A Clockwork Orange (film)
A Clockwork Orange | |
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File:Clockwork orangeA.jpg Poster for A Clockwork Orange. | |
Directed by | Stanley Kubrick |
Written by | Anthony Burgess (novel) Stanley Kubrick (screenplay) |
Produced by | Si Litvinoff |
Starring | Patrick Magee Malcolm McDowell |
Cinematography | John Alcott |
Edited by | Bill Butler |
Music by | Wendy Carlos Rachel Elkind |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date | December 19 1971 |
Running time | 136 min. |
Country | ![]() |
Language | English |
Budget | US$2.2 million (estimated) |
A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 film adaptation of a 1962 novel of the same name, by Anthony Burgess. The adaptation was produced, written and directed by Stanley Kubrick. It stars Malcolm McDowell as the charismatic and psychopathic delinquent Alex de Large. The film features a soundtrack comprising mostly classical music selections and Moog synthesizer compositions by Wendy Carlos.
Plot
Set in a future England (ca. 1990, imagined from 1965), the film follows the life of a teenage boy named Alex de Large (McDowell) whose pleasures are classical music (most especially Beethoven), rape, and ultraviolence. He is leader of a small gang of thugs, whom he refers to as his "droogs". Alex narrates most of the film in "nadsat", the fractured, contemporary adolescent argot comprising Slavic (especially Russian), English, and Cockney rhyming slang. The boy Alex is irreverent and abusive of others; he lies to his parents to skip school; has an expensive stereo sound deck blasting a classics recordings collection.
After drinking narcotic-laden milk at the Korova Milk Bar, Alex and his droogs beat an old drunken tramp (an Irish immigrant) under a motorway flyover. They then proceed to an old derelict casino where a rival gang led by Billyboy are about to rape a woman. A fight between the two gangs ensues; Alex and his droogs emerge victorious and leave before the police arrive. Alex and the gang steal a Durango 95 (a fictional sports car) for a drive into the countryside, where he leads his droogs in a home invasion, beating a reclusive writer named Mr. Alexander and raping his wife while singing and dancing to "Singin' in the Rain".
While skipping school for the day, Alex picks up two teenyboppers in a record shop, takes them home, and hurriedly has sex with both to the strains of the William Tell Overture. (In 1971, there was journalistic controversy about whether this scene constituted "obscenity" or not.)
Alex is soon faced by an attempted coup by two of his subordinate droogs, Georgie and Dim. Alex is slightly threatened, but seemingly deals with the problem, he kicks the droogs into the bay as they walk along the "flatblock marina", and cuts the back of Dim's hand, demonstrating his leadership and unwillingness to be overthrown.
That night, Alex is caught during a burglary, a mutinous set-up by his ill-contented droogs. Alex breaks into a woman's house and uses a ceramic phallus to beat (and accidentally kill) the owner. Alex is then attacked by his droogs where he gets hit on the head with a milk bottle, and left helpless at the scene of their crime to be caught by the police. After being arrested, he learns that his robbery victim has died: Alex is a murderer. He is sentenced to 14 years in prison.
After serving two years, he is offered a chance at parole if he submits to the Ludovico technique, an experimental aversion therapy developed by the government to solve societal crime. The technique involves being exposed to extreme depictions of on-screen violence under the influence of a nausea-inducing drug. Alex is unable to look away from the screen, his head held immobile and each of his eyes held open by small speculums.
Consequently, Alex is rendered incapable of violence, even in self-defense, and also incapable of touching a naked woman during a test of the technique, crawling away retching. Sadly, in an unintended side effect, the technique has also rendered him averse to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, the background score used in one of the films that is a montage of images of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis; the scientist-doctors apologise: "It can't be helped", saying that musical aversion is "the punishment element, perhaps?"
Once Alex has successfully completed the therapy, he returns home, joyful at the thought of starting afresh. However, he is unpleasantly surprised by the discovery that his parents have rented out his room to a new young man, essentially "replacing" their son. With no place to go, stripped of the ability to defend himself, Alex despondently wanders London. He soon encounters the same Irish tramp, who, with his street friends, attacks the defenseless boy. He is then discovered by his two former droogs, Georgie and Dim, who have now become policemen and who take him into the outskirts of town. They beat him and nearly drown him.
Alex wanders through the woods and unwittingly arrives upon the house of the writer whose wife he had raped and beaten earlier in the film. Mr. Alexander takes him in before discovering his identity; subsequently, he then drugs Alex and attempts to drive him insane with an electronic version of the Ninth Symphony (Second Movement) played at full volume below Alex's locked bedroom. The boy attempts suicide by jumping out a window, but survives. As a result of this conquering of the fear of death, Alex inadvertently cures himself of his crippling psychological anguish.
During his long recovery in hospital, Alex is visited by the Minister of the Interior who earlier had personally selected Alex for the Ludovico treatment. He apologizes to Alex for the treatment's consequences, saying he was only following his staff's recommendations. He begins politically seducing Alex by presenting him with an enormous stereo playing the Ninth Symphony's finale (Fourth Movement), to which Alex listens with no physical reaction.
The government promises Alex a job if he agrees to campaign on behalf of the ruling Conservative political party, whose public image has been severely damaged by Alex's attempted suicide. Anticipating his return to havoc, Alex relives his surreal fantasy of having sex with a woman in the snow, surrounded by applauding Victorian ladies and gentlemen. With the finale of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony in the background, Alex narrates the film's end: "I was cured, all right..." .
Cast
- Malcolm McDowell - Alexander DeLarge
Alex's Droogs
- Warren Clarke - Dim
- James Marcus - Georgie
- Michael Tarn - Pete
Alex's Victims
- Patrick Magee - Frank Alexander
- Adrienne Corri - Mrs. Alexander
- Miriam Karlin - Catlady (Miss Weathers)
- Paul Farrell - Tramp
- Richard Connaught - Billy Boy
Authorities
- Aubrey Morris - P. R. Deltoid
- Michael Bates - Chief Officer Barnes
- Michael Gover - Prison Governor
- Godfrey Quigley - Prison Chaplain
- Lindsay Campbell - Police Inspector
- Steven Berkoff - Det. Const. Tom
- John J. Carney - Detective Sergeant
- Anthony Sharp - Minister
Alex's Family
- Sheila Raynor - Mom
- Philip Stone - Dad
- Clive Francis - Lodger (Joe)
Doctors
- Carl Duering - Dr. Brodsky
- Madge Ryan - Dr. Branom
- Pauline Taylor - Psychiatrist
- Carol Drinkwater - Nurse Feeley
Others
- Margaret Tyzack - Conspirator
- John Savident - Conspirator
- Virginia Wetherell - Stage Actress
- John Clive - Stage Actor
- David Prowse - Julian
- Pat Roach - Korova Milk Bar bouncer
Themes
Morality
One of the film's central moral questions — as well as in many of Burgess's other books — is the definition of "goodness". After aversion therapy, Alex behaves like a good member of society, but not by choice; his goodness is involuntary and mechanical, like that of the titular clockwork orange. In prison, the chaplain criticises the Ludovico Technique, saying that true goodness must come from within. Another theme is the abuse of one's liberties — both by Alex and by those using him for their various ends. The film is also critical of both parties using Alex as a tool to those ends: Frank Alexander, writer and victim of Alex and the droogs, not only wants revenge over Alex, but sees him as a means to definitively turn the people against the government and its new regime — Mr. Alexander is afraid of this new government. Speaking on the phone, he says:
…Recruiting brutal young roughs into the police; proposing debilitating and will-sapping techniques of conditioning. Oh, we’ve seen it all before in other countries; the thin end of the wedge! Before we know where we are, we will have the full apparatus of totalitarianism.
On the other side, the Minister of the Interior puts Mr. Alexander away, using the excuse of him being a danger to Alex. Whether he has been harmed or not remains unclear, but from what the Minister tells Alex, it is obvious that the author has been denied his ability to write and, more importantly, to produce “subversive” material, critical of the current government and prone to cause unrest.
Psychology
Another central theme is outrage against behavioral psychology (popular throughout the 1940s and the 1960s), as propounded by psychologists John B. Watson and B. F. Skinner. Burgess disapproved of behaviorism, calling Skinner's most popular book, Beyond Freedom and Dignity, "one of the most dangerous books ever written".[1] Although Watson conceded behaviourism's limitations, Skinner argued that behavior modification (learning techniques of systematic reward and punishment) is the key to an ideal society (see Walden Two). Dr. Ludovico's technique, which is highly reminiscent of the notorious Project MKULTRA, is the form of behavior modification the scientists applied to Alex to condition associating violent acts with a sensation of severe physical illness, thereby preventing him from being violent. This film embodies a mistrust of behaviourism, especially the perceived dehumanisation and lack of choice associated with behaviour modification methods.
Adaptation
Kubrick's film is relatively faithful to Burgess's novel, omitting only the final, positive chapter in which Alex matures and outgrows sociopathy. The film ends with Alex offered an open-ended government job, implying that Alex remains a sociopath at heart, while the novel ends with Alex's positive change. This plot discrepancy occurred because Kubrick based his screenplay upon the novel's American edition, its final chapter deleted on insistence of the American publisher.[2] Director Kubrick claimed not having read the complete, original version of the novel until he had almost finished writing the screenplay, and that he never considered using it. In the introduction of the 1996 edition of the novel, it is said that Kubrick found the end of the original edition too blandly optimistic and unrealistic.
Some other notable differences:
Alex and his droogs are a few years older in the movie than in the book, and the two 10-year-old girls Alex raped in the novel are likewise several years older, and the sex consensual, in the analogous scene in the movie. Also, instead of former enemy Billy Boy becoming Dim's police partner, it's fellow-former-droog Georgie.
Production
During the filming of the Ludovico scene, Malcolm McDowell scratched a cornea and was temporarily blinded. The doctor standing next to him in the scene dropping saline solution into Alex's forced-open eyes was not just there for filming purposes, but was a real doctor needed to prevent McDowell's eyes from drying. McDowell also suffered cracked ribs during filming of the humiliation stage show and nearly drowned when his breathing apparatus failed while being held underwater in the trough scene.
When Alex jumps out the window to try to end his torment, the viewer sees the ground coming toward the camera until they collide. This effect was achieved by dropping a portable camera from two or three stories up, lens pointing downward, thus presenting a realistic sense of what such a fall could be like (although the way Alex (either McDowell or a stuntman) jumped, he actually would have landed on his back, presumably into a net). Reportedly the camera sustained lens damage but it was otherwise still functional.
Direction
Director Stanley Kubrick was a notorious perfectionist, and so he demanded many takes during the making of his films. In the words of actor Malcolm McDowell, however, he usually got it right, so Kubrick did not have to do too many takes. Despite his perfectionism Kubrick was able to complete filming between September 1970 and its wrap on April 20, 1971, making it the fastest-produced film by Stanley Kubrick.
Kubrick wanted to give the film a dream-like, fantasy quality, and filmed many scenes with fisheye lenses. He also used fast and slow motion after being influenced by certain scenes in Toshio Matsumoto's masterpiece, "Funeral Parade of Roses" (which was also one of Kubrick's favorite films).
Locations
A Clockwork Orange is shot almost entirely on location in and around London with comparatively little of the film filmed in a studio.
- The scene where the tramp is attacked was filmed at an underpass near Wandsworth road roundabout, London.
- The Billyboy gangfight takes place at the now demolished theatre, Taggs Island, Kingston on Thames.
- Alex's apartment is in Borehamwood.
- The house where the writer was attacked and his wife raped was filmed in a house called Skybreak in The Warren, Radlett, Hertfordshire. The house was designed by Sir Norman Foster and Wendy Foster with Sir Richard Rogers.
- The scene where Alex throws Dim and Georgie into the water takes place at the Thamesmead South Housing Estate in London.
- The house where Alex is caught by the police is Shenley Lodge in Hertfordshire at Blackhorse Lane.
- The prison exterior is Wandsworth Prison. The interior scenes were filmed at Woolwich Barracks.
- The Ludovico centre was filmed at Brunel University
- Alex's suicide leap was from the Edgewarebury Country Club, Elstree.[3]
Critical reaction
The film has received mixed reviews, critics like Roger Ebert gave it 2 stars calling it an "ideological mess". However the movie has received nominations for important awards including 4 nominations at Oscars(see below)
Responses and controversy
The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture (it lost to The French Connection) and reinvigorated sales for recordings of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. It also caused considerable controversy (see below) and was withdrawn from release in the UK. By the time of its re-release in the year 2000, it had already gained a reputation as a cult classic. It was recently placed at number 21 on AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills and number 46 on AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies lists. Alex De Large was placed at number 12 in the villain section of the AFI's 100 Years... 100 Heroes & Villains list.
United States censorship
The film was rated X on its original release in the United States. Later, Kubrick voluntarily cut 30 seconds from the film for a re-release, which was rated R and released in the US in 1973. It is a common myth that only the R-rated version (with the 30 seconds taken out or replaced with less graphic content) can be seen nowadays, but the opposite is in fact true: all DVDs present the original X-rated form, and only some of the early 80s VHS editions are in the R-rated form.[4]
The film was rated C (for "condemned") by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' Office for Film and Broadcasting because of its explicit sexual and violent content; such a rating conceptually forbade Catholics from seeing the film. The "condemned" rating was abolished in 1982, and since then films deemed by the conference to have unacceptable levels of sex and/or violence have been rated O, meaning "morally offensive".
British withdrawal
In the United Kingdom, the sexual violence in the film was considered extreme. Furthermore, it was claimed that the film had inspired copycat behaviour. In March 1972, a prosecutor at a trial of a 14-year-old boy accused of the manslaughter of one of his classmates referred to A Clockwork Orange, telling the judge that the case had a macabre relevance to the film.[5]
More direct connections were made after the murder of David McManus, a homeless 60-year-old man who had 1½p stolen from him. The attacker, a boy age 16 from Bletchley, pleaded guilty after telling police that his friends had told him of the film "and the beating up of an old boy like this one"; defence counsel told the trial "the link between this crime and sensational literature, particularly A Clockwork Orange, is established beyond reasonable doubt".[6] The press also blamed the influence of the film for a rape in which the attackers sang "Singin' in the Rain". Kubrick subsequently requested that Warner Brothers withdraw the film from UK distribution.
At the time, it was widely believed that the copycat attacks were what led Kubrick to withdraw the film from distribution in the United Kingdom. However, in a television documentary made after Kubrick's death, his widow Christiane confirmed rumours that Kubrick had withdrawn A Clockwork Orange on police advice after threats were made against Kubrick and his family (the source of the threats was not discussed). That Warner Bros. acceded to Kubrick's request to withdraw the film is an indication of the remarkable relationship Kubrick had with the studio, particularly the executive Terry Semel.
Whatever the reason for the film's withdrawal, it could not easily be seen in the United Kingdom for some 27 years. The first VHS and DVD releases followed shortly after Kubrick's death. It was also shown in many UK cinemas.
Academy Awards
The film was nominated for 4 Academy Awards:
- Best Director (Stanley Kubrick)
- Best Film Editing (Bill Butler)
- Best Picture (Stanley Kubrick, producer)
- Best Adapted Screenplay (Stanley Kubrick)
DVD releases
In 2000, the film was released on videotape and DVD, both individually and as part of The Stanley Kubrick Collection DVD set. Consequent to negative comments from fans, Warner Bros re-released the film, its image digitally restored and its soundtrack remastered. A limited-edition collector's set with a soundtrack disc, movie poster, booklet and film strip followed, but later was discontinued. In 2005, a UK re-release, packaged as an "Iconic Film" in a limited-edition slipcase was published, identical to the remastered DVD set, except for different package cover art. In 2006, Warner Bros announced the September publication of a two-disc special edition featuring a Malcolm McDowell commentary,and the releases of other two-disc sets of Stanley Kubrick films. Several UK retailers had set the release date as November 6, 2006; the release was delayed and re-announced for 2007 Holiday Season. An HD DVD, Blu-ray, and DVD re-release version of the film has recently been announced for a release date of October 23rd, 2007. The release will accompany three other Kubrick classics. 1080p video transfers and remixed Dolby TrueHD 5.1 audio tracks will be on both the Blu-ray and HD DVD editions. The DVD re-release edition will be anamorphically enhanced. No word has been given on the supplemental material, other than a commentary featuring Malcolm Mcdowell .
Anthony Burgess's response
Burgess had mixed feelings about the film adaptation of his novel. Publicly, he loved Malcolm McDowell and Michael Bates, and its use of music; he praised the film as "brilliant," even as a film so brilliant that it could be dangerous. His initial reaction to the film was very enthusiastic, insisting that the only thing that bothered him was the removal of the story's last chapter, for which he blamed his American publisher and not Kubrick.
According to his autobiography, Burgess got along quite well with Kubrick. Both men held similar philosophic and political views; both were very interested in literature, cinema, music, and Napoleon Bonaparte (Burgess dedicated his book Napoleon Symphony to Kubrick). Reputation-wise, however, things turned bad when Kubrick left it to Burgess to defend the film from accusations of glorifying violence. Himself a (lapsed) Catholic, Burgess tried many times to explain the story's Christian moral points to outraged Christian organisations who felt it a Satanic social influence; to defend it against journalistic accusations that it supported "fascist" dogma; and Burgess even received awards for Kubrick.
Burgess was deeply hurt, feeling Kubrick had used him as a film publicity pawn. Malcolm McDowell, who did a publicity tour with Burgess, shared his feelings, and at times said harsh things about Kubrick. Burgess and McDowell cited as evidence of Kubrick's uncontrolled ego that only Kubrick's name appears in the authorial opening credits. Burgess spoofed Kubrick's image in later works: the musical version of A Clockwork Orange, featuring a character resembling Kubrick who is beaten early in the work; The Clockwork Testament, wherein the fictional poet FX Enderby is attacked for supposedly glorifying violence in a film adaptation; and Burgess's novel Earthly Powers, which features a crafty director named Zabrick.
Soundtrack
The film's soundtrack comprises classical music and electronic synthetic music composed by Wendy Carlos (credited at the time to Walter Carlos).
Some of the pieces of classical music excerpted make only the briefest appearance in the film, a case in point being the "Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1" theme better known as "Land of Hope and Glory", which is used in highly ironic fashion to herald the appearance of a politician in the prison, and is not heard again.
The film's music can be interpreted as a thematic extension of Alex's psychological conditioning, affecting the viewers.
Track listing
- "Title Music from A Clockwork Orange"[2], Wendy Carlos
- "The Thieving Magpie (Rossini, Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording
- "Theme from A Clockwork Orange (Beethoviana)", Wendy Carlos
- "Ninth Symphony, Second Movement (Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording, probably the one conducted by Ferenc Fricsay.
- "March from A Clockwork Orange (Ninth Symphony, Fourth Movement, Abridged)", Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind
- "William Tell Overture (Rossini, Abridged)", Wendy Carlos
- "Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1", Sir Edward Elgar
- "Pomp and Circumstance March No. IV (Abridged)", Sir Edward Elgar
- "Timesteps (Excerpt)", Wendy Carlos
- "Overture to the Sun", Terry Tucker
- "I Want to Marry a Lighthouse Keeper", Erike Eigen (movie version is somewhat different)
- "William Tell Overture (Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording
- "Suicide Scherzo (Ninth Symphony, Second Movement, Abridged)", Wendy Carlos
- "Ninth Symphony, Fourth Movement, (Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording (Von Karajan, 1963, uncredited)
- "Singin' in the Rain", Gene Kelly, lyrics by Arthur Freed, music by Nacio Herb Brown.
- ^ The main theme is an electronic transcription of Henry Purcell's Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary[3], composed in 1695 for the procession of Queen Mary's cortège through the streets of London enroute to Westminster Abbey.
Three months after the official soundtrack's release, composer Wendy Carlos released a second version of the soundtrack (Columbia KC 31480) containing unused cues and musical elements unheard in the film. For example, Kubrick only used part of "Timesteps", and a shortened version of the synthesiser transcription of the Ninth Symphony's Scherzo. Additionally, this second soundtrack LP contained a synthesiser version of Rossini's "La Gazza Ladra"; Kubrick used an orchestral performance in the film's soundtrack. In 1998, an edition of the soundtrack containing digitally-remastered tracks of the synthesiser music was released. It contains Carlos's compositions, including those unused in the film, and the "Biblical Daydreams" and "Orange Minuet" cues unincluded in the 1972 soundtrack LP record.
Carlos composed the first three minutes of "Timesteps" before reading Burgess's novel. Originally, she had intended as the introduction to a vocoder rendition of the Ninth Symphony's Choral movement; "Timesteps" was completed at roughly the time when Kubrick completed the film's photography; "Timesteps" and the vocoder Ninth Symphony were the foundation for Carlos's and Kubrick's collaboration.
Reportedly, Stanley Kubrick asked Pink Floyd frontman Roger Waters if he could use elements of the "Atom Heart Mother" suite in the soundtrack; Waters rejected the request. Later, Waters asked Kubrick if he could appropriate sounds from 2001: A Space Odyssey - a request Kubrick rejected.
"March from A Clockwork Orange" was the first recorded song featuring a vocoder for singing, and often is cited as inspiration for many synthpop bands.
Neither the end-credits nor the soundtrack album name the orchestra playing the classical excerpts from the Ninth Symphony, however, in Alex's bedroom, early in the story, there is a fleeting close-up of a microcassette tape labelled: "Deutsche Grammophon – Ludwig van Beethoven – Symphonie Nr. 9 d-moll, op. 125 – Berliner Philharmoniker – Chor der St. Hedwigskathedrale – Ferenc Fricsay – Irmgard Seefried, Maureen Forrester, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Ernst Haefliger".
Previous film versions
The first dramatisation of A Clockwork Orange (excerpted from the story's first three chapters only) was by the BBC, for part of the programme Tonight, broadcast shortly after the novel's original publication in 1962. No recording of this dramatisation has survived.
Six years before Stanley Kubrick's film version, Andy Warhol produced a low-budget version, titled Clockwork (a.k.a Vinyl). Reportedly, only two scenes are recognisable: "Victor" (a renamed Alex) wreaking havoc, and undergoing the Ludovico Treatment.
Members of The Rolling Stones proposed filming their adaptation, with themselves as the ultraviolent gang, before Kubrick acquired the project. Other, unrealised versions supposedly contained miniskirted girls or old people as the gang.
Differences between the film and the book
- The film uses Nadsat significantly less often than the book in order to make the film more accessible.
- In the film Alex has a pet snake. There is no mention of this in the book. This was added by Kubrick due to Malcolm McDowell's fear of snakes.
- In the film, Alex and his droogs beat a tramp, who later recognises him and, with other homeless people, assaults him after his treatment. In the book, Alex beats an old man carrying library books, who later recognises him and (with other aged people) assaults him in a library after his treatment. Alex and his droogs also beat a tramp in the book, but Alex did not meet him again as he was presumably killed.
- In the book, Alex and his gang pay for a group of old ladies' drinks, bribing them into providing the police with an alibi to cover a "crast" (shop burglary). None of this appears in the film; the scene with the old ladies was shot, but not used.
- The girl that is about to be raped by Billy Boy's gang is ten in the book, but a young woman in the film.
- In the book, the writer whose wife Alex rapes is named "F. Alexander", leading to an ironic comparison between the two "Alexander"s. The film does not mention his surname, though he is called "Mr. Alexander" in the credits.
- In the book, Alex takes home and rapes two ten-year-old girls, Marty and Sonietta, after meeting them in a record shop. In the film, the girls are about 17 years old, and their sexual encounter with Alex is consensual.
- In the film, the "cat lady" whose house Alex breaks into possesses a great deal of sexual artwork, including a rocking penis sculpture with which Alex delivers the (inadvertent) killing strike. None of this artwork is mentioned in the book, in which Alex uses a small silver statue of a naked woman to deliver the fatal blow. The "cat lady" in the novel is elderly, addled, and living in a cat-ridden house of Mrs. Haversham-style delapidation; the "cat lady" in the movie is in her early 40s, sharp, and living in a house which is clearly also her highly successful business--some sort of upscale health/yoga resort.
- When trying to escape from the cat lady's house, Alex is stopped by Dim, who attacks him and leaves him for the police. In the book, Dim uses his "oozy" (or chain) to whip Alex across the face. In the film, Dim smashes a milk bottle across the side of Alex's head.
- In the film, Alex's surname is spoken as "DeLarge" on arrival at prison; this surname is a pun based on the book, when Alex (referring to his penis) calls himself "Alexander the Large" (in turn a reference to "Alexander the Great"). In a close-up shot of a newspaper article, Alex is identified as "Alex Burgess". In the book, Alex's surname is unknown.
- In the book, Alex's prisoner number is 6655321; in the film, it is 655321.
- In the book, Alex is beaten by prison guards. The film does not show this, but Alex mentions it in his narration.
- In the book, an imprisoned Alex learns of the death of his former droog Georgie. In the film, Alex meets with Georgie after being freed from prison (see below).
- In the book, the incarcerated Alex and cellmates brutally beat a man just put in their cell, for being a nuisance. Alex is told to give the man some "tolchocks", and accidentally kills him. For such persistent violence, Alex is selected to undergo the Ludovico Technique. In the film, Alex volunteers for the treatment and is chosen in part for his good behavior in prison.
- In the book, Alex is beaten by his former droog, Dim, and his former rival, Billy Boy, who have both joined the police; the beating itself is not described. In the film, Billy Boy is replaced in this scene by Georgie, another former droog (who had died in the novel); they take Alex down a wood path to a watering trough, where Dim forces Alex's head underwater, and Georgie beats him with his truncheon. Actor Malcolm McDowell nearly drowned during filming when his air tank failed, as the (unbroken) scene lasted 60 seconds.
- In the book, F. Alexander lives alone after the death of his wife, and manages most of the housework by himself despite his condition. In the film, he is shown to have hired a bodyguard named Julian to help him around the house and guard the home from future break-ins. The bodyguard is played by former bodybuilder and future Darth Vader, David Prowse in a brief role.
- In the book, F. Alexander recognizes Alex through a number of careless references to the previous attack (i.e. his wife then claiming they did not have a telephone). Whereas, in the film, Alex is recognized when singing the song 'Singing in the Rain', in the bath, which he hauntingly does whilst attacking F. Alexander's wife. The song does not appear at all in the book, as it was an improvisation by actor Malcolm McDowell when Kubrick complained that the rape scene was too "stiff".
- Alex is conditioned against all music in the book, but in the film he is only averse to Beethoven's 9th Symphony.
- The last chapter (21) of the book was not filmed. In this chapter, Alex encounters Pete, the third member of the original gang, who has grown beyond his violent ways and married; Alex realises that he wishes to do the same, but believes his violence was an unavoidable product of his youth.
Trivia
![]() | This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. (June 2007) |
There is occasional confusion about the title. Posters for the film, and the soundtrack album cover, read "Stanley Kubrick's Clockwork Orange", with Alex (Malcolm McDowell) emerging from what appears to be a large "A" to complete the title. The spinoff album cover is called "Walter/Wendy Carlos' Clockwork Orange". As the film's title cards make clear, the actual title of the film is the same as that of the book: A Clockwork Orange.
The film includes the phrase "A Clockwork Orange" only once. We see A Clockwork Orange written on a piece of paper in Mr. Alexander's typewriter. The book explains that the author Frank is supposed to have written a political tract by that name (with a passage explaining the title), but this is not mentioned in the movie.
- In the film, the car seen before the home invasion is the M-505 Adams Brothers Probe 16, in the book however, it is referred to as Durango 95. Only three were produced, in the TV-programme Top Gear (Season 2004, 2nd episode, aired October 31, 2004), the one used in the film was nominated for restoration in the Restoration Rip-off feature.
- The sculptures of females in the Korova Milkbar were based on works by sculptor Allen Jones.
- When Alex is dragged through the forest by the two droogs-turned-policemen, their badge numbers are 665 and 667, implying that Alex (between them) is 666, the number of "The Beast", or commonly referred to as Satan.
- Philip Castle's poster artwork for A Clockwork Orange incorporates the All-seeing eye of Masonic symbolism which features prominently on the Great Seal of the USA [4].
- Mr. Alexander's doorbell chimes the famous first four notes of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. Within classical tradition, this famous opening has been likened to "fate knocking at the door".
- The scene where Mr. Alexander offers Alex a glass of wine is an exact recreation of a scene in Dracula (1931 film) including the response, "I never drink wine."
- In the rumble scene at the Derelict Casino against Billy Boy's gang, Alex's hat falls off and then is immediately back on his head.
References to other Kubrick's films
- The album cover of the soundtrack to 2001: A Space Odyssey, also directed by Stanley Kubrick, is visible in the record-shop scene, as is the cover to The Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour, Neil Young's After the Gold Rush, and Pink Floyd's Atom Heart Mother.
- Alex is given Experimental Serum 114, a phonetic play on the CRM-114 radio seen in Dr. Strangelove. The number 114 also appears in other films by Stanley Kubrick, including Eyes Wide Shut and 2001: A Space Odyssey.
- The red chairs in the Korova Milk Bar are also seen in the space-station lounge in 2001: A Space Odyssey.
References
- ^ http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/clockworkorange/context.html
- ^ http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/faq/index2.html#slot21
- ^ Filming Locations Malcommcdowell.net, accessed 2007-07-22
- ^ [1] - Article discussing the edits, with photographs.
- ^ "Serious pockets of violence at London school, QC says", The Times, 21 March 1972.
- ^ "'Clockwork Orange' link with boy's crime", The Times, 4 July 1973.
- Burgess, Anthony (1978). A Clockwork Orange. In 1985. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-136080-3 (extracts quoted here)
See also
- A Clockwork Orange, the novel
- Aestheticization of violence
External links
- A Clockwork Orange at IMDb
- Reviews of A Clockwork Orange on Rotten Tomatoes
- A Clockwork Orange - A Hollywood Gothique Retrospective
- A Prophetic and Violent Masterpiece - Theodore Dalrymple in the City Journal
- Comparison of Book and Film
- Tabula Rasa: The Clockwork Orange Files
- Clockwork Orange and the Aestheticisation of Violence
- Articles lacking sources from October 2006
- Articles with trivia sections from June 2007
- 1971 films
- British science fiction films
- Dystopian films
- Censorship
- English-language films
- Films based on science fiction books
- Films directed by Stanley Kubrick
- Hugo Award Winner for Best Dramatic Presentation
- Prison films
- Black comedy films
- Obscenity controversies
- Satirical films
- Psychological science fiction films
- Warner Bros. films
- Fictional-language films
- Philosophical films