Want to know the best Stanley Kubrick movies? How about the worst Stanley Kubrick movies? Curious about Stanley Kubrick box office grosses or which Stanley Kubrick movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Stanley Kubrick movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences and which got the worst? Well you have come to the right place….because we have all of that information. From 1953 to 1999 Stanley Kubrick only directed thirteen movies. This is a case of quality over quantity, as some of those thirteen movies are classic movies. Kubrick’s first two films were produced by friends and family. Both films,1953’s Fear and Desire and 1955’s Killer’s Kiss, failed at the box office, costing his friends and family most of the money they invested.
His next two movies 1956’s The Killing and 1957’s Paths of Glory, also failed at the box office but gained Kubrick notice as a director who could produce a quality movie on a limited budget. In 1960, Kirk Douglas picked him to direct the big budget movie Spartacus. Spartacus would be Kubrick’s second biggest hit and establish him as a great director. From 1962 to 1999, he would only direct eight more movies. But during this time frame he directed the classic movies Dr. Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey, A Clockwork Orange, The Shining and Full Metal Jacket. In 1999, four days after screening a final cut of Eyes Wide Shut, Kubrick died of a heart attack in his sleep at the age of 70. It should be noted all the people that lost money on Kubrick’s first two films were paid back when Kubrick became successful. Stanley Kubrick’s IMDb page shows 16 directing credits from 1951-1999. This page will rank 13 Stanley Kubrick movies from Best to Worst in six different sortable columns of information. His 3 documentaries were not included in the rankings.
Stanley Kubrick Movies Ranked In Chronological Order With Ultimate Movie Rankings Score (1 to 5 UMR Tickets) *Best combo of box office, reviews and awards.
Stanley Kubrick Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table
The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.
- Sort Stanley Kubrick movies by the stars of the movies.
- Sort Stanley Kubrick movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost (in millions)
- Sort Stanley Kubrick movies by their yearly domestic box office rank
- Sort Stanley Kubrick movies how they were received by critics and audiences. 60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie.
- Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Stanley Kubrick movie received.
- Sort Stanley Kubrick movies by Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score. UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
Stanley Kubrick Adjusted World Wide Box Office Grosses
Stanley Kubrick Movies Worst to Best
#13 Fear and Desire (1953) From Wikipedia….. “Fear and Desire (1953) is a military action/adventure film by Stanley Kubrick. It is Kubrick’s first feature film and is also one of his least-seen productions. Kubrick served as the film’s director, producer, cinematographer and editor.” Kubrick would later try to purchase all known prints of the movie, in the hopes it would never be seen in public again. When prints of the movie started to show up in the mid 1990s…..Kubrick issued a statement that severely downplayed the film’s value, and he called Fear and Desire “a bumbling amateur film exercise.” He succeeded in making it difficult to locate…..but I actually tracked down and watched this movie. A nice first effort….but this is a confusing movie that does not even bother to try and explain itself.
#12 Killer’s Kiss (1955) After his first movie, Fear and Desire, which was family and friend financed, failed to make a dent at the box office, Kubrick raised the money for his second movie, Killer’s Kiss, by going to different friends and different family members. Killer’s Kiss had a budget of $40,000 but only returned about $21,000 to its producers. The movie which is about a boxer, a gangster and a dance hall girl, received mixed reviews….Kubrick not only co-produced but also directed, photographed and edited the venture from his own screenplay and original story…a true low budget film. One of the better reviews came from the New York Times….they said it looked like Kubrick had some promise.
#11 The Killing (1956) This is the first movie Kubrick made that was not by being banked by his friends and family. With a budget of $320,000 dollars, Kubrick and Jim Thompson (of The Grifters fame) wrote the screenplay based on the novel Clean Break by Lionel White. The drama features Sterling Hayden (who would later play Jack D. Ripper in Dr. Strangelove) and Elisha Cook, Jr. The movie did not make its money back but established Kubrick’s reputation as a budding genius among critics and studio executives.
#10 Paths of Glory (1957) Stanley Kubrick’s first great film. Paths of Glory is a 1957 anti-war film based on the novel by Humphrey Cobb. Set during World War I, stars Douglas as the commanding officer of French soldiers who refused to continue a suicidal attack. This movie shows the insanity of trench warfare, Douglas is awesome in his role. In 1992, the film was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. This is my 2nd favorite Stanley Kubrick film. Outstanding supporting roles and Kirk Douglas is outstanding in the lead role.
#9 Eyes Wide Shut (1999) The last film to be directed, produced and co-written by Stanley Kubrick. The film was based on Arthur Schnitzler’s 1926 Traumnovelle (Dream Story). This is one of my least favorite Kubrick movies. I have only seen it one time and that was enough for me. The movie earned over $87 million in adjusted for inflation box office dollars. It’s 75% critic audience score is the second lowest of all the Kubrick movies. Kubrick died four days after showing the final cut to the stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. FYI. The next time you watch Eyes Wide Shut….notice how there is a Christmas tree in almost every scene in the movie.
#8 Full Metal Jacket (1987) Considered by some to be the best Vietnam movie ever made. For my money I think Platoon is easily the winner of that argument. Full Metal Jacket follows some infantry riflemen from basic training at Paris Island to the Tet Offensive in 1968. It took Kubrick almost seven years to make this film. Vincent D’Onofrio and R. Lee Ermey are outstanding in the first half of the movie, neither makes it to the second half. IMDB has Full Metal Jacket ranked 86 on their Top 250 list.
#7 Lolita (1962) Lolita is a 1962 comedy-drama based on the novel by Vladimir Nabokov. James Mason plays Humbert Humbert, a 40-something British professor of French literature who falls in love with a fourteen-year old girl named Lolita. Murder, mayhem and a very funny Peter Sellers (he was Oscar® nominated for his role) take place in the movie. This was Kubrick’s 5th biggest box office hit. Jeremy Irons took over the James Mason role in the 1997 remake.
#6 The Shining (1980) Easily my favorite Staley Kubrick movie. No matter how many times I see this movie, it still can creep me out. Nicholson is fantastic, the sets are awesome, Shelly Duvall is memorable, and Danny Lloyd (his only film) as the son gives a great child performance. The Shining was Kubrick’s 4th biggest hit with $134.40 million in adjusted for inflation box office dollars. For some unknown reason to me, it received no love from the Oscar® or Golden Globe® people, not a single nomination. One of the best movies based on a Steven King book to be filmed.
#4 Barry Lyndon (1975) When people mention their favorite Kubrick movie, not too many people offer up 1975’s Barry Lyndon. Despite the movie’s lackluster box office (9th of his 13 movies), it earned seven Oscar® nominations (the most of any Kubrick film) and won four Oscars® (tied for most with Spartacus). The movie follows Ryan O’Neal’s character Barry Lyndon from the 1750’s to 1789. In Sight and Sound’s 2002 critic poll, Barry Lyndon was ranked #27 of all-time.
#3 Spartacus (1960) After veteran director Anthony Mann was fired after the first week of filming by producer Kirk Douglas. Douglas turned to Kubrick to take over the film. Douglas had appeared in Kubrick’s 4th film, Paths of Glory, and felt that Kubrick could handle the $12 million dollar budget with a cast of 10,500.
#2 Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb (1964) Dr. Strangelove was a 1964 black comedy movie that satirized the nuclear scare. The American Film Institute’s 100 years…..100 laughs poll ranks Dr. Strangelove as the 3rd funniest movie in American cinema history. Kubrick earned his first ever Oscar® nomination for Best Director for this movie. Peter Sellers was actually supposed to play 4 characters in the movie. There is great debate about why he never filmed the 4th part.
One story is that Seller’s broke his leg and therefore could not play the 4th and last part. Another story goes that Seller’s did not want to play the part and faked an injury to get out of the part. This was good news for Slim Pickens who got to play his most famous role in his career…Major “King” Kong.
Nice information, I can not believe how many tickets 2001 and Spartacus sold way back when, my favorite Kubrick film is Dr. Strangelove, Peter Sellers is awesome in that movie
Hey WOW….yep they were both huge hits….I agree Peter Sellers is indeed awesome in that movie…thanks for the comments
Great piece on one of the greatest directors ever. My favorite would easily be 2001 A space odysesey,
Hey Dave!….thanks for the compliment….2001 is a great classic.
Hey Pops. A Space Odyssey is a movie that gets better every time. Clockwork Orange still plays in theaters almost 50 years later. Kubrick is a genius.
Thank you Bryan. A Clockwork Orange is a classic….as for A Space Odyssey…..simple put….it is a movie about the creation of a new species……kind of like Unbreakable with Bruce Willis….when you find out at the end the movie was really a movie about a superhero origin. Thanks for reading.
I am sorry but I have never understood the Kubrick fascination. 2001 A Space Odyssey is a great movie to watch if you are having trouble sleeping, The Shining, butchers a great novel, Full Metal Jacket fizzles in the second half, and Eyes Wide Shut is a confusing mess, and after reading some of the comments, I am not sure I want to know Kubrick was thinking. So I have tried 4 Kubrick movies and have not liked any of them. But I enjoyed your page. voted up
Then I am even more impressed that you stopped by to comment on my page. You are not the first person to say that 2001 is a bore fest. Thanks for stopping by ShaunBroncoMan
Also, from the MKUltra/Ritualistic Abuse side of it here is another site: http://www.konformist.com/flicks/eyeswideshut.htm – this article gets to the point about the purpose of it a little more than the other guy. The symbolism is used by the MKUltra programmers. The Wizard of Oz programming – that’s what it’s called – is all throughout. The most obvious thing is the multiple references to the rainbow – this programming was used in the formation of child sex slaves, a practice begun under the Nazis and developed here in the U.S. Watching this film with your eyes wide open will open them even further – why are there so many unsolved crimes? …So many dead women and children? This movie was either done to blow the lid off of this kind of thing and expose it or it is a tool of the programmers… Hard to say. I tend to think it is more of an expose. I know a lot of people who are like the good doctor. They think they’re important and in the know. But, they’re just powerless, clueless chumps. The Dr. character is an analogy to the non-illuminated middle class.
Very interesting….ok I am now convinced I need to watch this movie again….my favorite line in the second article was…..”The choice of Cruise and Kidman in these roles is, to say the least, curious. Their emotional depth as actors–throughout their respective careers–has always appeared lacking, in my opinion. I sincerely doubt that either of them were actually perceptive enough to grasp what Kubrick was getting at with this film”…..I agree with that 100%. I will be doing some more research on this movie….that I had dismissed many years ago…..all the information you have suggested is greatly appreciated.
Good! Glad you’re enjoying it. I’m listening to that Youtube series I linked to right now, too. I often listen to Redice radio, they’re like Art Bell’s Coast to Coast a little, but out of Sweden.
Probably Kidman and Cruise didn’t think about it. After all, they’re programmed, too. Scientology is another type of programming, just like Mormonism (I’m an ex-Mormon. I deprogrammed myself, that’s how I got into this stuff years ago.) and the JWs, etc. I hope that doesn’t offend, anyone, but if anyone is reading this and involved with one of those organizations, you’d better start realizing you’re in a mind cage. So, maybe that IS the reason they were selected. Plus, they’re a big box office draw for a really off-beat film. A friend of mind once told me she just thought this was a soft porn film… something for men to enjoy alone. But, when you look at it again from the right perspective you see something really deep – layers deep! It’s like looking at one of those Magic Eye pictures – you look at it one way and it’s just a bunch of tiny seemingly unrelated images, but when you blink and look at it again another way, you see a three-dimensional picture
You have sold me Angela….I will be checking out again….after doing some more research so I can look for things the second time around….I like movies like that….another movie like that is another Tom Cruise movie called Magnolia….the first time you do not notice all the references to Exodus 8:2……and frogs….on a second viewing you notice the director put them everywhere…I am actually looking forward to watching it again…thank you.