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Just watched "A Clockwork Orange" for the first time
Posted on 6/29/12 at 12:23 am
Posted on 6/29/12 at 12:23 am
Without a doubt one of the weirdest, most fricked up movies I have ever seen....but I liked it.
One question though, did Alex go back to the way he was at the beginning at the end of the film? I get the sense that he either:
*SPOILERS*
1. Died, because his eyes went really crazy.
2. Went back to the way he was.
3. Went completely insane.
One question though, did Alex go back to the way he was at the beginning at the end of the film? I get the sense that he either:
*SPOILERS*
1. Died, because his eyes went really crazy.
2. Went back to the way he was.
3. Went completely insane.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 12:30 am to RollTide1987
The book is even more fricked up if you can believe it
Posted on 6/29/12 at 12:35 am to RollTide1987
I think he went back to close to what he was before but gained a bit of perspective and wound up closer to "normal". Its been a while since i have read the book or seen the movie, but i recall that's what i thought.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 1:36 am to RollTide1987
quote:
2. Went back to the way he was.
The book OTOH ends very differently. However, the original American version ends like the movie. It was only later that the British author, Anthony Burgess, prevailed and got his American publishers to include his final chapter, which was always part of the British version. It's interesting to read how he constructed the novel, with each of the three sections of seven chapters beginning the same way, "What's it going to be then, eh?", and how his choice of 21 chapters wasn't just a random number. The Americans screwed that up by leaving the 21st chapter out, which they viewed as a cop-out. I can definitely see both sides of that argument.
BTW, Malcolm McDowell was close to 30 when he played Alex, who was only 15 in the book.
quote:
his eyes went really crazy.
That was just Alex having an orgasmic fantasy free of the Ludovico sickness.
This post was edited on 6/29/12 at 1:39 am
Posted on 6/29/12 at 5:09 am to RollTide1987
He didn't die.
And my interpretation was he was able to begin to regain his free will, which the ludovico treatment had stripped from him, and he would be able to retrain himself to be able to indulge in his whims once more, albeit with the perspective of the victim in his mind now. I've always seen him as a sociopath.
And my interpretation was he was able to begin to regain his free will, which the ludovico treatment had stripped from him, and he would be able to retrain himself to be able to indulge in his whims once more, albeit with the perspective of the victim in his mind now. I've always seen him as a sociopath.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 5:38 am to fr33manator
I'm singing in the rain, just singing in the rain
time for a little of the ultra violence
no time for the in and out love...i'm just here to read the meter.
time for a little of the ultra violence
no time for the in and out love...i'm just here to read the meter.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 6:24 am to TideHater
"Ho, ho, ho! Well, if it isn't fat stinking billy goat Billy Boy in poison! How art thou, thou globby bottle of cheap, stinking chip oil? Come and get one in the yarbles, if ya have any yarbles, you eunuch jelly thou!"
Posted on 6/29/12 at 7:19 am to fr33manator
Here are my thoughts on ACO: LINK
Posted on 6/29/12 at 9:03 am to CocomoLSU
Good assessment, but i think you definitely did miss something if the Britishness of it threw you off.
But then again, I'm an Anglophile
But then again, I'm an Anglophile
Posted on 6/29/12 at 9:07 am to RollTide1987
The Durango-95 purred away real horrorshow - a nice, warm, vibraty feeling all through your guttiwuts. Soon, it was trees and dark, my brothers, with real country dark. We fillied around for a while with other travellers of the night, playing hogs of the road. Then we headed West. What we were after now was the old surprise visit. That was a real kick, and good for laughs and lashings of the old ultra-violence.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 9:09 am to RollTide1987
I think he
quote:
Went back to the way he was.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 10:01 am to DanglingFury
quote:
I think he
quote:
Went back to the way he was.
My impression as well. Socialist justice at it's finest. Bottom line: they wasted a bunch of time, resources, etc. on treatment that was ruled cruel and unusual punishment and freed a vicious murderer. Should have just executed this psychopath and be done with it.

Posted on 6/29/12 at 10:32 am to RollTide1987
quote:
Without a doubt one of the weirdest, most fricked up movies I have ever seen....but I liked it.
You think it's fricked up now? Imagine seeing it for the first time while in middle school. I don't think I was fully able to comprehend everything I saw. Hell, I still feel like this now.
Posted on 6/29/12 at 10:37 am to GeauxColonels
Anyone fancy a trip to the milk bar?
Posted on 6/29/12 at 11:03 am to TigerMyth36
You see more and more of the full circle of things as you watch it more times. Really a finely crafted movie. But if you watch it, you'll start talking like that IRL.
Viddy well little brotha. Viddy well.
Viddy well little brotha. Viddy well.
Posted on 1/11/13 at 12:46 pm to TigerMyth36
I remember watching this movie for the first time and thinking it was weird and stupid.
But, after watching it again later on I started to understand the greatness of it. I still thought it was weird as shite (how can you not?) but it was no longer stupid.
Watched a three part documentary on youtube and that also helped me understand just how great this movie really is. Truly a disturbing yet brilliant movie.
And that image of Alex with the milk is about as creepy as images can get.
But, after watching it again later on I started to understand the greatness of it. I still thought it was weird as shite (how can you not?) but it was no longer stupid.
Watched a three part documentary on youtube and that also helped me understand just how great this movie really is. Truly a disturbing yet brilliant movie.
And that image of Alex with the milk is about as creepy as images can get.
Posted on 1/11/13 at 12:52 pm to Marciano1
One of my favorite movies of all time.
Slight side note: I read somewhere that Al Jourgensen, the guy in Ministry, bought the Korova Milk Bar set and installed it in his home. To me, that's the sort of shite you do when you're a rich rock star.
Slight side note: I read somewhere that Al Jourgensen, the guy in Ministry, bought the Korova Milk Bar set and installed it in his home. To me, that's the sort of shite you do when you're a rich rock star.
Posted on 1/11/13 at 12:57 pm to davesdawgs
quote:
My impression as well. Socialist justice at it's finest. Bottom line: they wasted a bunch of time, resources, etc. on treatment that was ruled cruel and unusual punishment and freed a vicious murderer. Should have just executed this psychopath and be done with it
Posted on 1/11/13 at 1:23 pm to Carson123987
I went see it at the theatre this summer. An older couple left about about 30 minutes in after the sped up sex with underage girls scene. I don't think they cared for it.
As good as the movie is though, the book is even better. Probably my favorite novel. Real horrorshow.
The book ending is totally different as well, since the movie omits the 21st chapter. Burgess didn't care for the movie ending.
As good as the movie is though, the book is even better. Probably my favorite novel. Real horrorshow.
The book ending is totally different as well, since the movie omits the 21st chapter. Burgess didn't care for the movie ending.
This post was edited on 1/11/13 at 1:25 pm
Posted on 1/11/13 at 1:25 pm to timbo
quote:
Slight side note: I read somewhere that Al Jourgensen, the guy in Ministry, bought the Korova Milk Bar set and installed it in his home.
"The Korova milkbar sold milk-plus, milk plus vellocet or synthemesc or drencrom, which is what we were drinking. This would sharpen you up and make you ready for a bit of the old ultraviolence."
The coffee tables and old Luce must have been great conversation starters when the old boy brought home a blue-hair or two.
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