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Charly (1968)
In director Ralph Nelson's soap-opera-ish adaptation
of Daniel Keyes' Flowers for Algernon, a sci-fi drama:
- the transformation of 30 year old bakery worker
Charly Gordon (Best Actor winning Cliff Robertson) with an IQ of
59 into a supergenius via a science experiment and radical brain
surgery, although at first, Charly worried about his lack of progress:
("Did that operation make me dumber?")
- the scenes in which Charly repeatedly competed in
maze races and lost to laboratory mouse Algernon: ("He beat
me. I didn't know mice are so smart...How would you feel if you was
dumber than a mouse?...I ain't racing that Algernon no more. I'm
sick of being beaten by a mouse, and people laughing at me"),
but then finally his ecstatic joy when he beat laboratory mouse Algernon:
("I beat him, I creamed him")
- Charly's disproportionate, stunted emotional growth
("Emotionally, he's still a child, frightened, insecure")
compared to his intellectual development and advancement over his
own special-ed teacher Alice Kinnian (Claire Bloom): ("Student
surpasses the teacher"), demonstrated by his punctuation of
the phrase: ("That, that is, is. That, that is not, is not.
Is that it? It is")
- his primitively-displayed nude abstract drawings
of Alice, and Charly's seduction and sexual-rape assault of her,
when she fought back, slapped him, and insulted him: ("You think
anyone would ever want you? You stupid moron!")
- the long montage sequence in which Alice eventually
fell in love with a transformed Charly ("I'm back"), slept
with him in a shared sleeping bag in the outdoors, and ran and romped
through the trees with him, when he proposed marriage in voice-over:
(Charly: "Marry me, Alice." Alice: "Charly, I could
never keep up with you, and I don't want to hold you back. And I
don't want to be left behind." Charly: "Einstein had a
wife..."), and their child-like playfulness on a children's
playground
Alice's Love Affair with Transformed Charly
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- the convention scene in which Charly was shown
off to an audience as an advancement in science, as he - in counter-point
- explained what he saw about the promise of the future in various
areas, including modern science, modern art, foreign policy, today's
youth, today's religion, the standard of living, education, the
world's future, and the coming generation: ("Rampant technology,
conscience by computer... Dispassionate draftsmen...Brave new weapons...Joyless,
guideless....Preachment by popularity polls.... A TV in every room...A
TV in every room... Brave new hates, brave new bombs, brave new
wars.... Test-tube conception, laboratory birth, TV education,
brave new dreams, brave new hates, brave new wars; a beautifully
purposeless process of society suicide. (Silence) Any more questions?")
- Charly's sorrowful announcement to the audience that
he knew his newfound intelligence and the success of his operation
was only temporary and was beginning to reverse itself, and he would
be regressing: ("Algernon showed me. The answer to the question,
'Charly Gordon' is: Charly Gordon is a fellow who will very shortly
be what he used to be") - and then held out in the palm of his
hand the lifeless body of Algernon, fearing the same thing would
happen to him (he was soon haunted by appearances of his former pre-operative
self)
- his subdued farewell scene to Alice, refusing her
request to marry him: ("Marry me. (No response) All right, don't
marry me"). He replied: "Motion carried." When she
requested remaining with him: ("But I'm gonna stay, right here.
Whenever you feel like telling me to go, just tell me so. I'll go,
I'll leave"), he simply asked her to leave: ("Leave, please
leave")
- the tearjerking freeze-frame shot of Charly, once
again mentally retarded but smiling and care-free, playing with other
children on a see-saw
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Charly
(Cliff Robertson)
Mouse Maze Races
Alice: "You stupid moron!"
Convention Scene
The Lifeless Body of Algernon in Charly's Hand
Farewell Scene with Alice
Freeze-Frame Ending
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