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A Clockwork
Orange (1971, UK)
In producer-director-screenwriter Stanley
Kubrick's randomly ultra-violent, over-indulgent, graphically-stylized
film of the near future - it was a terrifying, gaudy film adaptation
of Anthony Burgess' 1962 satiric, futuristic novel of the same
name. It was unique for its use of doublespeak slang-dialogue throughout,
derived from Burgess' novel and filled with an onomatopoetic, expressive
combination of English, Russian, and slang. Some words were decipherable
in their contextual use, or as anglicized, portmanteau, rhymed, or
clever transformations or amputations of words.
The striking and unforgettable film's poster and tagline
advertised its themes of violence in a police state, teen delinquency,
technological control, and dehumanization:
"Being the adventures
of a young man whose principal interests are rape, ultra-violence and Beethoven."
In the plot set in a futuristic, dystopic
world of Britain, Alex - an "ultraviolent" juvenile delinquent
leader of a gang of four anarchic thugs ("droogs"), went
on various crime sprees and rampages of rape, theft, assault and murder,
intensified by Alex's love of Ludwig von Beethoven's music. Alex's
droogs were beginning to show signs of resentment of his forceful leadership
and authoritarianism. Their most vicious gang-rape and assault was
of a couple, the Alexanders, in their country home, to the tune of
'Singin' in the Rain.' Later, after also sexually attacking and killing
a Catlady (a proprietess of a health farm) with an enlarged plastic
sculpture of a phallus, Alex was arrested, charged, convicted, and
imprisoned. Alex served a few years of his 14 year sentence, but then
volunteered to participate in a program to be rehabilitated by behavioral
programming (an example of aversion therapy known as the "Ludovico
Technique"), to reduce his sentence to just two more weeks. It
was an experimental criminal reform effort to cut crime and reduce
prison overload, promoted by the government's Interior Minister.
During reconditioning, Alex was subjected to a total
of 14 harsh treatments to rid him of his anti-social and violent
tendencies, including the forced watching of films exhibiting rape,
beatings, and Nazi atrocities, while he was drugged up and listening
to the music of his favorite composer. Alex was supposedly 'cured'
and now averse to violence and sexual assault. His rehabilitation
was successfully demonstrated to an audience of government officials.
However, according to the prison's Chaplain, he had been debased
as a human being and deprived of his free will to choose between
either good or evil. Alex was released and returned to his previous
life, but found himself disabled and unable to cope, as he faced
many of his former victims who sought revenge. A former vagrant he
had beaten up attacked him with a group of other bums, and two of
his resentful ex-droogs, now police officers, nearly
drowned him in a cattle water trough.
In the company of vengeful
leftist and subversive writer Mr. Alexander, Alex was manipulatively
used as a political weapon, and was driven to commit suicide. He
survived a jump from a second-story window, but then became a political
pawn in the hands of anti-government protestors who vilified the
Interior Minister for inhumane experimental tactics of criminal reform.
Alex's 'Ludovico Treatment' was reversed and he received apologies
for his previous harsh reconditioning, and was given promises of
being cared for by the government. As the film concluded, Alex again
experienced fantasies of sex and violence, and stated to himself:
"I was cured, all right."
The frightening, chilling and tantalizing film (a morality play) raised many
thematic questions and presented a thought-provoking parable: How can
evil be eradicated in modern society? If the state can deprive an individual
of his free will, making him 'a clockwork orange,' what does this say
about the nightmarish, behavioral modification technologies of punishment
and crime? Do we lose our humanity if we are deprived of the free-will
choice between good and evil?
Originally rated X, A Clockwork Orange was nominated
for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Film Editing and Best Screenplay,
but was defeated in each category by William Friedkin's The
French Connection (1971). It was one of only two movies rated
X on its original release (the other was Midnight
Cowboy (1969)) that was nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award.
- the title of the film was set against an orange-shaded
background
- the opening memorable image was a close-up of slyly
grinning hoodlum Alex (Malcolm McDowell) wearing a bowler hat;
one eye was decorated with a false eyelash staring directly at
the camera, followed by the pull-back view of him lounging with
his 'droogie' friends in the Korova Milk Bar with white furniture of submissive nude women;
the image was accompanied by a voice-over beginning with: "There
was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs..."
- Alex's "droog" gang members included Georgie (James
Marcus), Dim (Warren Clarke), and Pete (Michael Tarn), all wearing
large codpieces over their white protective combat suits; they
were drinking spiked, hallucinogenic drink
concoctions (called "milk-plus") served from the nippled breasts of the coin-operated
mannequins, before an entertaining night of sado-masochistic mayhem
- every night, the delinquent gang committed
stylized but meaningless acts of terrorism including rape ("the
old in-out, in-out"), robbery, and assaults; first, the youth
gang mugged a drunken Tramp (Paul Farrell) who had sought refuge
in a gutter under a pedestrian underpass
- on the empty stage of a derelict, abandoned opera
house/casino, a buxom rape victim or 'devotchka' (Shirley Jaffe) had her clothes
torn off by five other mad-faced delinquents from the Billyboy (Richard
Connaught) rival gang; from the shadows, Alex's gang
observed and then challenged them to a fight, all synchronized with
music from Rossini's The Thieving Magpie
- afterwards, Alex and his gang escaped, crammed
into a stolen sports car - a Durango-95, and went on a joyride;
driving recklessly; they played "chicken" with
other vehicles, exhilarated by the panic and excitement of forcing
other cars and drivers off the road
- at an opulent futuristic residence
welcomingly marked with a lit "HOME" panel sign, the
droog gang (wearing bizarre comical masks) entered and assaulted
elderly husband Frank Alexander (Patrick Magee), a left-leaning
novelist; both victims were bound and gagged and the house was ransacked; brutal
kicks were delivered to the old man's body during the choreographed
rape of his wife Mrs. Alexander (Adrienne Corri) wearing a red
pajama suit; first, Alex attacked her breasts by snipping off
two circles of jumpsuit cloth around them, and then slit her entire
suit off from her pant leg upward prior to the rape; in the disturbing
sequence, the blows to the husband's midsection were rhythmically
punctuated with the lyrics of Singin' In The Rain (1952)
Assault and Choreographed Rape of the Alexanders
in Their Home
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- after the night of debauchery, they briefly stopped
back at the Korova Milk Bar for a nightcap, where Alex went into
ecstasy by listening to a rendition of Schiller's Ode
to Joy chorale movement from Beethoven's Ninth Symphony:
"I felt all the malenky little hairs on my plott standing endwise
and the shivers crawling up like slow malenky lizards and then
down again. Because I knew what she sang. It was a bit from the
glorious Ninth, by Ludwig van"; Alex also briefly quelled some
protest, dissatisfaction and discontent with his leadership from
a resentful Dim, who backed down and declined to fight
- just before dawn, Alex returned to his trashed lower-class
apartment, where he lived with his impotent, confused, weak and
foolish parents Pee (Philip Stone) and violet-haired Em (Sheila
Raynor) de Large wearing micro-skirts; while listening to a cassette
tape of his favorite composer and classical piece, the Ninth
Symphony, Alex laid back on his bed and moaned orgiastically: "Oh bliss,
bliss and heaven. Oh, it was gorgeousness and gorgeosity made flesh..."
Alex's Bedroom
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Alex's Father Pee de Large (Philip Stone)
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Alex's Mother Em de Large (Sheila Raynor)
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- the next morning, Alex (still in his underwear) was
confronted by his sexually-deviant, social worker/probation officer
("Post Corrective Adviser")
Mr. Deltoid (Aubrey Morris), who cornered him on a bed, got handsy,
and then cautioned and questioned his criminal behavior of the previous
evening and his truancy from school - he even threatened jail time
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Two Girls From Record Shop Invited to a Slapstick,
Sped-Up Orgy in Alex's Bedroom - To the Tune of the William Tell
Overture
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- later in the day, the stylishly-dressed Alex
visited a local shopping mall record store, where he picked up
two teenaged girls (brunette Marty (uncredited Barbara Scott) and
redhead Sonietta (Gillian Hills)) licking lollipops; after inviting
them to his home, in a sped-up, slapstick, group-sex orgy scene accompanied
by the William
Tell Overture, Alex had sex with both girls in his bedroom
- to appease his gang members, Alex considered a suggestion
from discontented droog Dim, who was leading a mutiny against him
for being dictatorial, to score the "big, big, big money" for themselves;
but then after suggesting that he would buy drinks, they walked
along the flatblock marina to the bar; in graceful slow-motion,
he thrust both Georgie and Dim into the water, and slashed the
back of Dim's hand with a dagger; he completely subjugated
them into submission by resuming power, as the group retired to
the Duke of York restaurant
- however, Alex did accept Georgie's scheme
to visit and rob the almost-deserted, isolated Woodmere Health
Farm outside of town: ("It's full up with like gold and silver,
and like jewels"); it was owned by rich Englishwoman Miss
Weathers, also known as the Catlady (Miriam Karlin); the inside
of the facility was decorated with gigantic, modern pornographic
art (lewd scenes of sexual intensity and bondage), and garish,
decadent art objects; when she refused to open her door, Alex snuck
through a 2nd floor window; he then approached and brutalized the
lady with her enormous, white obscene phallus sculpture with testicles,
while she fought back and dueled against him by wielding a bust
of his beloved Beethoven; when she fell to the floor, Alex raised
the white sculpture-weapon above her and plunged it down into
her - filmed from a low angle
- with the sound of approaching sirens, Alex raced
for the front door, where henchman Dim struck him in the face with
a milk bottle; he was blinded and left there to be arrested; with
a large bloody-nosed bandage on his face, Alex was questioned in
a police interrogation room; Alex's vindictive social worker
Mr. Deltoid arrived and gleefully gloated about the bludgeoning
murder of his victim: "You are now a murderer, little Alex. A murderer...I've
just come from the hospital. Your victim has died," and then spit in his face
Alex Questioned
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Stripped
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Subjected to Cavity Search
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- following his arrest and conviction by the totalitarian
government for 1st-degree murder, Alex was sentenced to fourteen
years in prison; in an extended scene, Alex was systematically inducted
into H. M. Prison Parkmoor; he was stripped of his clothes, subjected
to a rectal cavity search, and given a prison number and uniform
- two years later into Alex's sentence, the Chaplain/Priest
(Godfrey Quigley) threatened the inmates with a choice - "What's
it going to be then?" - he offered them a choice
between Hell's damnation or Heaven's redemption; Alex described
his awful incarceration: "It had not been edifying, indeed
not, being in this hellhole and human zoo for two years now"
- to pass the time in the prison library,
Alex read the Bible and imagined the more lurid and violent
parts of the Old and New Testaments; he fantasized
about being a Roman guard at the Crucifixion whipping Jesus, and thought
of himself as an Old Testament warrior in battle, and afterwards
surrounded by half-naked, bare-breasted handmaidens or concubines (Prudence
Drage, Vivienne Chandler and Jan Adair) feeding him grapes
Alex Studying the Bible ("The Big Book")
in the Prison Library
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Alex's Fantasy of Being a Roman Guard Whipping Jesus
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Alex's Fantasy of Eating Grapes with Bare Handmaidens
(l to r: Prudence Drage, Vivienne Chandler, Jan Adair)
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- after learning about a new, experimental,
brain-washing reprogramming treatment by the State against sex and
violence called "aversion therapy," aka the
Ludovico Treatment Technique, Alex expressed an interest in volunteering
to become a subject to reduce his sentence to a mere two weeks longer;
the Chaplain doubted the expedient treatment methods
to cure anti-social behavior, considering them dangerous because they
scientifically would deprive him of his humanity,
and his free will and moral choice
- during a visit to the prison, the Minister of the
Interior (Anthony Sharp) advocated the imposition of the Ludovico
Technique to clear the prison of mere "common criminals" so
that there may be more room for "political offenders"; considered
the perfect guinea-pig candidate, Alex was chosen for the controversial rehabilitation
treatment, and transferred from the prison to the Ludovico Medical Center
- during treatment including being injected with an
experimental serum, Alex was transported to a screening room where
his eyelids were painfully kept open with
pitiless clamps, and he was forced to watch films (with a violent
beating and gang-rape of a victim of Billyboy's gang (Cheryl Grunwald))
that deliberately followed the succession of crimes that Alex had
committed with his droogs; he reacted to the torturous behavioral
treatment: "When it came to the sixth or seventh malchick, leering and smecking and
then going into it, I began to feel really sick. But I could not
shut my glazzies. And even if I tried to move my glazz-balls about,
I still could not get out of the line of fire of this picture";
the films were paired to an induced, convulsive nausea caused by
the injections, part of the behavioral theory of conditioned-reflex
therapy
- on the second day of watching films to provide a
cure, Alex was forced to watch scenes of Nazi atrocities paired
to the Fourth Movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, and
Alex pleaded with his doctors to stop playing
his favorite piece of music; at his breaking point, Alex admitted
and confessed that he was cured of his anti-social tendencies
("I've learned my lesson, sir"); as "a free man" but
trained to become docile and harmless, Alex was destructively robbed
of his individuality, personality and humanity by being transformed
into a 'clockwork orange' - a compliant and mind-numbed citizen
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Demonstration of the Effectiveness of Alex's Treatment
to an Audience in an Auditorium - Alex's Revulsion At Touching
the Female's Breasts
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- after two weeks (and presumably 12 more treatments),
Alex attended an unusual graduation ceremony in an auditorium with
dignitaries in attendance; the Minister of the Interior proudly
introduced Alex to demonstrate the effectiveness of his
behavioral modification and rehabilitation:
("The problem of criminal violence is soon to be
a thing of the past"); when approached by an abusive, homosexual
Irish actor named Lardface (John Clive) who insulted, taunted and
attacked him and forced him to be subservient and lick his boots,
Alex was unable to defend himself; he also became exceedingly sick
and vomited when tempted to lustfully reach out and touch the
breasts of a topless blonde stage actress (Virginia Wetherell)
wearing only bikini panties who stood before him
- although pronounced 'cured' by the Minister, the Chaplain
argued that Alex had been deprived of his free will (and moral
choices) with the shock therapy that had nauseated him; he was
not a free man but "a clockwork orange" -
a mechanically-responsive non-human
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Newspaper Headlines of Murderer Alex's Release and
Cure
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- Alex was released and returned home where he pronounced
himself "cured," however, he discovered that his surprised and
bewildered parents had displaced him with a teenaged renter named
Joe (Clive Francis), who criticized Alex for making life with his
parents miserable; Alex seemed completely unprepared and helpless
to totally reenter society and cope with the real world; all of
his things had been confiscated by the police; Alex started to
contemplate committing suicide
- for the remainder of the film, Alex was assaulted
or rejected by the people from his past who had been his
abused victims, and now sought retribution; the drunken old Tramp
recognized him and other bums helped him to beat up Alex in a dark
underpass; his two former gang members - Dim and Georgie - who
were now in police uniforms, handcuffed him, dragged him into
their car, drove him into the country, struck him all over his body
with a blackjack club, and nearly drowned him in a cattle watering trough
- next, the injured and bleeding Alex entered the HOME of
the leftist, anti-government Dissident writer Mr. Alexander - the
widower of the rape victim who was now impotent and crippled in a
wheelchair, with weightlifter/male manservant Julian (David
Prowse); Alex was recognized, not as the previous assaulter, but
as the notorious subject-"victim" treated by the "horrible" Ludovico
Technique of conditioning; believing he had been blessed by Providence,
Mr. Alexander plotted to manipulatively use Alex as a political weapon,
to discredit the Government's new approach to dealing with crime
Alex in the Home of Mr. Alexander and Manservant Julian
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In Horror - Mr. Alexander Realized Alex's True Identity
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Alex Drugged at the Dinner Table - And Falling Face-First into
His Plate of Spaghetti
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- however, when Mr. Alexander heard Alex involuntarily
humming "Singin' in the Rain" while taking a bath in the
nearby room, a look of horror crossed his face when he realized that
Alex was the hoodlum that had earlier invaded his house; Alex was drugged
with wine at the dinner table, and fell face-first into his plate of spaghetti
- two of Mr. Alexander's friends arrived - Dolin (John
Savident) and a blonde female named Rubinstein (Margaret Tyzack); the
fiendish conspirators took Alex to an upstairs attic bedroom in Dolin's
Country Manor, to vengefully torture him by playing Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony at top volume; Alex attempted suicide by throwing himself
from the 2nd floor window, but survived
- Alex regained consciousness
in a hospital with serious injuries, and wrapped head to toe in a
body cast; Alex's death wish and attempt to kill himself had brought
widespread protest, and prompted newspapers to criticize the
government and the Minister of the Interior over its inhuman, brainwashing
experiments, and for changing Alex's nature; Alex (dubbed the 'crime
cure' boy) was now in the hands of opponents of the government, Dissidents,
who wished to reverse his conditioning
Government Accused of Inhuman Treatment Methods After Alex's Suicide Attempt
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Alex Recuperating in Hospital After Failed Suicide
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Alex's Psychiatrist - Tests Revealed Alex Was Slowly Deconditioning and Making
a "Complete Recovery"
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- a procession of individuals visited Alex in the
hospital; his parents apologized for their behavior, blamed the
government, and urged him to return home; psychiatrist Dr. Taylor
(Pauline Taylor) realized that Alex's brain was slowly becoming
deconditioned and that he was becoming his old self without any
aversions to sex or violence; his reactions to a slide-show of
cards revealed that he was 'recovering' from his "cure" and was
again showing violent and sexual urges
- the malleable Minister also visited, apologized
for his past treatment, and promised to restore Alex to his previous
condition so that he could find pleasure in violence once again;
he spoon-fed Alex his food, and promised him a government job with
great pay if he was supportive of the conservative Government's party
and helped to sway public opinion in its favor during the next
election; he also mentioned how the subversive and menacing Mr.
Alexander, regarded as a political prisoner, had been institutionalized
by the totalitarian government
- as the film concluded, Alex was viewed as a celebrity
in the hospital, surrounded by flowers and fruit, and Beethoven's "Ode
to Joy" was broadcast over loud-speakers; the Minister posed for
pictures with Alex; Alex's eyes rolled back in
his head as he entered a dream reflecting his old, preconditioned behavior
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The Apologetic Minister of the Interior Visited Alex,
Spoon-Fed Him and Persuaded Him to Turn Public
Opinion in His Favor For the Election; He Posed For Pictures With
the Minister of the Interior - And Then His Eyes Rolled Back
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- in his fantasy dream, he was semi-'reborn' as he
imagined himself nude and frolicking
in slow-motion on piles of white snow while making love (it's
unclear whether it's a rape fantasy?) to an equally-naked, beautiful
blonde female (Katya Wyeth) astride him wearing only black silk stockings,
while an audience of two rows of genteel Victorian Londoners sedately
observed and applauded his return to criminality; Alex - in voice-over,
triumphantly and sardonically delivered the film's closing line: "I
was cured all right"; his words were followed by a hard cut
to a bright orange title card pronouncing: 'Produced and Directed
by Stanley Kubrick'
- the film's implication
was that Alex was not really cured although he was now healed of
his psychic castration -- but in fact, he was still "a
clockwork orange" lacking free will; the only difference was that
now, he was programmed by the totalitarian government in the completely
opposite direction, to now embrace immoral behavior
- Gene Kelly's original rendition of Singin' in
the Rain was heard during the end credits
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Reverse Tracking Shot of Anarchic Leader of Gang of "Droogs" -
Alex (Malcolm McDowell)
The Gang in a Korova Milk Bar Drinking Milk-Plus Laced
With Drugs (l to r): Pete, Dim, Alex, Georgie
The Droogs Assaulting a Tramp in an Underpass
Alex's Rival Gang Led by Billy Boy Raping
a Devotchka on an Opera
House Stage Before A Gang Fight
Alex and the Droogs Joyriding in a Stolen Sports Car - a Durango 95
Novelist Mr. Alexander in his "HOME"
After a Night of Carousing, Dim Back at the Korova Milk
Bar For a Nightcap
Alex in Ecstasy Listening to Beethoven's Ode to Joy
Dim's Weak Protest Against Alex's Leadership
Alex's "Bliss" Listening to Beethoven's 9th Symphony Back in
His Bedroom
Alex's Handsy and Deviant Social Worker/Probation Officer ("Post
Corrective Adviser")
Mr. Deltoid (Aubrey Morris)
Walking Along the Marina With His Droogs Before Alex Asserted
His Dominance
Penis-Sculpture Lethal Assault on Cat-Lady
Alex Struck in Face with a Milk Bottle - Blinded and Arrested
Two Years Later, The Prison's Chaplain: "What's it going to be,
eh?"
Alex Selected to Participate in New Ludovico Treatment Technique by Minister
of the Interior
Aversion Therapy While Watching Films of Violence, Gang-Rape and the
Nazis
Demonstration to Show How Alex Had Been Successfully Cured
Although 'Cured' Acc. to the Minister of the Interior, Had Alex Lost
His Free Will Acc. to the Priest?
Teenaged Renter Joe (Clive Francis) Displacing Alex in
His Own Home
Former Droog Gang Members (Now Police Officers) Assaulting and Nearly
Drowning Alex
New Torture Tactics Used Against Alex in Dolin's Country Manor - Forced
to Listen to Music of Beethoven
Alex's Film-Ending Fantasy: "I was cured all right"
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