And I Am Never Never to of You Going to the Surface Again Is That Clear
The Shining is a 1980 British-American horror moving picture about a frustrated writer, his wife and their disturbed son who feel a series of paranormal horrors while looking after a deserted hotel for the winter.
- Directed by Stanley Kubrick. Written by Stanley Kubrick and Diane Johnson, based on the novel by Stephen Male monarch.
All work and no play make Jack a irksome boy...(taglines)
Jack Torrance [edit]
- [typed] All work and no play makes Jack a tiresome boy
- God, I'd give anything for a drink. I'd requite my goddamned soul for but a drinking glass of beer.
- I'll simply set my bourbon and advocaat down right here.
- Wendy, baby... I think you hurt my caput real bad. I'm dizzy. I think I need a dr..
- Wendy? You got a large surprise coming to yous. [laughs] You're non going anywhere. Get check out the Snow Cat and the radio and you'll come across what I mean. [laughing insanely] Go check it out! Get cheque information technology out!
- Wendy, I'm home.
- Little pigs, footling pigs, let me come in. [Silence and a pause] Not past the hair of your chiny-chin-chins? Then I'll huff, and I'll puff, and I'll blow your house in!
- Hereś Johnny !
- Annotation: ranked #68 in the American Film Plant's listing of the pinnacle 100 picture quotations in American movie theatre
- Come up out, come out, wherever you are!
- Danny! I'grand coming! You can't get abroad! I'thousand right behind ya!
- Wendy, darling, lite of my life, I'm non gonna hurt ya. Ya didn't let me finish my sentence. I said, I'm not gonna hurt ya. I'chiliad only gonna bash your brains in. I'grand gonna bash 'em right the fuck in. [laughs]
Wendy Torrance [edit]
- It was but ane of those things, yous know. Purely an accident. My husband had, uh, been drinking, and he came home about three hours tardily. So he wasn't exactly in the greatest mood that night. And, well, Danny had scattered some of his schoolhouse papers all over the room, and my married man grabbed his arm and pulled him away from them. Information technology's... it's just the sort of thing you practice a hundred times with a kid, you know, in the park or in the streets. But on this particular occasion, my married man just used as well much strength, and he injured Danny's arm. [Nervous express mirth] Anyhow, something adept did come up out of it all, considering he said "Wendy, I'chiliad never gonna touch another driblet. And if I do, you can get out me." And he didn't, and he hasn't had whatever alcohol in, uh, v months.
- [To Jack] You did this to him, didn't yous? Y'all son-of-a-bitch! You lot did this to him! Didn't yous?! [Jack shakes his head in denial] How could you? How could you?!
- If Jack won't come with us, I'll just have to tell them that we're going by ourselves.
- [When Tony says he does not want to become to the Overlook Hotel] Well, let'due south just await and see. We're all going to have a real good time.
Danny Torrance [edit]
- Tony, I'm scared. [As Tony] Recall what Mr. Hallorann said. Information technology'due south but like pictures in a book. It isn't real.
- [As Tony] Danny'southward not here, Mrs. Torrance … Danny can't wake up, Mrs. Torrance … Danny'southward gone away, Mrs. Torrance.
- Redrum … Redrum … Redrum … [Wendy sees it written backwards on the door, and in the mirror it spells "murder"]
Dick Hallorann [edit]
- Nosotros've got canned fruits and vegetables, canned fish and meats, hot and cold syrups, Post Toasties, Corn Flakes, Sugar Puffs, Rice Krispies, Oatmeal … and Cream of Wheat. You got a dozen jugs of black molasses, we got sixty boxes of stale milk, 30 twelve-pound bags of carbohydrate … at present we got dried peaches, dried apricots, dried raisins, dried prunes... [Telepathically to Danny] How'd you like some ice cream, Doc?
- (Imitating Bugs Bunny) Eh, what'due south up, Doc?
Others [edit]
- Stuart Ullman: Construction started in 1907. Information technology was finished in 1909. The site is supposed to be located on an Indian burying basis, and I believe they actually had to repel a few Indian attacks as they were building information technology.
- Grady Twins: Hello, Danny. Come and play with us. Come up and play with us, Danny. Forever... [shots of their bloody corpses]... and ever... and always.
- Hotel Guest: Great party, isn't it?
Dialogue [edit]
- Danny: Do you really want to get and live in that hotel for the wintertime?
- Wendy: Sure I practise. Information technology'll be lots of fun.
- Danny: Yeah, I approximate so. Anyway, in that location's hardly anybody to play with around here.
- Wendy: Yes, I know. It always takes a little fourth dimension to make new friends.
- Danny: Yes, I judge so.
- Wendy: What about Tony? He'south looking forrad to the hotel, I bet.
- Danny: [as Tony] No I ain't, Mrs. Torrance.
- Wendy: Now, come on, Tony, don't be light-headed.
- Danny: [as Tony] I don't desire to become at that place, Mrs. Torrance.
- Wendy: Well, how come you don't want to go?
- Danny: [every bit Tony] I just don't.
- Wendy: Well, let'south simply wait and run across. We're all going to have a real good time.
- Ullman: Physically, it'southward not a very enervating job. The only thing that tin get a bit trying upwards hither during the winter is... the tremendous sense of isolation.
- Jack: Well, that just happens to be exactly what I'm looking for. I'm outlining a new writing project and, uh, five months of peace is just what I demand.
- Ullman: That's very skillful, Jack. Considering... for some people, solitude and isolation can, in itself, get a trouble.
- Jack: Not for me.
- Ullman: I don't suppose they told you anything in Denver about the tragedy we had up here during the winter of 1970?
- Jack: I don't believe they did.
- Ullman: Well, my predecessor in this job hired a man named Charles Grady as the wintertime caretaker. And he came up here with his married woman and two little girls - I think they were about 8 and x - and he had a good employment record, skillful references, and from what I've been told he seemed similar a completely normal individual. Merely at some bespeak during the winter, he must have suffered some kind of complete mental breakdown. He ran amok and... he killed his family with an axe. Stacked them neatly in one of the rooms in the West Fly, and so he... put both barrels of a shotgun in his oral cavity. Law thought information technology was what the old-timers used to call cabin fever; a kind of claustrophobic reaction that can occur when people are shut in together over long periods of time.
- Jack: Well, that is quite a story.
- Ullman: [chuckling] Yeah, yeah it is. Oh, information technology'southward withal difficult for me to believe information technology actually happened here, only it did. So I remember you tin appreciate why I wanted to tell you virtually it.
- Jack: I certainly tin can, and I also sympathize why your people in Denver left it for you to tell me.
- Wendy: Hey, wasn't it effectually here that the Donner Party got snowbound?
- Jack: I think that was further west in the Sierras.
- Wendy: Oh...
- Danny: What was the Donner Party?
- Jack: They were a party of settlers in covered-railroad vehicle times. They got snowbound 1 winter in the mountains, and they had to resort to cannibalism in social club to stay live.
- Danny: You lot hateful they ate each other up?
- Jack: They had to, in guild to survive.
- Wendy: Jack--
- Danny: Don't worry, Mom. I know all most cannibalism. I saw it on TV.
- Jack: You see? It's okay. He saw it on the tv set.
- Wendy: Are all these Indian designs authentic?
- Ullman: Yeah, I believe so. Mainly based on Navajo and Apache motifs.
- Wendy: Oh well, they're really gorgeous. As a matter of fact, this is probably the most gorgeous hotel I've ever seen.
- Ullman: Oh, this one-time place has had an illustrious past. In its heyday, it was one of the stopping places for the jet-set, even earlier anybody knew what a jet-gear up was. We had iv presidents who stayed here. Lots of picture show stars.
- Wendy: Royalty?
- Ullman: All the best people.
- Ullman: We tin can conform up to three hundred people here very comfortably.
- Wendy: Boy, I'll betcha we could really have a good party in this room, huh?
- Ullman: I'yard afraid you're not gonna do too well here, unless you brought your own supplies. We always remove all the booze from the premises when we close down. That reduces the insurance we normally have to carry.
- Jack: We don't drink.
- Ullman: Well and so you're in luck.
- Hallorann: Mrs. Torrance, your husband introduced yous equally Winifred. Now, are you a Winnie or a Freddy?
- Wendy: I'one thousand a Wendy.
- Hallorann: Oh, that'south overnice. That's the prettiest.
- Ullman: By five o'clock tonight, yous'll never know everyone was ever hither.
- Wendy: Just like a ghost ship, huh?
- Hallorann: You know how I knew your proper name was Doc? [Danny doesn't respond] Y'all know what i'k talkin' 'bout, don't you? [No answer again] I can remember when I was a little boy, my grandmother and I could hold conversations entirely without ever opening our mouths. She chosen it "shining". And for a long time, I thought information technology was just the two of the states that had the smoothen to u.s.a.. Just like you probably idea you lot was the simply i. But there are other folks, though generally they don't know it, or don't believe information technology. How long have you been able to exercise information technology? [Danny doesn't reply] Why don't y'all wanna talk virtually it?
- Danny: I'm non supposed to.
- Hallorann: Who says you own't supposed to?
- Danny: Tony.
- Hallorann: Who'south Tony?
- Danny: Tony is a trivial male child that lives in my mouth.
- Hallorann: Is Tony the one that tells you things?
- Danny: Yes.
- Hallorann: How does he tell y'all things?
- Danny: It'south like I become to sleep, and he shows me things. Only when I wake up, I can't remember everything.
- Hallorann: Does your Mom and Dad know virtually Tony?
- Danny: Yes.
- Hallorann: Practice they know he tells yous things?
- Danny: No. Tony told me never to tell them.
- Hallorann: Has Tony ever told you annihilation about this place? Nearly the Overlook Hotel?
- Danny: I don't know.
- Hallorann: Now remember real hard, Doc. Think.
- Danny: Possibly he showed me something.
- Hallorann: Try to think of what it was.
- Danny: Mr. Hallorann, are yous scared of this place?
- Hallorann: No. I ain't scared of nothing hither. Information technology's only that, you know, some places are like people. Some "smoothen" and some don't. I guess you could say the Overlook Hotel here has something well-nigh similar "shining".
- Danny: Is there something bad here?
- Hallorann: Well, you know, Md, when something happens, it can leave a trace of itself behind, say like if someone burns toast. Well, maybe things that happen exit other kinds of traces backside. Not things that anyone else can notice, merely things that people who shine tin run across, but like they can see things that haven't happened all the same. Well, sometimes they can see things that happened a long fourth dimension ago. I think a lot of things happened correct here in this hotel over the years, and not all of 'em was adept.
- Danny: What about Room 237?
- Hallorann: Room 237?
- Danny: You're scared of Room 237, ain't ya?
- Hallorann: No I own't.
- Danny: Mr. Hallorann, what is in Room 237?
- Hallorann: Nothing! There ain't nothing in Room 237, merely you haven't got no business going in in that location anyway, so stay out. Yous sympathise? Stay out!
- [Wendy brings Jack breakfast in bed]
- Wendy: It's really pretty outside. How about taking me for a walk later you've finished your breakfast?
- Jack: Oh, I suppose I ought to try to do some writing first.
- Wendy: Any ideas yet?
- Jack: Lots of ideas. No good ones.
- Wendy: Well, something'll come up. It's but a matter of settling dorsum into the habit of writing every day.
- Jack: Yep, that's all information technology is.
- Wendy: Information technology'south really prissy up here, isn't it?
- Jack: I love it, I actually do. I've never been this happy or comfortable anywhere.
- Wendy: Aye, it's astonishing how fast you become used to such a big place. I tell y'all, when we first came up here, I thought it was kind of scary.
- Jack: I fell in love with it right away. When I came up here for my interview, it was as though I'd been here earlier. I mean, nosotros all have moments of déjà vu, but this was ridiculous. It was almost every bit though I knew what was going to be around every corner.
- Wendy: Get a lot written today?
- Jack: Yes.
- Wendy: Hey! Weather forecast said it'southward gonna snow tonight!
- Jack: What exercise you desire me to do most information technology?
- Wendy: Aw, come up on, Hun. Don't exist and so grouchy.
- Jack: I'm not being grouchy. I but desire to stop my piece of work.
- Wendy: Okay, I empathize. I'll come dorsum afterwards with a couple of sandwiches for ya, and possibly you'll permit me read something then.
- Jack: Wendy, allow me explicate something to you. Whenever you come up in hither and interrupt me, you're breaking my concentration. You're distracting me! [he hits his head with the palm of his paw, rips up his manuscript, and throws it onto the floor] And it will and so take me fourth dimension to get dorsum to where I was! Sympathize?!
- Wendy: Yep.
- Jack: I'm gonna make a new rule: whenever I'm in hither, and you hear me typing, [presses down on random keys] whether you don't hear me typing, whatever the fuck you hear me doing in here, when I'm in here, that ways that I am working. That means don't come in. Now, do you call up you tin handle that?
- Wendy: Yeah.
- Jack: Fine. Why don't you lot outset right now and go the fuck outta here?
- Wendy: Okay...
- [Danny enters the room finding Jack awake sitting on his bed]
- Danny: Can I go to my room and go my fire-engine?
- Jack: Come up here for a infinitesimal first. [Danny sits with Jack] How'south it going, Medico?
- Danny: Okay.
- Jack: Are you having a practiced time?
- Danny: Yes, Dad.
- Jack: Good. I want you lot to have a good time.
- Danny: I am. Dad?
- Jack: Yes?
- Danny: Practice y'all feel bad?
- Jack: No. I'grand just a little tired.
- Danny: So why don't you go to sleep?
- Jack: I can't. I accept as well much to exercise.
- Danny: Dad?
- Jack: Yes?
- Danny: Practise you lot similar this hotel?
- Jack: Yes I exercise. I beloved it. Don't you?
- Danny: I guess then.
- Jack: Good. I want you to like information technology here. I wish we could stay here for ever, and e'er... and ever.
- Danny: Dad?
- Jack: What?
- Danny: You wouldn't ever hurt Mommy and me, would you?
- Jack: What exercise you hateful? Did your mother always say that to you, that I would injure y'all?
- Danny: No, Dad.
- Jack: Are y'all certain?
- Danny: Yes, Dad.
- Jack: I dearest you, Danny. I love you more than annihilation else in the whole world, and I'd never do anything to hurt yous, ever. Y'all know that, don't you?
- Danny: Aye, Dad.
- Jack: Good.
- Jack: It was the most terrible nightmare I always had! It'southward the most horrible dream I always had!
- Wendy: It'south okay, information technology's over now.
- Jack: I dreamed that I — that I killed yous and Danny. But I didn't just kill y'all. I cut you up into little pieces. Oh my God! I must be losing my mind.
- Wendy: Everything's gonna be all right.
- Jack: Hullo, Lloyd. A little slow this evening, isn't it? [laughs]
- Lloyd: Yep it is, Mr. Torrance. What'll it exist?
- Jack: I'm awfully glad you asked me that, Lloyd. Considering I but happen to have two twenties and two tens right here in my wallet. I was afraid they were gonna exist there until next April. And so hither's what: you slip me a canteen of bourbon, a lilliputian glass and some ice. You lot can do that, tin can't you, Lloyd? You're not too decorated, are you?
- Lloyd: No, sir. I'1000 not busy at all.
- Jack: Good human! You ready 'em up and I'll knock 'em back, Lloyd. One by one. White man'south brunt, Lloyd, my man! White human's brunt. [checks wallet] Say, Lloyd, information technology seems I'grand temporarily light! How'southward my credit in this joint, anyway?
- Lloyd: Your credit's fine, Mr. Torrance.
- Jack: That's swell. I like y'all, Lloyd. I always liked you. You were always the best of 'em. Best god-damn bartender from Timbuktu to Portland, Maine. Or Portland, Oregon, for that thing.
- Lloyd: Give thanks you for saying so.
- Jack: Hither's to five miserable months on the wagon, and all the irreparable damage that it's caused me.
- Lloyd: How are things going, Mr. Torrance?
- Jack: Things could be ameliorate, Lloyd. Things could be a whole lot better.
- Lloyd: I hope it'due south nothing serious.
- Jack: No. Nothing serious. Merely a little problem with the, uh, old sperm-bank upstairs. Nothing I can't handle though, Lloyd. Thanks.
- Lloyd: Women. Can't live with 'em, can't live without 'em.
- Jack: Words of wisdom, Lloyd! Words of wisdom. I never laid a hand on him, goddamn it. I didn't. I wouldn't touch one pilus on his goddamn piddling caput. I love the fiddling son of a bowwow! I'd do anything for him, any fucking matter for him. But that bitch! As long every bit I live, she'll never let me forget what happened. I did injure him once, okay? Information technology was an accident — completely unintentional, could accept happened to everyone — and it was three goddamn years agone! The little fucker had thrown all my papers all over the floor, and all I tried to do was pull him up! A momentary loss of muscular coordination, all right? A few extra foot-pounds of free energy per second, per 2d.
- Wendy: Jack, at that place'south someone else in the hotel with u.s.! In that location'southward a crazy woman in 1 of the rooms! She tried to strangle Danny!
- Jack: Are yous out of your fucking mind?
- Wendy: No, it's the truth! I swear information technology! Danny told me! He went upward into one of the bedrooms, the door was open, and he saw this crazy woman in the bathtub! She tried to strangle him!
- Jack: [pause] Which room was it?
- Wendy: Did you lot find anything?
- Jack: No, nothing at all. I didn't see one goddamn thing.
- Wendy: You went into the room Danny said, to 237?
- Jack: Yep I did.
- Wendy: And you didn't see annihilation at all?
- Jack: Absolutely nothing. How is he?
- Wendy: He's still asleep.
- Jack: Good. I'm certain he'll be himself again in the morning.
- Wendy: Well, are you lot sure it was the correct room? I mean, perchance Danny fabricated a mistake.
- Jack: He must accept gone in that room. The door was open, the lights were on.
- Wendy: Oh, I just don't understand it. What about those bruises on his neck? Somebody did that to him.
- Jack: I recall he did it to himself.
- Wendy: No, that's non possible.
- Jack: Wendy, once yous rule out his version of what happened, there is no other explanation, is there? It wouldn't be much different from the episode that he had before we came up here, would it?
- Wendy: 'Whatever the explanation is, I think nosotros have to get Danny out of hither.
- Jack: Get him out of here?
- Wendy: Yes.
- Jack: You mean but leave the hotel?
- Wendy: Yes.
- Jack: Information technology is so fucking typical of yous to create a problem similar this when I finally have a chance to achieve something, when I'g really into my work! I could really write my ain ticket if I went back to Boulder now, couldn't I? Shoveling out driveways? Work in a carwash? Any of that appeal to you lot?
- Wendy: Jack, please!
- Jack: Wendy, I accept allow you fuck up my life and then far, just I am not gonna allow y'all fuck this up!
- Lloyd: Good evening, Mr. Torrance.
- Jack: How-do-you-do, Lloyd. Been away, but now I'grand back.
- Lloyd: It's proficient to come across you.
- Jack: It'southward proficient to be back, Lloyd.
- Lloyd: What'll it be, sir?
- Jack: Pilus of the dog that bit me.
- Lloyd: Bourbon on the rocks.
- Jack: That'll practice her.
- Lloyd: No charge to you lot, Mr. Torrance.
- Jack: No charge?
- Lloyd: Your money's no good hither. Orders from the house.
- Jack: Orders from the house?
- Lloyd: Drink up, Mr. Torrance.
- Jack: I'chiliad the kind of man who likes to know who'southward buying their drinks, Lloyd.
- Lloyd: Information technology's not a matter that concerns you, Mr. Torrance. At to the lowest degree not at this point.
- Jack: Annihilation you say, Lloyd! Anything you say!
- Jack: What do they telephone call y'all around here, Jeevesy?
- Grady: Grady, sir. Delbert Grady.
- Jack: Grady?
- Grady: Yes, sir.
- Jack: Delbert Grady?
- Grady: That's correct, sir.
- Jack: Uh, Mr. Grady, haven't I seen you somewhere before?
- Grady: Why no, sir. I don't believe and then. [cleans Jack's coat] Ah, it'due south coming off now, sir.
- Jack: Um, Mr. Grady, weren't you once the caretaker here?
- Grady: Why no, sir. I don't believe and then.
- Jack: You a married homo, are yous, Mr. Grady?
- Grady: Yes, sir. I take a wife and ii daughters, sir.
- Jack: And, uh, where are they now?
- Grady: Oh, they're somewhere around. I'thou non quite sure at the moment, sir.
- Jack: Mr. Grady, you were the caretaker here. I recognize you. I saw your motion-picture show in the newspapers. You lot uh, chopped your married woman and daughters up into little bits and and so you blew your brains out.
- Grady: That'south foreign, sir. I don't have any recollection of that at all.
- Jack: Mr. Grady, you were the flagman here.
- Grady: I'm sorry to differ with you, sir, but you are the flagman. Y'all've ever been the caretaker. I should know, sir. I've e'er been hither. Did you lot know, Mr. Torrance, that your son is attempting to bring an outside party into this situation? Did you know that?
- Jack: No.
- Grady: He is, Mr. Torrance.
- Jack: Who?
- Grady: A nigger.
- Jack: A nigger?
- Grady: A nigger melt.
- Jack: How?
- Grady: Your son has a very great talent. I don't call up yous are enlightened how great it is, only he is attempting to use that very talent against your will.
- Jack: Well, he is a very willful boy!
- Grady: Indeed he is, Mr. Torrance. A very willful male child. A rather naughty boy, if I may be then bold, sir.
- Jack: It'southward his mother. She uh, interferes.
- Grady: Perhaps they demand a practiced talking to, if you lot don't mind my saying and so. Maybe a bit more. My girls, sir, they didn't treat the Overlook at kickoff. One of them actually stole a pack of matches and tried to burn it down, but I corrected them, sir. And when my wife tried to prevent me from doing my duty, I corrected her.
- [Wendy is reading Jack's manuscript which constantly says "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy". A manic Jack appears]
- Jack: How practise you like information technology?
- Wendy: [screams] Jack!
- Jack: What are y'all doing down here?
- Wendy: I just wanted to talk to yous.
- Jack: Okay. Let's talk. What do you want to talk about?
- Wendy: I — I can't actually remember.
- Jack: Y'all tin can't call up?
- Wendy: No. I can't.
- Jack: Possibly it was about Danny? Maybe it was most him. I think we should talk over Danny. I think we should discuss what should be washed with him. What should be done with him?
- Wendy: [sobbing] I don't know.
- Jack: I don't think that's true. I think you take some very definite ideas about what should be done with Danny, and I'd similar to know what they are.
- Wendy: I recollect peradventure he should be taken to a doctor!
- Jack: You think "maybe" he should be "taken to a medico"?
- Wendy: Yes!
- Jack: When do y'all think "maybe" he should exist "taken to a doctor"?
- Wendy: Every bit soon as possible!
- Jack: "As shortly as possible"?
- Wendy: Jack! Please!
- Jack: Y'all believe his wellness might exist at stake.
- Wendy: Yes!
- Jack: Y'all are concerned about him.
- Wendy: Yes!
- Jack: And are you concerned about me?
- Wendy: Of course I am!
- Jack: "Of course" you are! Ever thought virtually my responsibilities?
- Wendy: Oh, Jack, what are you talking almost?
- Jack: Have you ever had a unmarried moment'due south thought about my responsibilities? Take y'all ever thought, for a unmarried solitary moment, well-nigh my responsibilities to my employers? Has it ever occurred to yous that I take agreed to look after the Overlook Hotel until May the first? Does it matter to you at all that the owners accept placed their complete confidence and trust in me, and that I have signed a letter of agreement, a contract, in which I have accepted that responsibility? Exercise you have the slightest idea what a moral and ethical principle is? Do you? Has it ever occurred to y'all what would happen to my future if I were to fail to live upwards to my responsibilities? Has information technology e'er occurred to you? Has it?
- Wendy: [swinging a bat] Stay away from me!
- Jack: Why?
- Wendy: I just want to go back to my room!
- Jack: Why?
- Wendy: Well, I'yard very confused! I just need a hazard to think things over!
- Jack: You've had your whole fucking life to think things over! What good's a few minutes more than gonna practise you now?
- Wendy: Stay away from me! Please! Don't hurt me!
- Jack: I'k not going to injure you.
- Wendy: Stay away from me!
- Jack: Wendy...
- Wendy: Stay abroad!
- Jack: Darling, light of my life, I'k non going to hurt y'all. You lot didn't allow me finish my judgement. I said I'g not gonna hurt ya. I'm just going to bash your brains in! I'm going to bash 'em right the fuck in!
- Grady: Mr. Torrance, I run into y'all can hardly have taken intendance of the... business we discussed.
- Jack: No demand to rub it in, Mr. Grady. I'll bargain with that situation just as soon as I exit of here.
- Grady: Volition you indeed, Mr. Torrance. I wonder. I have my doubts. I and others have come to believe that your heart is not in this, that you haven't the belly for it.
- Jack: Just requite me ane more chance to evidence information technology, Mr. Grady. That's all I ask.
- Grady: Your married woman appears to exist stronger than we imagined, Mr. Torrance, somewhat more... resourceful. She seems to take got the better of you.
- Jack: For the moment, Mr. Grady. Just for the moment.
- Grady: I fear y'all will have to deal with this matter in the harshest possible way, Mr. Torrance. I fear... that is the only matter to do.
- Jack: There'south aught I look forward to with greater pleasure, Mr. Grady.
- Grady: You give your word on that, do yous, Mr. Torrance?
- Jack: I requite you my word.
- [the door is unlocked, letting Jack out]
- Danny: [possessed by Tony] Redrum...Redrum...Redrum...
- Wendy: Danny, stop it.
- [Wendy sees it written backwards on the door, and in the mirror it spells "murder". Just and then they hear Jack chopping on the door with an ax. Wendy and Danny escapes into the bathroom. Wendy then locks the door and clears out the toiletries on elevation of the toilet's tank to open the window. Jack manages to interruption through parts of it.]
- Jack: Wendy, I'm home.
- [He unlocks the door and lets himself in. In the bath, Wendy clears out some snow to make room for Danny. She slides him out to safety. When Wendy attempts to escape the same way, she finds herself trapped in the bathroom equally the window'due south opening isn't big plenty to let her through.]
- Jack:[Advancing in the bedroom] Come out. Come out, wherever you are.
- [In the bathroom, Wendy opens the bathroom window again and attempts to escape from there, but she is still stuck.]
- Wendy: Danny, I can't go out. Quick, get him out. Run.
- [Danny runs out and Wendy grabs the breadstuff knife to defend herself behind the wall and nearby the shower. Inside the bedroom, Jack notices the bathroom door locked and smiles intently knowing his family is there.]
- Jack: Little pigs. Little Pigs, let me come in. [gets no reply] Non by the pilus on your chinny chin-chin? And so I'll huff, and I'll puff, and I'll blow your business firm in!
- [He uses the ax to chop open the bathroom door open and Wendy screams in terror every bit she begs him to stop. After breaking down parts of the door, he peers in to see her]
- Jack: Here's Johnny!
- [Every bit he attempts to reach in the bathroom to open the door, Wendy slices his paw]
Nearly The Shining (pic) [edit]
- I don't get it. Merely at that place are a lot of things that I don't get. Just evidently people absolutely honey it, and they don't sympathize why I don't. The book is hot, and the film is cold; the book ends in burn down, and the picture show in ice. In the book, there'southward an actual arc where you see this guy, Jack Torrance, trying to be good, and little by little he moves over to this place where he's crazy. And as far as I was concerned, when I saw the movie, Jack was crazy from the first scene. I had to keep my rima oris shut at the time. It was a screening, and Nicholson was at that place. But I'g thinking to myself the minute he's on the screen, "Oh, I know this guy. I've seen him in five motorcycle movies, where Jack Nicholson played the same office." And information technology'due south and then misogynistic. I mean, Wendy Torrance is only presented as this sort of screaming dishrag. But that's just me, that's the way I am.
- Stephen King Stephen King: The Rolling Stone Interview October 31, 2014)
Taglines [edit]
- Some places are like people: some shine and some don't
- All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...
- A Masterpiece of Modern Horror
- Stanley Kubrick's epic nightmare of horror
- The Horror is driving him crazy!
- The tide of terror that swept America is Here [Uk Affiche]
- He Came As The Caretaker, But This Hotel Had Its Own Guardians – Who'd Been There A Long Time
Cast [edit]
- Jack Nicholson equally Jack Torrance
- Shelley Duvall as Wendy Torrance
- Danny Lloyd as Danny Torrance
- Scatman Crothers every bit Dick Hallorann
- Barry Nelson as Stuart Ullman
- Philip Stone as Delbert Grady
- Joe Turkel equally Lloyd the Bartender
- Lisa Burns as Grady's Daughter
External links [edit]
- The Shining quotes at the Internet Movie Database
- The Shining at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Shining at Filmsite.org
Source: https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Shining_(film)
0 Response to "And I Am Never Never to of You Going to the Surface Again Is That Clear"
Post a Comment