A middle-aged college professor becomes infatuated with a 14-year-old girl.A middle-aged college professor becomes infatuated with a 14-year-old girl.A middle-aged college professor becomes infatuated with a 14-year-old girl.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 2 wins & 9 nominations total
Terry Kilburn
- Man
- (as Terence Kilburn)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPeter Sellers modeled the voice of his character Clare Quilty on that of his director, Stanley Kubrick.
- GoofsDirector Stanley Kubrick walks out of the very first interior shot (center to right bottom) of Humbert entering Quilty's house.
- Quotes
Charlotte Haze: Do you believe in God?
Humbert Humbert: The question is does God believe in me?
- Crazy creditsThe credits are played over footage of Lolita's toenails being painted.
- Alternate versionsThe scene where Lolita first "seduces" Humbert as he lies in the cot is a good 10 seconds longer in the British cut of the film. In the U.S. cut, the shot fades as she whispers the details of the "game" she played with Charlie at camp. In the U.K. print, the shot continues as Humbert mumbles that he's not familiar with the game. She then bends down again to whisper more details. Kubrick then cuts to a closer shot of Lolita's head as she says "Well, allrighty then" and then fades as she begins to descend to Humbert on the cot. The British cut of the film was used for the Region 1 DVD release.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hai-Kubrick (1999)
Featured review
Not the two words that came to mind when I first read the book. This movie nicely handles the taboo subject matter and is tremendously funny as well. Peter Sellers was warming up for his triumph in Dr. Strangelove, Shelly Winters gave her best performance, and James Mason made us feel his pain. As Lolita, Sue Lyon is convincing although Kubrick makes her character a bit older (probably to satisfy the censors, which still slapped this with an X rating originally, much to my surprise). The movie could play on TV today with no edits. I have not seen the 1997 remake but can only imagine, given its director with a reputation of going over the top, that it's not as classy and tasteful as this one. Since this was made in 1962, the risque elements from the book were left to our imagination. And the movie scores highly because of it. The movie's story is stuck in the '60s (that bubblegum music, which played during Lolita's early scenes, will stick with you), and if you are bored with the story, or cannot believe what you're seeing, you can always get a culture lesson: Hula hoops, malt shops, pseudo intellectuals, faulty cots and gas stations where they still pump your gas.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $7,411
- Runtime2 hours 33 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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