Stanley Kubrick dissects the nature of violence in this darkly ironic,
near-future satire, adapted from Anthony Burgess's novel, complete with
"Nadsat" slang. Classical music-loving proto-punk Alex (Malcolm
McDowell) and his "Droogs" spend their nights getting high at the Korova
Milkbar before embarking on "a little of the old ultraviolence," such
as terrorizing a writer, Mr. Alexander (Patrick Magee), and gang raping
his wife (who later dies as a result). After Alex is jailed for
bludgeoning the Cat Lady
(Miriam Karlin) to death with one of her phallic sculptures, Alex
submits to the Ludovico behavior modification technique to earn his
freedom; he's conditioned to abhor violence through watching gory
movies, and even his adored Beethoven is turned against him. Returned to
the world defenseless, Alex becomes the victim of his prior victims,
with Mr. Alexander using Beethoven's Ninth to inflict the greatest pain
of all. When society sees what the state has done to Alex, however, the
politically expedient move is made. Casting a coldly pessimistic view on
the then-future of the late '70s-early '80s, Kubrick and production
designer John Barry created a world of high-tech cultural decay, mixing
old details like bowler hats with bizarrely alienating "new"
environments like the Milkbar. Alex's violence is horrific, yet it is an
aesthetically calculated fact of his existence; his charisma makes the
icily clinical Ludovico treatment seem more negatively abusive than
positively therapeutic. Alex may be a sadist, but the state's autocratic
control is another violent act, rather than a solution. Released in
late 1971 (within weeks of Sam Peckinpah's brutally violent Straw Dogs),
the film sparked considerable controversy in the U.S. with its X-rated
violence; after copycat crimes in England, Kubrick withdrew the film
from British distribution until after his death. Opinion was divided on
the meaning of Kubrick's detached view of this shocking future, but,
whether the discord drew the curious or Kubrick's scathing diagnosis
spoke to the chaotic cultural moment, A Clockwork Orange became a hit.
On the heels of New York Film Critics Circle awards as Best Film, Best
Director, and Best Screenplay, Kubrick received Oscar nominations in all
three categories.
Directed By: Stanley Kubrick
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