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A Clockwork Orange (film)

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This article describes the film. For other uses of the term Clockwork Orange, see Clockwork Orange (disambiguation).
A Clockwork Orange (1971) is a film directed and produced by Stanley Kubrick based on the novel of the same name by Anthony Burgess. The film stars Malcolm McDowell as charismatic delinquent Alex DeLarge, and features a soundtrack by Wendy Carlos. It came in at number 21 on AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills and number 46 on AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movies.

Synopsis

Set a few years in the future, the film follows the career of a teenager named Alex whose main pleasures in life are classical music (especially Beethoven), rape, and random acts of 'ultraviolence'. Alex tells his story in a teenage slang called 'Nadsat', which mixes Russian with English.

Eventually Alex is caught, jailed, and 'rehabilitated' by an experimental program of aversion therapy, spearheaded by the government in an effort to solve society's crime problem. The therapy renders him incapable of violence (even in self-defense), but in an unintended side effect, also makes him unable to enjoy Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. The doctors whisper to themselves that 'it can't be helped' and that this is 'The punishment factor, perhaps?'

Stripped of the ability to fight back, Alex soon falls afoul of both his former partners in crime (the 'droogies'), and some of his former victims. He is then captured by anti-government politicians (one of whom is a former victim seeking revenge) who drive him insane by playing Beethoven's Ninth; Alex tries to commit suicide by jumping out a window but fails.

After a long recovery in hospital, Alex seems to be back to his former self. While in the hospital, the Minister of the Interior (who had personally selected Alex for the special treatment) visits Alex and apologizes for the treatment program, saying that he was only following the recommendations of his staff. Alex is then promised a position in government if he'll agree to improve the ruling political party's public image, which had been damaged on account of Alex's experience. The closing shots of the film feature Alex's voiceover saying 'I was cured all right...', anticipating his return to creating havoc. The film ends with a disturbing, surreal image of Alex having sex with a woman, surrounded by applauding Victorian gentlemen, an image that suggests that his aggression is accepted by society, now that Alex will be working with politicians instead of criminal outcasts.

Themes

One of the central moral questions of the film, as well as many of Burgess' other books, is the definition of "goodness". Once he has undergone the aversion therapy, Alex behaves like a good member of society, but not through choice; his "goodness" is as artificial as the clockwork orange of the title. In one scene, the prison chaplain criticizes the therapy, saying that true goodness has to come from within. Another theme is the abuse of liberties.

Adaptation

The film is relatively faithful to the novel, except for the omission of the final chapter. Burgess's novel ends with Alex maturing and growing out of his sociopathy, eventually becoming an upright citizen. Kubrick's film offers a much bleaker conclusion; Alex has not really changed at all, and now he has the government's tacit approval to wreak as much havoc as he likes.

This discrepancy is because Kubrick based his film on the American edition of the novel, which had its final chapter cut at the insistence of the American publisher [link]

Behind the scenes

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 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).

Responses

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.

United States censorship

Alex at the Korova Milkbar
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Alex at the Korova Milkbar

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 [link]: all DVDs present the original X-Rated form, and only some of the early 80s VHS editions are in the R-Rated form.

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, claims that the film had inspired copycat behaviour were made: the press blamed the influence of the film for an attack on a homeless person and a rape in which the attackers sang "Singin' in the Rain". The film was subsequently withdrawn from UK distribution by Kubrick himself.

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 video and DVD releases followed shortly after Kubrick's death.

Anthony Burgess's response

Burgess had mixed feelings about the film adaptation of his novel. Publicly, he loved Malcolm McDowell, Michael Bates and the use of music, and praised the film as 'brilliant', and even as a film so brilliant that it could be dangerous. His initial reaction to the film was very enthusiastic and he insisted that the only thing that bothered him was the removal of the last chapter, though he blamed his American publisher and not Kubrick (who had read the American version of the book, missing its last chapter). According to his autobiography, Burgess got along quite well with Kubrick. The two both had similar philosophical and political views, they both were very interested in literature, film, music, and Napoleon (Burgess even dedicated his book Napoleon Symphony to Kubrick, who gave him ideas for it). However, things started to go bad when Kubrick left Burgess to defend the film from the accusations that it glorified violence. A devoted Christian, he tried numerous times to explain its Christian moral point to outraged Christian groups who felt it was a Satanic influence, and even defend it from accusations by the left-wing media that it supported 'fascist' dogma. He even collected awards for Kubrick. Burgess was deeply hurt and felt Kubrick had used him as a pawn for the film's publicity. Malcolm McDowell, who went on a publicity tour with Burgess, shared his feelings, and sometimes said some pretty harsh things about Kubrick. Burgess and McDowell said that proof of Kubrick's out-of- control ego was the fact that only his name appears in the opening credits. Burgess would go on to spoof Kubrick's image in several of his later works: his musical version of A Clockwork Orange (which includes a character who looks just like Kubrick, and who is beaten up early in the piece); The Clockwork Testament, in which the fictional poet FX Enderby is similarly attacked for supposedly glorifying violence in a film adaptation; and finally thinly-disguised references to Kubrick also appear in Burgess's novel, Earthly Powers, which features a crafty director named Zabrick.

Soundtrack

The film's soundtrack combines classical music with electronic music created by Wendy Carlos (credited under the name Walter Carlos).

The music in this film can be interpreted as extending the theme of conditioning to the audience: during any scene of violence in the movie, beautiful classical music is played, so that for a short while afterwards, whenever the viewer listens to that music, they may remember the violent images in the movie.

The track listing is as follows:

  1. "Title Music From A Clockwork Orange", Wendy Carlos
  2. "The Thieving Magpie (Rossini, Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording
  3. "Theme From A Clockwork Orange (Beethoviana)", Wendy Carlos
  4. "Ninth Symphony, Second Movement (Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording, probably the one conducted by Ferenc Fricsay.
  5. "March From A Clockwork Orange (Ninth Symphony, Fourth Movement, Abridged)", Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind
  6. "William Tell Overture (Rossini, Abridged)", Wendy Carlos
  7. "Pomp And Circumstance March No. 1", Sir Edward Elgar
  8. "Pomp And Circumstance March No. IV (Abridged)", Sir Edward Elgar
  9. "Timesteps (Excerpt)", Wendy Carlos
  10. "Overture To The Sun", Terry Tucker
  11. "I Want To Marry A Lighthouse Keeper", Erike Eigen (movie version is somewhat different)
  12. "William Tell Overture (Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording
  13. "Suicide Scherzo (Ninth Symphony, Second Movement, Abridged)", Wendy Carlos
  14. "Ninth Symphony, Fourth Movement, (Abridged)", A Deutsche Grammophon Recording (Von Karajan, 1963, uncredited)
  15. "Singin' In The Rain", Gene Kelly, lyrics by Arthur Freed, music by Nacio Herb Brown.
Album cover of 1972 LP (Columbia KC 31480)
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Album cover of 1972 LP
(Columbia KC 31480)

The title track for A Clockwork Orange is an electronic rendition of the "March" from Henry Purcell's Music on the Death of Queen Mary.

Three months after the official soundtrack was released, composer Wendy Carlos released a version (Columbia KC 31480) containing unused cues and other musical elements which had not appeared in the film. For example, Kubrick had only used part of Carlos's "Timesteps", and the synthesizer rendition of the Scherzo from Beethoven's Ninth Symphony had been shortened. In addition to these materials, the second soundtrack LP contained a synthesizer version of Rossini's "La Gazza Ladra", for which Kubrick had used an orchestral performance. In 1998, a compact disc was distributed containing a new, digital remastering of the synthesizer material. The CD contains Carlos's compositions, including those Kubrick did not use, and the cues "Biblical Daydreams" and "Orange Minuet" which the 1972 LP had not included.

Carlos composed the first three minutes of "Timesteps" before reading Burgess's novel. Originally, she had intended it to introduce a rendition of the Ninth Symphony's Choral movement, played with a vocoder. "Timesteps" was completed roughly the same time Kubrick had wrapped photography for his film; along with the vocoder performance of Beethoven's Ninth, it became the foundation for Carlos and Kubrick's collaboration.

Stanley Kubrick reportedy asked Pink Floyd frontman Roger Waters if he could use elements of the song "Atom Heart Mother" in the soundtrack. Waters rejected the request but later 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 to feature the use of a vocoder, and is often cited as the inspiration for many synthpop bands.

Previous film versions

The first dramatization of A Clockwork Orange (excerpts from the first three chapters only) was by the BBC, for part of the programme Tonight, broadcast shortly after the novel's original publication. No recording of this dramatization has survived.

Seven years prior to the Kubrick film, Andy Warhol had produced a low-budget version, titled Clockwork (also known as Vinyl). Reportedly, the only two recognizable scenes are those where Victor (Alex) wreaks general havoc and undergoes the Ludovico treatment.

Members of The Rolling Stones proposed to film their own adaptation before Kubrick decided to do so. Other unrealized versions were supposedly to contain girls in miniskirts or senior citizens instead of teenagers.

Influence

Both the story and individual elements have had a strong influence on popular culture in general and popular music in particular.

Plays

After Kubrick's film was released, Burgess wrote a Clockwork Orange stage play. In the stage version, Dr. Branom "defects" from the psychiatric clinic when she realizes that the treatment has destroyed Alex's ability to enjoy music. The play restores the novel's ending, ending with Alex deciding to start a family. One of Alex's early victims is modelled on Kubrick: a bearded trumpeter who plays "Singin' in the Rain" at the Korova milkbar.

Parodies and spinoffs

There is also a pornographic spin-off, entitled A Clockwork Orgy, starring Kaitlyn Ashley. In this version, Alex is a female (Alexandra), the Korova is just a regular, run-of-the-mill bar, and there is no prison chaplain.

A Mad magazine parody is entitled A Crockwork Lemon.

Blur's 1995 music video for "The Universal" is a tribute to Kubrick's film. In the video, the band, dressed as Alex, Georgie, Pete and Dim, recreate the Korova milkbar scene.

The jpop group globe created a music video to their song "Genesis of Next" in which one of the group's singers is dressed exactly like Alex.

New Zealand rock band Shihad released the music video to their song "Pacifer" in 1998. The video is inspired by A Clockwork Orange and has the entire band (and extras) recreating scenes from the film.

On Rob Zombie's 2001 album, The Sinister Urge, track number 4 is titled "Never Gonna Stop (The Red, Red Krovvy)". The word "Krovvy" is Nadsat for "blood." The lyrics have obvious references to the movie A Clockwork Orange. The first verse of the song starts with: "Yeah my Durango Number 95, take me to the home kick boots and ultra live. See heaven flash a horrorshow, knock it nice and smooth step back and watch it flow, yeah!" In addition, Rob Zombie is dressed as Alex DeLarge in the music video for "Never Gonna Stop".

In the April 30, 2006 episode of The Simpsons, "Girls Just Want To Have Sums", Springfield Elementary is split into separate-sex schools. The boys' side is depicted as a Clockwork Orange-style crime-ridden dystopia, complete with distorted Walter Carlos-style music. Additionally, Bart Simpson is dressed as Alex in an episode of the Treehouse of Horror series. In another episode, Bart is shown reaching for cupcakes in a manner which parallels Alex reaching for the model's breasts after being conditioned. In yet another episode Santa's Little Helper is shown getting the Ludivicio treatment with the Ninth Symphony playing in the backgound.

The Louisiana based metal band Acid Bath uses quotes from A Clockwork Orange in the song, "Cassie Eats Cockroaches."

In the Nintendo 64 game, Conker's Bad Fur Day, and its Xbox remake, , the opening and closing sequences portray the main character Conker as Alex, with a slow fade outward and inward, playing the Clockwork Orange theme.

The rap group Gnarls Barkley dressed up like Alex and Dim for their album cover.

British dance act Moloko took their name from that of the milk bar Alex and the droogs visit. When the band had to choose a name for their first musical release and had seen the film just the night before.

Bert McCracken of The Used wears an outfit very similar to Alex's in the video clip for "All That I've Got"

The band Fall Out Boy recently released a song titled "A Little Less 16 Candles". In the video for the song there is shown a character similar in appearance to Alex.

The band The Adicts dress like droogs and have written many songs about the movie (e.g. "Smart Alex")

For a photoshoot, singer of the band My Chemical Romance dressed and posed as Alex.

In the cartoon Rocko's Modern Life their was an episode concerning a gang of stray dogs running around terrorizing the citizens of O-Town. The leader of the pack wore a bowler derby and had a black circle under his eye, similar to that Alex. Also, one of his cohorts spoke in an accent similar to Dim.

Differences between the film and the book

Trivia

References

See also

External links

 


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