Decoder Ring | Was "Eyes Wide Shut" a Warning?
Slate Podcasts | March 11, 2026
Host: Willa Paskin | Guest: Lane Brown
Episode Overview
This episode investigates the resurgence of conspiracy theories surrounding Stanley Kubrick's final film, Eyes Wide Shut (1999). After being largely dismissed or misunderstood at its release, the film gained a second life in internet culture, particularly after the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, with some claiming it was a coded warning about elite sex trafficking rings. Feature writer Lane Brown (New York Magazine) retraces the origins of the theory, examines Kubrick's methods, and ultimately debunks the conspiratorial claims by speaking directly to people involved in the making of the film.
Key Discussion Points
1. Eyes Wide Shut: Misunderstood on Release
2. The Re-Emergence of Eyes Wide Shut Amid Epstein and Internet Conspiracies
3. Investigating and Systematically Debunking the Theories
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Lane Brown’s Reporting Process
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Why These Theories Persist
- The urge to find meaning and patterns in complex art, coupled with real instances of powerful men abusing their status (as with Epstein), fuels these theories.
- Kubrick’s reputation for detail invites “treasure map” thinking—similar to conspiracies around The Shining (37:57–40:17).
“The reason we are still watching these movies... is because they're filled with ideas. Not all of them are pointing in the same direction...” (Lane, 40:45)
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What’s Lost and Gained by the Conspiracy
- Conspiracists collapse the film’s ambiguity and richness into a single, all-consuming “message,” diminishing its artistic legacy (48:46–50:20).
“Believing even something as disturbing as the conspiracy about Eyes Wide Shut is more comforting than the reality, which is that so many people knew and said nothing.” (Willa, 50:20)
Notable Quotes & Timestamps
- "Eyes Wide Shut is an erotic thriller that’s not especially erotic or even thrilling." – Willa Paskin (04:47)
- “He shot 127 takes of the scene where Jack Nicholson barges into the bathroom in The Shining... Here's Johnny.” – Lane Brown (10:39)
- "The world was sort of promised basically pornography. And it ends up being this cold, inert meditation on marriage with this weird abstract masked cult..." – Lane Brown (20:59)
- “[The theory is] that Stanley Kubrick was murdered when, I guess, the elite sex traffickers found out what he’d done. I am not just going to dismiss the weird timing of Kubrick's death.” – Lane Brown (06:36)
- “In 2019, after Epstein dies, the movie Eyes Wide Shut suddenly gets a brand new reputation. People think, wait a second, this movie was actually sort of predictive of a lot of things that really wouldn't come into view until 20 something years later.” – Lane Brown (26:43)
- “I talked to a lot of people, and it did not seem like they had coordinated their stories and were sort of in on some secret conspiracy. They all had, you know, slightly different memories... But the one thing they all agreed on was that Kubrick was not, you know, warning the world explicitly about any real life sex cult.” – Lane Brown (43:09)
- "He was 70 years old and looked about 120. He was very stressed, and producing that movie was enough to kill him. Nobody needed to hire anyone to do it." – Frederick Raphael, relayed by Lane Brown (47:46)
- “A lot of this is kind of unnecessary. It’s like you can really sort of give Kubrick credit for basically anticipating something that... the rest of us didn’t know existed until years later. You don’t really need to fall down the conspiracy hole.” – Lane Brown (50:00)
Timestamps for Key Segments
- Start of content: 03:28
- Kubrick’s process, secrecy, and death: 09:00 – 15:25
- Release and misreading of Eyes Wide Shut: 16:43 – 22:05
- Conspiracy theory emergence post-Epstein: 24:10 – 34:02
- Debunking the conspiracy, Lane's investigation: 35:31 – 47:46
- Reflections on art interpretation and conspiracy thinking: 48:46 – 50:20
Memorable Moments
- The examination of how Eyes Wide Shut’s final scene (Helena in the toy store) became the linchpin of a vast internet theory—despite being an accidental background detail (30:25; 45:13).
- The “Joe Rogan Experience” anecdote, and how easily second-hand, unverifiable stories light up the online imagination (34:25; 46:05).
- Lane’s methodical process of tracking down the actual production story—contrasting the messy reality with the “clean” logic of the conspiracy.
Episode Tone and Conclusion
There's a combination of wry humor, patience, and gravitas throughout the discussion. Host Willa Paskin and Lane Brown treat both Kubrick’s artistry and the sensitivities behind abuse scandals with seriousness, but address the feverish corners of internet theory with measured skepticism.
The conclusion: Eyes Wide Shut did anticipate certain real-world horrors—but not through any suppressed exposé or secret-message mission. Instead, its layered and ambiguous nature enables people to read into it what they wish—a testament to both Kubrick’s complexity and society’s need for answers, even in the places least likely to contain them.
For more:
Read Lane Brown’s article in New York Magazine (Dec 2025): “The Eyes Wide Shut Conspiracy.”
Have a cultural mystery? Email decoderring@slate.com.