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  1. 15 de jun. de 2010 · Stanley Kubrick: 'Lolita'. En la primera secuencia de ‘Lolita’ (id, 1962, Stanley Kubrick), el profesor Humbert Humbert (James Mason) llega a la mansión de Clare Qulity (Peter Sellers) con la intención de matarlo. Quilty aparece de debajo de una sábana mientras dice: “Soy Espartaco, ¿has venido a liberar a los esclavos?”.

  2. 13 de nov. de 2009 · Stanley Kubrick’s “Lolita” released ... Another big-screen Lolita was released in 1997, directed by Adrian Lyne and starring Jeremy Irons and the then-unknown 15-year-old Dominique Swain.

  3. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1012611-lolitaLolita | Rotten Tomatoes

    With a screenplay penned by the author himself, Stanley Kubrick brings Vladimir Nabokov's controversial tale of forbidden love to the screen. Humbert Humbert (James Mason) is a European professor ...

    • (45)
    • Comedy, Drama
  4. Stanley Kubrick directs an all-star cast in Vladimir Nabakov's screenplay of his own once-shocking, now-classic novel, Lolita. When worldly, middle-aged professor Humbert Humbert (James Mason) rents a room from widowed Charlotte Haze (Shelly Winters), he quickly becomes obsessed with her young daughter, Lolita (Sue Lyon). Humbert goes so far as to marry Charlotte to be close to her daughter ...

  5. Lolita es una película dirigida por Adrian Lyne con Jeremy Irons, Melanie Griffith. Sinopsis : Cuando afable profesor Humbert llega a la pequeña ciudad de Ramsdale, New Hampshire, su casera ...

    • 2 min
  6. 5 de nov. de 2000 · The word was coined soon after an obscure literature professor, Vladimir Nabokov, a Russian émigré, published a novel, in 1955, descriptive of the obsessions of a middle-aged man for a twelve-year-old girl. Though the book was thought scandalous, it catapulted its author to fame and fortune, and soon attracted the attentions of Stanley ...

  7. sider the recasting of Lolita from novel to filmscript as another of Nabokov's magical transmutations, and to ask how this revision fares by his own typically high and demanding standards for translation. It must be noted at the outset that this essay will focus upon Nabokov's screenplay, not the script and actual movie made by Stanley Kubrick.