It s like three dimensional chess says filmmaker jay weidner in the movie.
The shining carpet moon landing.
It s about the apollo 11 moon landing.
The shining is kubrick s apology for supposedly working with the government to fake the 1969 apollo 11 moon landing despite the fact he was busy with 2001.
Film and furniture regulars will know one of the original inspirations for this very website was the hexagonal patterned carpet in the shining s overlook hotel.
He also refers to the fact that a carpet pattern resembles the apollo launching pad as evidence that the film is an elaborate apology of sorts for kubrick s involvement.
Most striking was the scene set on the moon in which a group of astronauts posthuman in their suits descend into an excavation where once again the human race comes into contact with the monolith.
As danny rises up with from the carpet seen as launch pad wearing his sweater apollo 11 he enters the dreaded room 237.
He believed that there are telltale signs of the use of front projection in nasa s footage and that kubrick was contracted to produce hoaxed footage of a fake moon landing.
In the minds kubrick and clarke it shimmered luminous mechanical and cold.
He goes on to explain why he is convinced the shining is a coded apology for having helped the american government fake the apollo moon landing.
One theory however outdoes all the others in terms of lunacy.
The real truth is that this movie is really about the deal that stanley kubrick made with the manager of the overlook hotel america weidner writes in his blog secrets of the shining.
In the book the room number was 217 but it is widely believed that kubrick changed it to 237 as the distance between the earth and the moon is roughly 237 000 miles.
The interpretation asserts that the shining was in part kubrick trying to confess his role in the moon landing from the carpets up to jack nicholson s crazed rants acting as kubrick s vented.
Rodney ascher s 2012 documentary room 237 dug into those perceived meanings.
Let s start with the most popular theory.
The carpet in the hotel s corridor features prominently in several key scenes of kubrick s 1980 film including young danny s first unnerving encounter with room 237 as he investigates on his tricycle.