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A Clockwork Orange | Canadian First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Movie Review | Movie Commentary

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CineBinge

CineBinge

Күн бұрын

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@parallaxnick637
@parallaxnick637 Жыл бұрын
A Clockwork Orange is a prime example of how a movie can be non-horror but still horrifying.
@LordEriolTolkien
@LordEriolTolkien Жыл бұрын
it is a testament to Kubrik that it is still shocking to this day.
@wibre8753
@wibre8753 Жыл бұрын
More than fifty years, and it still retains its power to shock. A classic.
@wibre8753
@wibre8753 Жыл бұрын
@@justindenney-hall5875 Yeah, that's why Kubrick was forced to remove it from release in the UK, because it was so tame.
@flaggerify
@flaggerify Жыл бұрын
Looks tacky compared to 2001.
@undergroundwarrior70
@undergroundwarrior70 Жыл бұрын
@@justindenney-hall5875 A Clockwork Orange was Rated X when it was first released here in the U. S. in 1971. I remembered that. I was 15 in 1971. I did see it in 1973 and I do believe it was still Rated X at that time.
@treetopjones737
@treetopjones737 Жыл бұрын
@@undergroundwarrior70 Midnight Cowboy when it was released also had an X rating.
@undergroundwarrior70
@undergroundwarrior70 Жыл бұрын
@@treetopjones737 Yes it did. I remember that in 1971 when I was 15 in 1971. When I first saw 'A Clockwork Orange' in the theater it was in 1973.
@alexflorea4879
@alexflorea4879 Жыл бұрын
,, it's like looking at your future...'' George you're killing me 😂 and the look on Simone's face was just priceless 👍
@MarcosElMalo2
@MarcosElMalo2 Жыл бұрын
“There’s so many cats!”
@Daveyboy100880
@Daveyboy100880 Жыл бұрын
One of the top 5 Cinebinge moments right there! 😂
@michaelriddick7116
@michaelriddick7116 Жыл бұрын
That's was a look of DEATH! Lolol!!
@richieb7692
@richieb7692 Жыл бұрын
If George ever visits Simone again, the only advice I can give, is... Never fall asleep, 'cos she looked Pissed Off...
@patriksvab1446
@patriksvab1446 Жыл бұрын
Time stamp?
@nkfd4688
@nkfd4688 Жыл бұрын
That look when George called out Simone's future, with all the cats... Crazy scary lol
@dabe1971
@dabe1971 Жыл бұрын
4:58 Malcom improvised the choice of song and Stanley loved it so rushed through getting the rights to use it, paying $10K - or so he claimed. Many years later, Malcolm was introduced to Gene Kelly at an event and he said nothing and walked away. He assumed it was because he hated the use of it for that scene. Many years later, after Kelly died, Malcom was telling the story at a Hollywood event and was overheard by none other than Gene's widow. She explained that it wasn't because of the usage, it was because he never actually got any payment from Kubrick despite agreeing to the deal.
@Sgt_Glory
@Sgt_Glory Жыл бұрын
That was pretty nasty of Kubrick, but somehow not unexpected. He seemed to look at the 'talent' as little more than tools.
@wolfofthewest8019
@wolfofthewest8019 Жыл бұрын
@@Sgt_Glory Kubrick believed that the film and his artistic vision were all that mattered. He was absolutely dedicated to that vision and seeing it through, and was willing to push himself to his absolute limits and break every rule to achieve it, and if you didn't feel the same way he would treat you like absolute shit. He really was the shadow archetype of the artist, even worse than Hitchcock.
@flarrfan
@flarrfan Жыл бұрын
It wasn't Kelly's to sell...Singin in the Rain was a pre-existing song at the time of Kelly's movie, from an earlier musical film not called by the song title.
@bengilbert7655
@bengilbert7655 Жыл бұрын
@@flarrfan It was from 1929 from the time the movie is set in.
@jray7316
@jray7316 Жыл бұрын
@@wolfofthewest8019 Makes me wonder how he treated Walter / Wendy Carlos.
@CrowTRobot-ni7zu
@CrowTRobot-ni7zu Жыл бұрын
Just FYI, when Alex answers 14 years, the question was the length of his sentence, not his age.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
@@chrissibersky4617 Yeah, he is a teenager.
@kirstenshute2729
@kirstenshute2729 Жыл бұрын
@@chrissibersky4617 Close - the book says he's 15 when he's arrested.
@jamielandis4308
@jamielandis4308 Жыл бұрын
The body guard is David Prowse, aka Darth Vader. Much of the dialogue has a combination of English and Russian. The soundtrack by Wendy Carlos was revolutionary. The milk is laced with various drugs. The gang’s slang-filled discourse is not dissimilar to what you hear from gangs today; nothing dystopian about it. By rights, today is the future society in the movie. Urban violence is as brutal as anything in this movie. Like today, nobody really cares about the violence until it lands in their neighborhood. And like today, politicians are told to do something and, instead of figuring out why the problem exists, they do something extremely visible and completely cruel or ineffective. I confess to having been known to use ‘gutty-wutts,’ ‘eggy-weggs,’ and ‘appypollyloggies’ in everyday usage.
@pete_lind
@pete_lind Жыл бұрын
They did not spot Darth Vader , helper for the wheelchair man , David Prowse . Prison guard , Michael Bates , funny , but Fulton Mackay was mirror image of him as prison guard in Porridge 1974-77 , a prison comedy , bet he took his character from this movie .
@Harv72b
@Harv72b Жыл бұрын
"Bolshoi great yarblokos to thee and thine!" is my go-to when I get cut off in traffic.
@christophergodawski5663
@christophergodawski5663 Жыл бұрын
Not to mention Alex's dad played by Philip Store. The actor would later play Charles/Delbert Grady in "The Shining" (More Kubrick / W. Carlos).
@Acme1970
@Acme1970 Жыл бұрын
When i make out my grocery lists i actually write Eggy-Weggs when i need Eggs.
@thedarcbird
@thedarcbird Жыл бұрын
@@pete_lind that's what I thought.
@clayjohanson
@clayjohanson Жыл бұрын
The title, "A Clockwork Orange", refers to the fact that when his ability to choose between good and evil was taken away, Alex became no different from a wind-up toy -- a clockwork orange. Good is not good unless the choice of evil is not made.
@xbeaker
@xbeaker Жыл бұрын
It comes from an old British colloquialism "He's as queer as a clockwork orange" (Queer in the meaning of 'odd' not referencing sexuality.) As an orange has no moving parts, making it clockwork wouldn't really do anything.
@DocuzanQuitomos
@DocuzanQuitomos Жыл бұрын
@@ItApproaches Technically, that is true: good and evil, in the sense we understand them, are human constructions; actions just "are" and then can be framed under whatever context we want to apply to them. But, for the sake of the meaning of the film, let's stick to some ideas: first, that we work only with human elements; second, that good and evil are unavoidable concepts (since humans like to classify everything) and three, we forget a bit of different moral compasses: good is the supreme good (don't kill, don't harm, don't abuse, don't betray... don't do unto others what you won't like to do unto you) and evil is the supreme evil (kill, harm, abuse, betray... do to others whatever that brings you joy). Under that setting... is there really some value if a person has no other choice to do "good"? Because even the saying "don't do unto others what you wouldn't like to be done to you" frames the concept of good on the person's understanding of evil, that the things are evil if you wouldn't like them done to you (self preservation). If a person doesn't have the choice to aim for the good, and is rather forced to always do the good... what's the value of its actions? Is there even free will in a world of pure goodness? The answer would be: no. Any good a person elects to make is worthy (or can be measured) based on the evil it could have done instead. If there are no stakes to actually do evil... being good is kind of hollow. Even assuming "good" and "evil" don't exist and are just a matter of opinion: you still expect some degree of contention or comprehension from different individuals at different points in time (your parents, your lovers or significant others, idols, teachers, friends, enemies...). You expect them at one point to show some restrain or agreement that benefits you (individually) or benefits the collective you belong to (basically, you expect them to be "good"), even when they could have every argument (and every right) to make a choice in a different way. The conclusion then is that "good" and "bad" (while not carved in stone) exist, since indivudals praise some general behavior above other; and that behavior is worth of admiration precisely because the other individual has every opportunity to choose a different path; even if its opinions are not the same as yours (some indviduals even act against their personal opinions for the benefit of others). So, Clay's argument still stands: being able to choose between "good" and "bad" is what makes being good worthy of admiration. Forcing people to think twice to be good prevents we kill each other. And removing the ability to make the choice (and just "be" good) nullifies the value because it erases the conflict (and even erases the idea that opinions create good and evil; what kind of opinions you can create if all think in only one specific given way?).
@flaggerify
@flaggerify Жыл бұрын
Left out of film, controversially.
@flaggerify
@flaggerify Жыл бұрын
@@ThreadBomb Because he has no real free will.
@DocuzanQuitomos
@DocuzanQuitomos Жыл бұрын
@@ThreadBomb In the sense that a prison sentence limits your liberty to act, not your liberty to think and decide. Being imprisoned (in general) makes the criminal think (and, maybe, regret) its actions and is a warning at the same time to others not to do the same. But once released, a former inmate can still commit a crime, if so it wishes (its ideas about good and evil have not been manipulated to actively purge "all evil" choices from its person). The person is still free to decide the meaning of its actions, without having "incapacitating disgust" at the sight of violence, music or a beautiful girl.
@heyheyjk-la
@heyheyjk-la Жыл бұрын
The novel had a dictionary in it to translate the slang, which was a mishmash of Russian and other slang. Also, did you notice in the record store that the soundtrack to “2001 A Space Odyssey” was displayed? Also, the look on Simone’s face when George mentioned the cat lady was like looking at her future was PERFECT. Great reaction to a great film.
@donkfail1
@donkfail1 Жыл бұрын
I only found that dictionary when I had finished reading it. But I think it's even harder to keep up with the slang in the movie. While reading, you can pause and try to figure out the meaning.
@OneThousandHomoDJs
@OneThousandHomoDJs Жыл бұрын
I HAD to have the glossary at hand when I read it. A lot of things are repeated, so you get those faster, but otherwise, yes, not easy to just breeze right through......
@flaggerify
@flaggerify Жыл бұрын
@@donkfail1 There is no dictionary or glossary in the book.
@donkfail1
@donkfail1 Жыл бұрын
@@flaggerify There was in the one I read.
@mondegreen9709
@mondegreen9709 Жыл бұрын
@@OneThousandHomoDJs It sort of helps though to get the gist of the vernicular if you're familiar with Slavic languages of any kind.
@Rivetlicker
@Rivetlicker Жыл бұрын
I chuckled when George mentioned Salo and Simone was like "what's that?" 😂
@jessharvell1022
@jessharvell1022 Жыл бұрын
the final frontier in youtube movie reactions
@erikholmes644
@erikholmes644 Жыл бұрын
You mean that The 120 Days of Sodom film by Pier Paolo Pasolini? Yeah, that's TRULY the final frontier. 😬
@STOCKHOLM07
@STOCKHOLM07 Жыл бұрын
@@jessharvell1022 Where 80% of the screen is always blurred out.
@pete_lind
@pete_lind Жыл бұрын
1970s was something else , Straw dogs , Dirty harry a.s.o lot of big name actors and directors in high budget (for the time) R rated movies . Not like today , they take two R rated movie monsters , Alien and Predator and make a PG movie from those .
@GavinBollard
@GavinBollard Жыл бұрын
A movie to watch while eating chocolate mousse...
@davevannatta985
@davevannatta985 Жыл бұрын
The actor who played Alex's dad is Phillip Stone who was also Delbert Grady in Kubrick's The Shining
@stevetheduck1425
@stevetheduck1425 Жыл бұрын
- and the priest who marries Ming the Merciless and Dale Arden in Flash Gordon.
@stevesheroan4131
@stevesheroan4131 Жыл бұрын
@@stevetheduck1425 “Or - until - such - time as you grow weary of her…..”
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 6 ай бұрын
_The Shining_ is basically the prequel to this film.
@SickBoyMAB
@SickBoyMAB Жыл бұрын
"There has to be an air tank there" Nope. He almost drowned for real. Also the eye stuff scratched his cornea for real. Kubrick wasn't... the nicest man to actors.
@emurphy42
@emurphy42 Жыл бұрын
I think maybe there was supposed to be a concealed tube or something, but it malfunctioned? Would have to look it up to confirm.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Film making was very different back then. Kubrick would have wanted it to be as real as possible.
@EdDunkle
@EdDunkle Жыл бұрын
There was, but they did 28 takes on that shot and it took Malcolm some practice at locating the breathing apparatus.
@fakecubed
@fakecubed Жыл бұрын
Actors today are big babies, couldn't handle real art.
@AG-gr4yx
@AG-gr4yx Жыл бұрын
From I recall from an interview, Kubrick also scammed McDowell's royalties off him as well. The film studio agreed to a 1% royalty deal, but Kubrick told McDowell that they had declined it, then had that directed to himself. Tortured and robbed.
@Chasmodius
@Chasmodius Жыл бұрын
Nearly every moment in this film is grotesque or painful in some way, but when taken as a whole in context, it makes for a brilliant piece of art. The way Alex constantly vacillates between characteristics of child and adult is particularly interesting to me -- that dichotomy and juxtaposition.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Yes, the fact he uses childish language. I don't know why people feel sorry for him later in the film. To my mind he has made his own bed and doesn't seem to have learned anything in the end.
@B3RyL
@B3RyL Жыл бұрын
@@Cheepchipsable Well, there's something to be said about his upbringing. His parents were never concerned about him as much as the appearance of a functioning family. They were never interested in him or what he does late at night: a mere "I'm working" was enough to dispel any doubts on their part. What kind of a parent does that? So while I'm not claiming he was a victim, it's undeniable the portrayal of his family as dysfunctional was a commentary on the liberal approach to raising a child, weather you agree with it or not. And it culminates with the parents finding a "better" child after he was outed as a criminal, and kicking him out.
@Tr0nzoid
@Tr0nzoid Жыл бұрын
@@B3RyL, a lot of parents now ignore the criminality their kids are doing, and they have the benefit of social media to see exactly what they are up to.
@B3RyL
@B3RyL Жыл бұрын
@@Tr0nzoid Bad parenting is not a new invention. Sure, things got complicated with the advent of social media, but at its core, the problem remains the same: kids are dumb. If you can't find a way to make them not dumb, they will be dumb for the rest of their lives. So the role of a parent is to make sure their child is not dumb by the ever-changing standards of society. That's all there is to it. Whatever methods you employ, just makes sure your kid is a functioning member of society they are going to grow up in
@maul42
@maul42 Жыл бұрын
That's a very astute observation, given how the book ends. He is a child on the cusp of becoming a man in the book. The final chapter of the book, which has not been adapted for the film, we come back to Alex after he's become an adult, and is trying to run a new gang. But with adulthood comes maturity, and he becomes tired of violence and his mind starts wandering to starting a family. He shows signs that eventually he will become good of his own accord, not because of programming.
@strawdawgs78
@strawdawgs78 Жыл бұрын
If you're a maniac who watches A Clockwork Orange enough times, you get to understanding Nadsat (or whatever language Alex and his Droogies use) perfectly fine.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Or you could just get the book. It's pretty short.
@chaospoet
@chaospoet Жыл бұрын
Between the movie and the book at one point I was pretty fluent in it. Not so much these days but I still know how to properly use a "viddy" in a sentence and that's good enough for me.
@raifthemad
@raifthemad Жыл бұрын
Or if you happen to know russian as well, the couple of simple words, spoken in a horrendous accent are still understandable.
@johnmulligan455
@johnmulligan455 Жыл бұрын
or if you read the book - once -
@chaospoet
@chaospoet Жыл бұрын
I had the pleasure of meeting Malcom McDowell once. One of the nicest people I've ever met, which is funny since he's so great at playing villains, and while talking he slyly slipped in a "Viddy well." and I nearly died on the spot from a severe, nearly fatal, movie nerd attack. No joke I couldn't even talk after he said that. I was just like "He's quoting A Clockwork Orange at me! This is the coolest thing ever!"
@hmsweet5227
@hmsweet5227 3 ай бұрын
I met him too!
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 Жыл бұрын
George, that is one of the best analysis I've ever seen someone give of this movie, at least on just a first viewing, immediately after. I can't believe you edited this, Apocalypse and Once Upon A Time In Hollywood all in one week, that is CRAZY. What a week of cinema on Cinebinge! Those are three major movies to have gotten under your belt! THANK YOU!
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192
@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that’s one helluva week of movies!
@MattyNoNose
@MattyNoNose Жыл бұрын
Their slang has a lot of Russian in it. The milk they drink has different drugs in it to get them ready for a bit of ultra violence. Classic film. So many incredible shots and uses of color and light and different filters. Kubrick really goes all out in this movie.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Yes, stimulants. The Milk Bar is the kind of place where young people go, and Pubs and regular social clubs are "uncool". Maybe it's code for Speed?
@chriscompton3228
@chriscompton3228 Жыл бұрын
@@Cheepchipsable most notably the milk had mescaline, LSD, and amphetamines analogs.. the amphetamines was Alex's favoutrite...Think energy drinks
Жыл бұрын
Why then did you fail to mention who actually came up with the language (nadsat), and with the moloko plus, and the ultra-violence? . . Anthony Burgess, that's who, in the hopefully unlikely case you didn't know, because he wrote the book this was based on.
@MrHws5mp
@MrHws5mp Жыл бұрын
In 1971 there were a lot of ex-military types working as prison guards, security guards etc, and they really did bring that OTT military way of doing things to their new job. It became a stereotype that was used by Monty Python et al, but the only reason the stereotype worked was because the audience recognised the type.
@tofersiefken
@tofersiefken Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: David Prowse, the actor who played the body-building care-giver for the wheelchair-bound writer, was also the body actor in the Darth Vader suit in the Star Wars O.T.
@Madbandit77
@Madbandit77 Жыл бұрын
He was also the Black Knight in Terry Gilliam's "Jabberwocky", a movie more reactors should watch.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
He was screwed over by Star Wars producers because he had signed on the original film for a percentage of the profit. Apparently Star Wars never made a profit, and he got a letter every year telling him so.
Жыл бұрын
@@Cheepchipsable "Hollywood creative bookkeeping"
@altwhitmann7899
@altwhitmann7899 Жыл бұрын
Interesting bit of trivia - when the two former droogs, now cops, catch up with Alex, their numbers are 665 and 667. So when they're either side of Alex, that would make him...
@Ezra4224
@Ezra4224 Жыл бұрын
" i was this high once" a couple minutes later 'okay.. i was wrong, ive never been as high as this movie" killed me XD
@krautgazer
@krautgazer Жыл бұрын
We tend to underestimate old audiences and old directors. Everything in this movie that looks funny was supposed to be funny. There's nothing wrong in laughing at it, Kubrick intended it to be like that. That's even more true about his next film, Barry Lyndon, which many audiences today even fail to laugh because they associate period dramas with seriousness, although there's some fine humor in the portrayal of decadence in that film.
@mobyworm
@mobyworm Жыл бұрын
The best social satire is when the absurd still looks disturbingly familiar. Burgess nailed it in the novel; Kubrick (as usual) made it into a visually striking film.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Usually what satires are. You had to be around in that era to get the full impact. Like the prison guard was meant to be overly officious and represented the "old order" so to speak. He was meant to be ridiculous. Many women wearing vinyl clothes and coloured hair, etc.
@treetopjones737
@treetopjones737 Жыл бұрын
@@Cheepchipsable Colored hair ( though not with older people ) was a thing in the 80's.
@braxtonagee412
@braxtonagee412 Жыл бұрын
The attack on the old writer and his wife was based on actual event that happened to Anthony Burgess, the book's author, and his wife. Also, I love your 'What the fuck is going on?!' reactions throughout.
@xXxGR33NDR3AMSxXx
@xXxGR33NDR3AMSxXx Жыл бұрын
I’m relatively impressed that you fully watched this. Even more impressed that you posted it lol
@DustinHawke
@DustinHawke Жыл бұрын
I never would have expected them to do this movie.
@TYoung023
@TYoung023 Жыл бұрын
I’m fully impressed!
@wiredtardis
@wiredtardis Жыл бұрын
Simone: "This movie is making me nauseous!" Me: "You're becoming healthy that's all!"
@EdwardGregoryNYC
@EdwardGregoryNYC Жыл бұрын
Well said.
@onclebob2178
@onclebob2178 Жыл бұрын
@@EdwardGregoryNYC indeed
@Myndir
@Myndir Жыл бұрын
@@onclebob2178 Right-right.
@bigneon_glitter
@bigneon_glitter Жыл бұрын
The "HG Wells vs Jack The Ripper" time travel caper _Time After Time_ (1979) is a Malcolm McDowell classic worth checking out. A perfect movie.
@LadyIarConnacht
@LadyIarConnacht Жыл бұрын
With a GREAT car chase. :)
@GavinBollard
@GavinBollard Жыл бұрын
My favourite bit there being when he says that he ate at a "Scottish restaurant "
@metalmugen
@metalmugen Жыл бұрын
Time After Time is so fucking cool.
@laustcawz2089
@laustcawz2089 Жыл бұрын
@@GavinBollard Yes..."MacDougal's".
@treetopjones737
@treetopjones737 Жыл бұрын
Young people especially would enjoy seeing late 70's U.S.
@roadrunner3100
@roadrunner3100 Жыл бұрын
After this was released there were many copycat crimes in England, brutal ones, with some attackers actually singing "Singing in the Rain." Kubrick asked Warner Bros. to pull the film from all English theaters and, despite the loss in revenue, they obliged, because they valued Kubrick and wanted him to make his next film with them. Malcolm McDowell did indeed to through the ringer filming this, including suffering a broken rib and a scratched cornea.
@thomsboys77
@thomsboys77 Жыл бұрын
Wasn’t just in England. It was withdrawn from the entire UK
@magicbrownie1357
@magicbrownie1357 Жыл бұрын
One weird, yet brilliant movie. Love just about everything Kubrick did. Also love the really interesting language the writer used for his young people.
@jvondd
@jvondd Жыл бұрын
This is my favorite movie. What I like best about it is as it goes along, you start to realize that Alex's story is just a small part of an even bigger story going on in his country. Alex isn't a good person, but when you consider his environment, it becomes clear that he isn't an aberration to his society; he's a product of it.
@Kensei007
@Kensei007 Жыл бұрын
I disagree. Probably because the book gives more insight into Alex's character but in the book he KNOWS what he's doing is morally wrong; he just doesn't care. Mr. Deltoid said it best. Alex has a good home, good parents, a good brain, but he chooses to do bad anyway. He's only interested in himself and the things he thinks is important, namely Beethoven. He absolutely LOSES it when he realizes that the 9th is being perverted by the films and his treatment, even calling it a sin, something he knowingly does day in and out, but he considers it in the same category as rape and violence.
@jvondd
@jvondd Жыл бұрын
Okay, but frankly, I think everything you've supported your disagreement with is completely wrong. For starters, we're not talking about the book, so let's throw that out right away. I think it's safe to accept that Alex lives in a harsh society because mostly everyone in this movie is a pretty lousy person. If Mr. Deltoid's creepy personality wasn't bad enough, he sexually assaults Alex and gets touchy with him while Alex is in his underwear. Sure, he says that Alex has good parents, but that doesn't make it true. At best, his parents are negligent by not providing him any structure and allowing him to stay home from school when he's obviously faking it, and at worst, they may have been abusive, specifically his mother. The movie never says so directly, but the scene where Alex accidentally kills the cat lady has a subtle allusion which suggests his mother might have abused him. When he delivers the death blow with the phallic statue, the film cuts to a painting of a woman with two sets of teeth. Earlier in the movie, Alex's mother is shown to wear dentures, so that could be a subconscious hint that this sort of inappropriate, nonconsensual interaction is familiar to Alex. Granted, that's an interpretation and could be wrong, but even if it is, it doesn't absolve his parents for being neglectful. Even when they visit him in the hospital, Alex's father admits that they'd done wrong by him by not providing him a loving home before he went to prison or after he got out. Look at this way. Alex is a teenager whose parents allow him to screw around all night and don't seem terribly invested or interested in what he actually gets up to. Since he's out in the streets every night, he goes to bar where the owner serves drug-laced milk to minors that gets them all messed up, beats people up, steals cars, destroys property and sexually assaults women. If he had a good healthy home life, he probably be out doing those things, but because he doesn't, he's doing what he needs to survive. After a certain amount of time, it's not surprising he acquired a taste for all these bad behaviors. The people who represent law and order aren't any better. The cops abuse him while he's in custody, the prison guards are fascists who goose-step like Nazis and are always acting aggressively toward the prisoners, and the government subjects him to classical conditioning through torturous means and call it "treatment." Had Alex not gone to prison, received the Ludovico technique and attempted to kill himself, he probably might have ended up working with the government sooner, only as a police officer where he'd be allowed to dispense violence legally. If Georgie and Dim could become police officers without having to change their ways, it stands to reason that Alex would have been the kind of guy they would have liked to keep dissenters in line. To make a long story short, I'm not saying that Alex bears no responsibility for his actions. What I am saying is that his behavior, bad as it is, doesn't really make him distinct from the society he lives in. As a street hooligan, his behavior is treated as degeneracy, but put a badge on his chest and a club in his hand, and suddenly his same behavior is treated as necessary for preserving law and order. I mean, come on. This is one of the most antifascist movies ever made, and you can't really make that point if you don't portray a fascist society.
@toooydoeur
@toooydoeur Жыл бұрын
​@@Kensei007 ofc
@Asehpe
@Asehpe 7 ай бұрын
@@Kensei007 I tend to disagree. The book emphasizes more Alex's free will, but the movie dials that down, and lets us wonder where our free will really comes from. Do we make the choices we make solely because of our own thinking, or were we (deeply?) influenced by people and culture around us? What shaped Alex's interests, for instance? Did he just choose Beethoven because, reasons? Was ultraviolence pre-programmed in his brain structure via DNA? Or looking around, at how people seem kinda awful all around him, could it be that he is a much more extreme, but somehow also quite fitting, member of his community?
@stevesheroan4131
@stevesheroan4131 Жыл бұрын
George is such an editing champ for being able to post this and retain the spirit of the movie.
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, this must have been like doing gymnastic routine or something. Impressive.
@ElectricJesus410
@ElectricJesus410 Жыл бұрын
This movie is absolutely genius. It starts with a near r-word happening on a stage, and you and the theater-audience are disgusted, rightly so. Then we spend the first half seeing what a monster Alex is, until we arrive at the brainwashing scene. Then we see him in a theater being disgusted by r-word on screen, officially the correct reaction, but we also feel an additional unique feeling of disgust about what the doctors are doing to him. Kubrick absolutely puts us and Alex through the wringer to get us to that realization. The overarching question throughout the movie is “what is worse, having free will but always doing bad things, or having no free will and doing what you are told is right?” and Kubrick leaves us feeling weird about our own answer, as the final scene almost feels like a sigh of relief.
@HaganeNoGijutsushi
@HaganeNoGijutsushi Жыл бұрын
I'll add that I much prefer the movie ending to the book's. The book adds an epilogue that shows Alex older, having a family and generally having turned to a honest life. In doing so it pretty much gives an answer to the question (Burgess was without a doubt making a case for free will, and I think specifically from a Christian viewpoint), and it kind of minimises the horrible stuff Alex did as an almost "boys will be boys" kind of thing, errors of youth that eventually he outgrew. Which would make sense maybe for a bit of brawling between gangs, not the awful crimes he indulged into. Meanwhile, the movie stays ambiguous because it's clear that Alex is unrepentant, so you're left wondering if it's right to feel relief that the principle is respected while in practice this means that the monster that is Alex is unleashed on the world once again (and worse, now he has powerful political backers that might cover up a little crime or two...).
@Asehpe
@Asehpe 7 ай бұрын
@@HaganeNoGijutsushi I agree. There's a powerful philosophical point to be made here, which Burgess kind of avoided with his ending. There's something about good and evil, and what makes them different, that comes out of this movie and that should be more discussed. Not simply Alex being a monster, or the so-called good citizens being also able to do horrible things for revenge, or the whole project to change Alex and others like him being ultimately a little part of the game between UK political parties... It's how we can ever disentangle good from evil when they seem to be so inextricably mixed in people's personalities.
@Czarisyn
@Czarisyn Жыл бұрын
Malcolm McDowell - He played Dr. Tolian Soran in Star Trek: Generations, Loomis in the Halloween Remakes done by Rob Zombie. He's a phenomenal actor
@Mark_McC
@Mark_McC Жыл бұрын
This movie has one of my all-time favorite lines from any movie. ‘No time for the old in-out love, just here to read the meter.’ My buddies and i, we all still say that to each other, usually as a greeting, especially if it’s been a long, long time since we’ve seen each other.
@notperfectedyet7998
@notperfectedyet7998 Жыл бұрын
When I read the novel at school, there was an appendix at the back of the book to translate the Nadsat slang spoken; the novel is told from Alex's POV. After a while, you adjust to it and understand without having to look up the translation.
@wsn0009
@wsn0009 Жыл бұрын
This is a master class in filmmaking. Kubrick's talents are on full display here.
@0lyge0
@0lyge0 Жыл бұрын
I was surprised Simone didn't recognize Malcom McDowell since he played Soran in Star Trek Generations. Also Alex's father was the same actor who played Delbert Grady in The Shining
@thunderstruck5484
@thunderstruck5484 Жыл бұрын
Yes! And I saw the 2001 either album cover or picture at the counter in the awesome record store
@paulekstrom9499
@paulekstrom9499 Жыл бұрын
Yes, that Philip Stone did indeed play both Alex's father and Delbert Grady, and he also played Graham in Barry Lyndon.
@malcolmrowe9003
@malcolmrowe9003 Жыл бұрын
He does look quite different though.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Warren Clarke who played Dim had a long career in film and TV also. He was in Firefox with Clint Eastwood and Top Secret! and a log running UK series called Dalziel and Pascoe.
@thunderstruck5484
@thunderstruck5484 Жыл бұрын
@@Cheepchipsable great character in Firefox, good movie
@donkfail1
@donkfail1 Жыл бұрын
"You should *never* watch Salò!" That is what a good friend say.
@donkfail1
@donkfail1 Жыл бұрын
@@justindenney-hall5875 Sure. A good friend may recommend it if they know you are into that.
@donkfail1
@donkfail1 Жыл бұрын
@@justindenney-hall5875 You seem weird. I like it!
@fakecubed
@fakecubed Жыл бұрын
I love Kubrick. Probably my favorite director. This is one of his more important works, and its effect on cinema cannot be underestimated. I hope we'll see more Kubrick on this channel.
@SoSoMikaela
@SoSoMikaela Жыл бұрын
In the original release of the novel this movie is based on, there is a final chapter in which Alex actually does reform and turn his life around - by his own choice and free will. However the US release of novel, which is the version Kubrick read and used for the film, that chapter was omitted so the story ended with Alex going right back to his original violent and debaucherous ways.
@michaeldavis5610
@michaeldavis5610 Жыл бұрын
Never imagined this being on anyone's channel. Kudos for taking the leap.Thanks for all the time and energy you have put into this. Have a great day
@Itwasalwaysme_Noone
@Itwasalwaysme_Noone Жыл бұрын
Brandon Likes Movies, James VS Cinema, Cinema Rules, TBR Schmitt, RolyPolyOllie Reactions, and about 10 other channels which I haven't watched yet, have reacted to this movie.
@davevannatta985
@davevannatta985 Жыл бұрын
Malcolm McDowell suffered a scratched cornea from that scene where his eyelids are pryed open
@annaclarafenyo8185
@annaclarafenyo8185 Жыл бұрын
The "milk" isn't the point, it's the "vellocet" (speed), "Synthemesc" (synthetic mescaline), or "Drencrum" (something like valium) that is mixed in the milk. The idea is that milk, as an emulsion, works to deliver both water soluble and fat soluble drugs.
@annaclarafenyo8185
@annaclarafenyo8185 Жыл бұрын
@B Sell The book came out in 1962, while Adrenochrome was only invented by Hunter S. Thompson in 1972. Thompson might have borrowed the name from Clockwork Orange, or the reference to Drencrom might not be in the original novel, but in my hazy memory, the three milk-drug coctails were lifted directly from the book.
@annaclarafenyo8185
@annaclarafenyo8185 Жыл бұрын
@B Sell My bad--- adrenochrome is a real substance, a dissociative discovered in the 1950s. The Hunter S. Thompson version is the one that stars in modern conspiracy lunacy.
@majimasmajimemes1156
@majimasmajimemes1156 Жыл бұрын
Fact that makes this story more disturbing: In the book, the two girls he was with in the beginning were 12. And it wasn't exactly consentual.
@danl3602
@danl3602 Жыл бұрын
The movie can be summed up by what the priest tells Alex before the Ludovico technique: "when a man cannot choose, he ceases to be man". Like the title implies, you cannot mechanically engineer something natural without perverting it.
@CraigKostelecky
@CraigKostelecky Жыл бұрын
12:47 Time stamp for Simone's epic look in regards to George's comment about her future.
@constantdvdcollector
@constantdvdcollector Жыл бұрын
Alex is one of the main inspirations Heath Ledger used for his performance as The Joker. Also, the opening sequence where they show Alex at the club, he toasts the camera before he takes a drink. Reportedly he was asked by Stanley what the toast was for and Malcolm explained he was telling the audience they were in for a really wild ride!
@constantdvdcollector
@constantdvdcollector Жыл бұрын
Also, the iconic main theme of this movie is actually a rewritten classical piece (Hey, it's Kubrick!) that is well known as the Death March of Queen Mary of the Scots, I believe. It was redone for the movie in synthesizer format by Wendy Carlos.
@vraspir123
@vraspir123 Жыл бұрын
Burgess' wife was assaulted so some details were slightly autobiographical, and Burgess said he basically was drunk to get through writing that section. Also there was an arc of redemption for an adult Alex at the end of the book Kubrick left out that Burgess resented being omitted.
@Cheepchipsable
@Cheepchipsable Жыл бұрын
Kubrick seems to do that to every novel ha adapted.
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 Жыл бұрын
Well, it would be more accurate to say, U.S. publishers left the final chapter of the book out, and it was that edition that was used to write the screenplay...but yeah, Burgess was quite miffed, not only because it held the proper conclusion of the tale, but it was also Chapter 21, a number he felt was symbolic of adulthood, and showed that this was utimately a coming-of-age story of Alex.
@jamesmayes4351
@jamesmayes4351 Жыл бұрын
The blood in the movie is closer to real blood color than the dark red blood in modern movies.
@NiteOfTheWorld
@NiteOfTheWorld Жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: the bodyguard towards the end of the movie is played by David Prowse, who also played Darth Vader (he was the one who wore the suit in the film itself).
@xbeaker
@xbeaker Жыл бұрын
"... from Caligula, which we would NEVER do..." as an intro while getting ready to watch Clockwork Orange. LMAO
@dwcinnc
@dwcinnc Жыл бұрын
Me and a group of friends were standing in line for tickets to "Jaws" on a summer evening in 1975. We decided to stop waiting because one of us did not want to see that film. We left to find something else and settled on a drive-in theater that was showing "A Clockwork Orange". At this drive-in you could get out of the car and set on the ground and drink beer or whatever. We were young (and drinking), and everyone thought "what the hell was this?" Fun Times! Since that night it has become one my favorite films, especially since the eighties and home video. I really do not care to watch the "ultra-violence" but the film aesthetics and cinematography are mesmerizing. I read that Malcolm McDowell did have an eye injury from this. My favorite line is, "I'll teach you to break-in to real peoples houses" from the cat lady.
@Zseventyone
@Zseventyone Жыл бұрын
I was far, far too young when I first saw this. Growin' up in the 80's, what a different time.
@johnzavala333
@johnzavala333 Жыл бұрын
Definitely a soundtrack you want on your playlist. I own the album and CD. 🎶☺️ Glad you appreciated this masterpiece. 👍🍿
@NeoNyder
@NeoNyder 2 ай бұрын
I love how they thought he said he was 14 when he was stating the years of his sentence.
@praack4563
@praack4563 Жыл бұрын
This one really opened my eyes as a lad - my Dad took me to this movie at the Drive In ( yes it was that long ago it was a few weeks past the premier) i don't think i was the same again- as a little droogie i was taught much that day....
@peterbridges5781
@peterbridges5781 Жыл бұрын
The big guy helping the old man in the wheel chair is Dave Prowse. In the UK he was the Green Cross Code Man (taught children road safety) but you would know him as Darth Vader. He was the body for Vader for the original trilogy, with James Earl Jones being the voice.
@ThePrimordialcell
@ThePrimordialcell Жыл бұрын
And a young James Earl Jones also appeared in Dr Strangelove, another Kubrick classic. So both actors who portrayed Darth Vader appeared young in Stanley Kubrick films.
@kevtb874
@kevtb874 Жыл бұрын
The best part is he read the lines himself on set but because he has such a strong Bristol accent it sounds hilarious. There are behind the scenes clips if you look for them.
@DetectiveSadist
@DetectiveSadist Жыл бұрын
The original book has quite a number of changes but the ending felt a lot better. After he is "cured" in the hospital Alex goes back to his old ways with a new group of friends by being a horrible criminal. Soon after though, he finds that it's not that satisfying as it used to be. He runs into Pete (the quiet, young looking one of the original gang), and see's he is a normal and good member of society and that makes Alex want that life too. Unfortunately though, it leaves him wondering that if he starts a family would his cruel and selfish tendencies be passed down onto him.
@ShadowSonic2
@ShadowSonic2 7 ай бұрын
I always hated that ending, that psychopaths just "Grow out" of that behavior
@DetectiveSadist
@DetectiveSadist 7 ай бұрын
@@ShadowSonic2 That's fair, he doesn't really get any comeuppance either ending. I just always felt like the movie had this lesson for Alex then just said nah forget it let's just reward him completely.
@ShadowSonic2
@ShadowSonic2 7 ай бұрын
@@DetectiveSadist And then there's that silliness of Pete's fiance/wife being fine with how her husband was a rapist...
@richieb7692
@richieb7692 Жыл бұрын
Simone just summed up this film so beautifully at the end.. She really understood It.
@paulmasella1616
@paulmasella1616 Жыл бұрын
The muscular guy in the wine scene was the man in the Darth Vader suit in the first three Star Wars movies.
@worsel555
@worsel555 Жыл бұрын
I remember back in high school my debate teacher was talking about conditioning and he brought up this movie, having never seen it my friend and I went and rented it after school was done for the day and watched it. Pretty insane stuff, I love it and it's a shame that a lot of the message is lost on people. When I told my teacher in class the next day I had seen it he was impressed and gave us extra credit, lol.
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 Жыл бұрын
To this day, I can't help but grin if someone makes a "Ludovico Treatment" reference.
@edwardsighamony
@edwardsighamony Жыл бұрын
I commend George on his excellent rotoscoping of all the bits you can't show on KZbin.
@fuzzballzz36
@fuzzballzz36 Жыл бұрын
At the end of the original novel, there was a short chapter about Alex growing up and becoming more responsible (he basically puts all his r+pe and violence down to 'kid stuff!'). It was removed from the American version because the publishers there thought it was cooler to end with 'I was cured all right!" and apparently, Kubrick agreed.
@bhurzumii4315
@bhurzumii4315 Жыл бұрын
The slang/language spoken by Alex and his friends is called "Nadsat" - there are websites with Nadsat dictionaries and language translations.
@deiwi
@deiwi Жыл бұрын
25:20 Say hello to Darth Vader!
@williamburnham3659
@williamburnham3659 Жыл бұрын
You beat me to it, going to make the same point 😊😊😊
@evilmunky1979
@evilmunky1979 Жыл бұрын
you mean the green cross code man ;)
@williamburnham3659
@williamburnham3659 Жыл бұрын
Indeed and also a goon in the 1974 Callan film
@JohnEgeloveshisfamily
@JohnEgeloveshisfamily Жыл бұрын
George's blurring of the bobbing 'work of art' has converted me to a patron
@krishnamurtiism
@krishnamurtiism Жыл бұрын
I haven’t seen this before, but it’s reminiscent of The Prisoner, classic British 60s tv series and probably best thing ever made. Maybe.
@Steelburgh
@Steelburgh Жыл бұрын
Ahh yes, A Clockwork Orange. I remember my friend and I picking it at Blockbuster not knowing what it was, and watching it with his mom. It was a glorious and mortifying evening.
@epaitech
@epaitech Жыл бұрын
Spotchka was a beverage that could be created from the creatures known as krill. This might be what he was referring to in the milk bar.
@zapermunz
@zapermunz Жыл бұрын
Don't get that confused with Devotchka, which means 'little girl' or just abouts. Their slang is a strange russian/english hybrid. Edit. Nvm it IS Spotchka, but I've had a hell of a time looking up what that could be
@worsel555
@worsel555 Жыл бұрын
16:29 when Alex replied "Fourteen" he was not talking about his age but how long his sentence was, you two were talking over that part :)
@JohnSmith-qn3ob
@JohnSmith-qn3ob Жыл бұрын
Since no one else is addressing it because they are talking about David Prowse 1) Alex isn't 14 years old. 14 years was his prison sentence. His age is never said although he's suppose to be 17-18. In the book he's 15. Malcolm McDowell was 27 at the time. 2) The guy that meets Alex in his parent's bedroom and when he gets arrested isn't his lawyer, it's is probation officer. 3) The milk in the Korova Milk Bar wasn't just milk. It has drugs in it. That's why it's called "milk-plus". That's why it "sharpens you up" and gets you ready for "ultra-violence". 4) The old man at the "home" only knew Alex was from the experiment, he didn't know Alex was the one that attacked him and his wife until Alex sang Singing in the Rain in the bathtub. 5) The slang they're using is called "Nadsat". It's a combination of Cockney Rhyming Slang and Russian. The book's author didn't want to use real slang since it would become dated.
@michaelbuhl4250
@michaelbuhl4250 Жыл бұрын
There was a synth-pop band in the '80s called the Heaven 17 that was named after one of the bands the girls in the record store were looking for.
@TheNativeEngine
@TheNativeEngine Жыл бұрын
Wasn't one of their songs in Trainspotting? The one in the club?
@michaelbuhl4250
@michaelbuhl4250 Жыл бұрын
@@TheNativeEngine I believe so.
@treetopjones737
@treetopjones737 Жыл бұрын
Not "the" in the name.
@LeePresson
@LeePresson Жыл бұрын
Speaking of Singin' in the Rain, you guys should really check out some old MGM musicals! Gene Kelly & Fred Astaire, that kind of thing.
@firebladenut
@firebladenut Жыл бұрын
The 'bodyguard' is actually David Prowse... better known as Darth Vader!
@bigredtlc1828
@bigredtlc1828 Жыл бұрын
They have their own language. Droog is their word for friend. The book comes with a glossary so you can understand what the hell they are talking about.
@jculver1674
@jculver1674 Жыл бұрын
I saw a midnight showing of this when I was in high school. The most disturbing part was seeing couples in the theater, cuddling while watching it.
@BuccWylde
@BuccWylde Жыл бұрын
Their milkbar hangout is actually milk laced with mescaline. Malcolm went through a lot for this film and was considered to be an up and coming star in British cinema. He got decent work over the next few years and critics often praised his eccentric acting. Then he made the poor choice to star in Caligula.... produced by Bob Guccione, the pornographer. The film had a renowned cast and a big budget and on the surface was suppose to be a gritty depiction of Rome during Caligula Caesar's reign, but Bob felt the finished product wasn't erotic enough and shoehorned in a few gratuitous explicit sex scenes, using porn actors engaging in unsimulated sex. This was largely unbeknownst to the cast until after its release. To this day Malcolm blames that film for permanently derailing his career.
@BJ52091
@BJ52091 Жыл бұрын
My favorite part of this movie is the patchwork language Alex uses throughout: an idiosyncratic mix of English, Russian, and Cockney slang. A friend of mine in high school looked up the dictionary online after watching the movie and taught himself to speak it fluently. But I can read and write Atlantean, so I’ve got him licked. And you’re right, it’s an insane film! If you want a happy palate cleanser of a film after this one, I recommend Nightcrawler.
@squ34ky
@squ34ky Жыл бұрын
3:27 the author invented a slang for the book, called 'Nadsat'.
@johnglue1744
@johnglue1744 Жыл бұрын
I remember my psychology teacher senior year in the 80s actually showed us this film. The class freaked out but a friend and I had already seen it several times so we more watched the class.
@raydurz
@raydurz Жыл бұрын
I read the book over 30 years ago and in the original ending, Alex was actually reformed or was on his way of becoming reformed, if I remember correctly.
@Hapsard
@Hapsard Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the story pretty much follows Alex in the movie, but Kubrick left out the final chapter (chapter 21) in which the re-violent Alex comes to his own reform and grows up. ... Kind of the main point of the book and just another example of Kubrick doing an adaptation of a book he has little respect for. Great film maker, but if I was a writer I wouldn't let him near my book at any price.
@xbeaker
@xbeaker Жыл бұрын
@@Hapsard The original (at least in the U.S.) publication of the book also does not include the 21st chapter. The version I read in school didn't have it and our teacher had to give us the 21st chapter as a separate epilog.
@Hapsard
@Hapsard Жыл бұрын
@@xbeaker do you or anyone else here have any idea why they did that? I know Capitol Records changed the song lists on American releases of Beatles albums (which must have ruffled feathers) but removing the ending of a novel seems amazingly odd ...
@stefkukla8533
@stefkukla8533 3 ай бұрын
"What’s with the codpieces?" To protect the cod-dangles.
@RDPproject
@RDPproject Жыл бұрын
*FYI....The tall body builder in the house who picks up Malcom McDowell and brings him into the house. That's DAVE PROWES. Also known as DARTH VADER. He was my gym instructor back in 1998. When I lived in Borough, London.* Pink shirt at the table at 27:48
@Cynim
@Cynim Жыл бұрын
Singing in the Rain has a very different vibe after watching this movie…! And the composer Wendy Carlos’ electronic re-rendering of classical music is marvellous.
@raineramelung7380
@raineramelung7380 Жыл бұрын
.. Hi greedings from Germany. There, s a song about this Film.. :"Die toten Hosen-hier kommt Alex" (covered lauter in English by UK Subs).. *was a succesful Song here, in the 90,s
@dethtongue945
@dethtongue945 Жыл бұрын
Just to clarify for you this is based on an old science fiction novel by Anthony Burgess. The sets and language are so weird because this is a classic example of the trope called 20 minutes into the future. Basically its set in the (recent) future, but its grounded enough so that you can still relate to the the characters and how they interact with society and technology at large. Ironically the sets probably looked less outlandish in the sixties than they do today. The language is based on a lot of Russian and Soviet words because Burgess was assuming Soviet culture would creep westwards. The story at large deals with themes of individual freedom versus societal safety, and weather free will is a requirement for morality. Basically if you cant choose to be evil are you really being good. Kubric took an ok book and dialed it up to eleven basically.
@stephanx2384
@stephanx2384 Жыл бұрын
You might recognize Philip Stone, the guy playing Alex's father. He also played Charles Gradey, the former careteaker in The Shining.
@niteowlsongs
@niteowlsongs Жыл бұрын
“I was this high once.”😅George
@sonnercampbell1702
@sonnercampbell1702 Жыл бұрын
If you want another hilarious rough watch I suggest A Boy and His Dog (1975) it is absolutely nuts
@Madbandit77
@Madbandit77 Жыл бұрын
That movie's weird but not as rough as "Orange". I vote for Sam Peckinpah's "Straw Dogs", which came out the same year "Orange" did.
@Chicklo11
@Chicklo11 Жыл бұрын
This must have been a nightmare to edit. Not that fun to watch either, but it's certainly a masterpiece in Horror/thriller
@ianhamilton2035
@ianhamilton2035 Жыл бұрын
"I've never been as high as this movie!" Best description ever!!! 😃😆🤣😝
@peterwilson1663
@peterwilson1663 Жыл бұрын
The bodybuilder with the glasses is David Prowse. AKA Darth Vader
@notjustforhackers4252
@notjustforhackers4252 Жыл бұрын
This movie makes a whole lot more sense when you realise its an incredibly clever satirical dark comedy... damn funny one too.
@lampad4549
@lampad4549 Жыл бұрын
Dark comedy yes, clever doubtful
@nighttimejackable
@nighttimejackable Жыл бұрын
Simone, George is right, never EVER watch Salo. Watch Human Centipede, that one is fine lol
@flyingardilla143
@flyingardilla143 Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing it on a big screen (after seeing it on a TV). Several people walked out early and I thought - 'yeah that makes sense'.
@DylanShupeMusic
@DylanShupeMusic Жыл бұрын
I like dim’s actor was trying not to laugh when he was getting some milk 🤣
@VilleHalonen
@VilleHalonen Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it! It's a really rough ride at times but the really weird-ass humor and unhinged performances make it easier to digest. It's kind of odd one, personally, since I first heard about the film when I was something like 10 years old, and a pair of twins in my class said that their older brother had told them that they can watch any movies but not this until they were actually 18 years old [the highest age rating in Finland back then and even now]. So guess which movie took on a mythical status... I saw it a few years later when everything violent was cool, and Singing in the Rain and Stuck in the Middle with You became edgy favorite songs, but only later started to understand what it was about. Looking forward to more of your Kubrick reactions! My personal favorite is Barry Lyndon, but it's not very popular so I'm not sure how wise a choice it is for your channel's growth.
@LoganAlbright73
@LoganAlbright73 Жыл бұрын
Barry Lyndon is amazing, and although the Shining is my personal favorite film, I think Barry Lyndon is the most technically perfect of all Kubrick’s movies. It’s very unpopular with reactors though, probably due to the slow pace. I hope they watch it at some point!
@morrisgautreau6704
@morrisgautreau6704 Жыл бұрын
The big muscle body guard that helps the old man around with his wheelchair is David Prowse: The actor under the Darth Vader suit in the original trilogy!
@weirds0up
@weirds0up Жыл бұрын
The film is based off the US version of the novel which is actually a chapter shorter than the UK version. Also, the bodyguard guy is David Prowse who went on to appear in some sci-fi film from the 70’s that no one remembers ;)
@stevetheduck1425
@stevetheduck1425 Жыл бұрын
Dave Prowse appears twice: in the milk bar, and as the scholar's bodyguard.
@stevetheduck1425
@stevetheduck1425 Жыл бұрын
The early 1950s version of '1984', however, has two versions, one shown in the US, one everywhere else. It's worth finding and comparing, then deducing who paid to have the film made and why.
@B3RyL
@B3RyL Жыл бұрын
"It's both like futuristic and not" I believe the word you're looking for is "retrofuturism". It's basically a reimagining of what the future COULD have looked like if it diverged from our timeline at a specific point in the past, and sort of stayed that way or developed in a way that conformed to the sensibilities of the time. It has more of a presence in games, like the Fallout series, Iron Harvest, Cyberpunk 2077, Dishonored, and so on, but look closely enough and you'll spot it in many movies too, like the Blade Runner, Alien franchise, and Dune, and yes, Clockwork Orange is a prime example too.
@jeffmcdonald5901
@jeffmcdonald5901 Жыл бұрын
The record store in this film was a real place. I have this film on DVD and in the commentary they were talking about it.
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