Color Me Kubrick, the new biopic about early-’90s Stanley Kubrick imposter Alan Conway (John Malkovich), is not the first film about a delusional man passing himself off as a movie director. But it’s ...
Luna Guthrie is a Movie Features Editor for Collider, writer and film critic. She began as a writer for Collider in 2021 and joined the editorial team in 2024. She has a bachelor's degree in ...
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Taking its cue from the real-life exploits of a con man who managed to pass himself off as Stanley Kubrick while the famed filmmaker was directing "Eyes Wide Shut," ...
John Malkovich stars as Alan Conway, a man who posed as director Stanley Kubrick as the auteur embarked on making his final film, "Eyes Wide Shut." Directed by Brian W. Cook.
In the new comedy “Color Me Kubrick,” John Malkovich plays a person of no particular talent who passes himself off as a noteworthy artist. He’s a hapless character who provides the movie with two ...
It's hard to imagine any serious film buff taking a pass on "Colour Me Kubrick," a sly, enormously entertaining romp based on the antics of real-life Brit conman Alan Conway who rooked his way around ...
John Malkovich is one of those actors who lends instant credibility to whatever project he accepts, and “Color Me Kubrick,” the new comedy directed by the legendarily reclusive auteur’s longtime ...
Alan Conway, a gay con artist in England who successfully impersonated Stanley Kubrick in the 90s, died in 1998, only a few months before Kubrick. His exploits are fascinating because the people he ...
A new era is born.
John Malkovich knows juicy roles, and, as pathological Stanley Kubrick impersonator Alan Conway, he not only sinks his teeth into the part, he licks, chomps and devours it. Despite looking nothing ...
Being John Malkovich reaches new heights of mincing, self-indulgent madness in Color Me Kubrick. That’s no mean feat, but it comes with something of a mean streak here: Malkovich plays Alan Conway, a ...
The New Orleans Film Society's 2007 series receives a healthy dose of absurdity with May's screening of Color Me Kubrick. The picture, helmed by longtime Kubrick assistant director Brian Cook, ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results