Stephen King famously dislikes Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of his 1977 novel The Shining but I think it is a cinematic masterpiece and was thrilled when I learned that it was coming back to theaters in honor of its 45th anniversary (what?). I have seen it on the big screen several times but experiencing it in IMAX last night was absolutely epic! Jack Torrence (Jack Nicholson) takes a job as the winter caretaker at the Overlook Hotel in the remote mountains of Colorado with his wife Wendy (Shelley Duvall) and young son Danny (Danny Lloyd) because he is desperate to escape from his troubled past and hopes to find the time and solitude to work on his novel. Once they arrive, the cook Dick Hallorann (Scatman Crothers) recognizes that Danny has a strong psychic ability he calls "shining" and warns him that the hotel also has a "shine" because of its violent past. Danny begins having frightening visions about the former inhabitants of the hotel but Jack seems to feel at home with these malevolent ghosts. When a severe winter storm cuts them off from the outside world, Jack has a compete psychotic break causing him to attack his family. I have always found this movie to be incredibly unsettling (the book is scarier but the movie creates an escalating tension that is almost unbearable) and the IMAX format makes the sense of unease even more immersive. The long tracking shots following Wendy and Danny though the empty hotel are even more disconcerting because it really feels like you are there with them and the sound design, including Danny's Big Wheel traveling across different floor surfaces, ice cubes rattling in Jack's glass, the echo of the typewriter in the cavernous lobby, and the staccato beating of a heart, is even more menacing because it is all around you. Nicholson's performance is iconic but I have always thought that Duvall's interpretation (or Kubrick's) of Wendy is less effective because it is very weak and passive. However, in this format her fear is absolutely visceral (it makes Jack's behavior seem more terrifying) and I couldn't look away. Even though it wasn't filmed specifically for IMAX, seeing it this way was definitely my favorite viewing experience and I highly recommend it!

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