Vivian Kubrick’s conspiracy odyssey

Vivian Kubrick (here, in 2014 in California) adheres to many conspiracy theories.

Aged 60, Vivian Kubrick has retained from her father filmmaker a taste for seclusion. Installed in the United States, she hardly leaves her home, refuses any interview but communicates on the other hand a lot, on Twitter, for its 23,700 subscribers. She gives voice because, according to her, the dangers are numerous.

In February, she called Bill Gates “Bioterrorist” and opposed any vaccination against Covid-19. She also invited her subscribers to join discussion groups organized by QAnon, this conspiratorial movement arguing that a secret war has broken out between Donald Trump and financial circles and the media, the latter being accused of pedophile and satanic crimes.

She will never go home again

Stanley Kubrick’s youngest daughter Vivian Kubrick made her first public appearance in one of her father’s most iconic films, 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). In the second part of the film, an American scientist makes a brief stop at a space station before going to the Moon, and he calls Earth by video conference in order to converse with his child. This is none other than Vivian Kubrick, then 8 years old.

She subsequently maintained a close professional relationship with her father, making a documentary on the set of Shining (1979), composing, under the pseudonym Abigail Mead, the music of Full Metal Jacket (1987) while orchestrating a new making of the film, never before seen. At the end of the 1990s, the director’s daughter joined the Church of Scientology in California, far from the family home located in the outskirts of London.

The director, who wanted her to compose the music forEyes Wide Shut (1999), had sent her a forty-page letter begging her to come home. In vain: she only returned to the family manor of Childwickbury for her father’s funeral in March 1999, accompanied by a member of the Church of Scientology who followed her without greeting anyone. She will never return home, even to attend the funeral of her older sister, Anya, who died of cancer in 2009.

The “globalists” obsess him

Vivian Kubrick is no newcomer to conspiracy. In 2012, during a rare public appearance, on the occasion of a meeting organized by one of his gurus, Alex Jones, a radio host who broadcasts through his site, Infowars, various conspiracy theories – some often hackneyed, around September 11, or other, much more eccentric, on child slaves held on the planet Mars -, the daughter of the director of 2001 attacked the “Folly of tyranny” of the Obama administration.

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