virginia Leith. In the years to come, Mazursky would garner acclaim as a writer and director himself, with films such as Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969), Harry and Tonto (1974) and An Unmarried Woman (1978). Virginia Leith would become best known for playing the doomed disembodied head in the notorious cult classic The Brain That Wouldn't Die (1962). Despite a shoot plagued by mishaps, including Kubrick accidentally spraying the cast with pesticide while trying to create a fog effect, filming was completed in two to three weeks. The relative lack of budget meant Kubrick had to shoot silent, however, and the resulting addition of sync sound and music ate up an additional $53,000, which Kubrick only procured by agreeing to serve as assistant director on a five-part biography of Abraham Lincoln for the television series Omnibus. Upon its release, Fear and Desire drew praise for its dreamlike imagery and stunning cinematography from critics such as James Agee, Curtis Harrington, and Mark Van Doren, but Kubrick soon became ashamed of its low-budget nature, deeming it an amateurish effort. However, it is easy to see the first flowering of the amazing genius that would come to fruition in his unforgettable classics Spartacus (1960), Lolita (1962), Dr. Strangelove (1964), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), A Clockwork Orange (1971), and The Shining (1980). To understand Kubrick, Fear and Desire is mandatory viewing.

This product is made-on-demand by the manufacturer using DVD-R recordable media. Almost all DVD players can play DVD-Rs (except for some older models made before 2000) - please consult your owner's manual for formats compatible with your player. These DVD-Rs may not play on all computers or DVD player/recorders. To address this, the manufacturer recommends viewing this product on a DVD player that does not have recording capability.
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Product Info

  • Sales Rank: 36,118
  • UPC: 089218835796
  • Shipping Weight: 0.25/lbs (approx)
  • International Shipping: 1 item

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