The Kubrick stare is a directorial technique used to portray insane or unstable characters in film.[1]
In a Kubrick stare, an actor looks out from under the brow line and tilts their head towards the camera.[2] The actor may smile in sinister fashion or look directly into the camera, which can create the illusion that the actor is looking past the camera and directly at the audience.[3] Directors use the stare to convey that a character has become dangerously mentally unstable, and often to foreshadow something "intense".
Deemed "one of cinema's most recognizable shots" by The Daily Telegraph, the technique is named after Stanley Kubrick, who often used it, but it has also been used by other directors before and since.[4]
What would later be known as the Kubrick stare was first used by director Alfred Hitchcock in the ending of Psycho (1960),[5] but the origin of the term lies in the making of Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (1971). According to actor Malcolm McDowell, whilst filming the movie, Kubrick requested that McDowell react to hearing music by Beethoven for a scene. After several tries, they agreed upon an expression with the eyes "kind of up and glazed over". Cinematographer Douglas Milsome dubbed it the "Kubrick stare", coining the term.[6] Kubrick found McDowell's gaze compelling enough to put on the poster for A Clockwork Orange.
Kubrick extensively used the technique that bore his name in almost all his films, especially in Full Metal Jacket (1987), The Shining (1980), and A Clockwork Orange (1971). Manohla Dargis argued that the Kubrick stare was perfected by Jack Nicholson in The Shining.[7] In the modern era, directors and actors have also relied on the technique to convey derangement. It can be seen in The Silence of the Lambs (1991), Donnie Darko (2001), and Batman (1989). In particular, the supervillain the Joker has become associated with the Kubrick stare due to actor Heath Ledger heavily using it in The Dark Knight (2008). The movie Smile (2022) revolves around a woman who is haunted by a many-faced entity that constantly smiles at her while giving a Kubrick stare.[8]
Drawing on the theories of Jacques Lacan, Far Out argues that the Kubrick stare breaks down the barrier between the fictional world and that of the viewers, causing the audience to become further invested in the media. Similarly, researcher Matthew Melia notes that an actor performing the stare will give the impression that they are looking past the fourth wall and directly at the audience. He describes the technique as "invasive" and "troubling".[9] Slate remarks that the facial expression is perhaps unrivalled in evoking fear in cinema.[10] Similarly, The Telegraph describes the stare as reveling in the viewer's unease.
In analyzing a specific Kubrick stare from Full Metal Jacket, scholar Jens Kjelgaard-Christiansen notes that the character's lowered eyebrows and smiling mouth seem to contradict one another, indicating both anger and joy at the same time. She adds that abnormal gazes can come across as creepy, as humans read emotions from the eyes.
Robbie Collin, writing in The Daily Telegraph, opines that only actors with an innate "coiled menace" in their facial structures are able to perform a Kubrick stare well, regardless of talent or acting ability.[11] He comments that Jack Nicholson appears to constantly look as if he were giving a Kubrick stare, due to the "hunch of his eyebrows and curl of his lip". Manohla Dargis, reviewing Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024), comments that Anya Taylor-Joy is suited to perform a Kubrick stare as she has large eyes, whose whites are accentuated when she looks up.
Film critic Roger Ebert complains that Kubrick's decision to film Alex, an amoral character in A Clockwork Orange, from above makes Alex look "messianic" instead of villainous.[12] He also criticizes Kubrick for overusing the technique associated with him in a review of Full Metal Jacket, stating that it "spoils some of the suspense."[13]