Warning: Spoiler Zone (and if you need a spoiler warning for a 1971 film then I probably can't help you).
This is not a review. Goodness knows there are plenty of better written analyses around.
Random Verdict: A feelgood movie for the criminally insane. If you haven't before, put it on your Must Watch list. Still one of the better movies you'll ever watch despite its low technology and lack of set construction. Yadda yadda film history yadda yadda.
Why was Alex DeLarge violent?
Was it because there was no virtue in society for him to empathize with?
Was it because he was orphaned by mediocrity?
Was it because modern society was evil?
Was it because Stanley Kubrick needed a hatrack to hang his theme on, and so made Alex as violent as needed without really any justification?
Rewatching this flick recently, I must say it holds up really rather well - though for a violent criminal Alex can be quite a polite lad by today's standards. (Remember Bill Hicks' comedy bit on "The Hooligans")? The Clockwork design team really made a timeless environment (though come on, they could have at least tried a few more futuristic elements).
I quite enjoyed Malcom McDowell's stellar, powerful performance in this movie, a terrific actor we know here as Soran in Star Trek: Generations. He improvised the song "Singing in the Rain" (because he knew all the words); along with the improvised take knocking over the bookcase in the rape scene are two of the most recognizable and memorable aspects of this film. (The way he walked away from the bookcase reminded me of Heath Ledger's improvised Joker scene walking away from a delayed explosion when he blew up the hospital. Very fortuitous they stayed in character even during these explosive improvisations - especially given Kubrick's penchant for multitudes of takes).
One thing I really appreciate about Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange was its extreme violence and reputation for violence without actually becoming explicit. Today it seems the opposite is the norm - the more violence you put in, the less sensitized you are to it, until you need whole legions of zombies just to make an impact. Today's aesthetics seem to require precision violence (and other dramatic factors) in lieu of the sense of something.
All in all, if you haven't watched this movie in a while, it rewards a rewatch very well. It is also pretty close to Anthony Burgess' novel (with some ending variation due to economic reasons; Kubrick had already earned an X rating as it was; though it has been rated an R today).
Picture-perfect performances from the cast, superlative design, intriguing dialogue, and a theme that remains relevant make watching this film the next best thing to reading Burgess' engrossing novel. If this movie were made today it would probably feature ten times the violence and a quarter of the visceral impact.
They really knew how to make 'em then. Also, this movie has some fascinating trivia.
I'd love to hear others' take on it. Do you like the film (or book)? Is it dated? Did it hit or miss? Is it still relevant?
Thoughts? What's your Random Verdict?
This is not a review. Goodness knows there are plenty of better written analyses around.
Random Verdict: A feelgood movie for the criminally insane. If you haven't before, put it on your Must Watch list. Still one of the better movies you'll ever watch despite its low technology and lack of set construction. Yadda yadda film history yadda yadda.
Was it because there was no virtue in society for him to empathize with?
Was it because he was orphaned by mediocrity?
Was it because modern society was evil?
Was it because Stanley Kubrick needed a hatrack to hang his theme on, and so made Alex as violent as needed without really any justification?
Rewatching this flick recently, I must say it holds up really rather well - though for a violent criminal Alex can be quite a polite lad by today's standards. (Remember Bill Hicks' comedy bit on "The Hooligans")? The Clockwork design team really made a timeless environment (though come on, they could have at least tried a few more futuristic elements).
I quite enjoyed Malcom McDowell's stellar, powerful performance in this movie, a terrific actor we know here as Soran in Star Trek: Generations. He improvised the song "Singing in the Rain" (because he knew all the words); along with the improvised take knocking over the bookcase in the rape scene are two of the most recognizable and memorable aspects of this film. (The way he walked away from the bookcase reminded me of Heath Ledger's improvised Joker scene walking away from a delayed explosion when he blew up the hospital. Very fortuitous they stayed in character even during these explosive improvisations - especially given Kubrick's penchant for multitudes of takes).
One thing I really appreciate about Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange was its extreme violence and reputation for violence without actually becoming explicit. Today it seems the opposite is the norm - the more violence you put in, the less sensitized you are to it, until you need whole legions of zombies just to make an impact. Today's aesthetics seem to require precision violence (and other dramatic factors) in lieu of the sense of something.
All in all, if you haven't watched this movie in a while, it rewards a rewatch very well. It is also pretty close to Anthony Burgess' novel (with some ending variation due to economic reasons; Kubrick had already earned an X rating as it was; though it has been rated an R today).
Picture-perfect performances from the cast, superlative design, intriguing dialogue, and a theme that remains relevant make watching this film the next best thing to reading Burgess' engrossing novel. If this movie were made today it would probably feature ten times the violence and a quarter of the visceral impact.
They really knew how to make 'em then. Also, this movie has some fascinating trivia.
I'd love to hear others' take on it. Do you like the film (or book)? Is it dated? Did it hit or miss? Is it still relevant?
Thoughts? What's your Random Verdict?
"There was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie and Dim. And we sat in the Korova milkbar trying to make up our rassoodocks what to do with the evening."
Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange
“What’s it going to be then, eh?”
There was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie, and Dim, Dim being really dim, and we sat in the Korova Milkbar making up our rassoodocks what to do with the evening, a flip dark chill winter basard though dry.”
Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork OrangeThere was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie, and Dim, Dim being really dim, and we sat in the Korova Milkbar making up our rassoodocks what to do with the evening, a flip dark chill winter basard though dry.”
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