Color Me Kubrick: A Great Premise, but Little Else

By El Bicho, published Apr 05, 2007
Published Content: 552  Total Views: 66,262  Favorited By: 9 CPs
Rating: 3.0 of 5
The film is loosely based on real life hustler Alan Conway, a sociopathic alcoholic con man who posed as director Stanley Kubrick around London during the early '90s. What made Conway's ability to continually get away with the ruse all the more remarkable is not only did he know very little about Kubrick, he didn't resemble him at all. Kubrick was American while Conway was English. Kubrick had a beard while Conway was clean-shaven. Kubrick was married while Conway was gay.

What Conway had in his favor was Kubrick shunned the trappings of fame and celebrity attached to filmmaking, so while many may have known the names of his films, very few people knew much about the man. According to the media, Kubrick was a genius and a recluse. For him to come out of hiding and open up to a stranger surely implied said person was special because surely Kubrick wouldn't open up to just anyone. It would be like meeting J.D. Salinger.

Conway was a very interesting con man because rather than the usual big scores that take place in films he was only after, and successfully acquired, the little niceties of life: cigarettes, vodka, and the seduction of men. Color Me Kubrick shows Conway was very good at telling people what they wanted to hear: showering them with praise and the potential of great opportunities. They very much wanted to believe him and the wishes he says he can grant. And it wasn't just the common folk. He even fooled New York Times writer Frank Rich and a British comedian who thought he was headed for Las Vegas to become an international star.

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