Film Review
The film that is often cited as Stanley Kubrick's most provocative is
also judged to be one of his greatest - a visually stunning work that
offers a stark reflection on the prevalence of violence in our
supposedly civilised society.
Like most of Kubrick's better films,
A Clockwork Orange is
a sumptuous piece of cinematic art that is enjoyable to watch and yet
also highly ambiguous. It demands the spectator to make his or
her own interpretation, and this ambiguity is what gives it its power
and its beauty - and also what makes it such a darkly subversive film.
A Clockwork Orange is closely
based on a popular short novel of the same title by Anthony Burgess and
part of its charm is that it uses the street slang which Burgess
invented for his story, a mix of Cockney and Russian ("droog" means
"friend", "horrowshow" means "great", etc.). It was made on
a budget of around two million dollars, which is pretty modest when you
consider that Kubrick had just spent over ten million dollars making
2001: A Space Odyssey.
In a role that would define (and seriously constrain) his future career
Malcolm McDowell plays the psychopath Alex with a mixture of boyish
charm and undiluted malevolence. It is McDowell's tour de force
performance that makes the film both intensely alluring and memorable,
as well as helping to create the film's distinctive iconography.
Few actors portray cool, intelligent evil as convincingly or as
chillingly as McDowell does in certain parts of this film, and yet the
character he plays remains, throughout, someone with whom we can
sympathise and even grow to like.
A Clockwork Orange has many
shocking sequences (including one where a woman is clubbed to death
with a gigantic plaster phallus) but the one that is particularly
painful to watch is the scene in which Alex rapes a woman (played by
Adrienne Corri) in her own home. What makes this so disturbing is
the casual, even playful, way in which the attack is staged, with Alex
cheerfully giving his rendition of "Singin' in the Rain" whilst
simultaneously molesting the victim and her husband. The idea of
using this particular song was suggested by Malcolm McDowell, the only
song to which he knew the words. Kubrick was so enthused by this
inspired touch that he shot the sequence without first enquiring whether he would
be given permission to use the song in the film.
Although the film adheres closely to the original novel, the ending is
markedly different to what Burgess had intended. Kubrick based
his film on the American edition of the novel, which omitted the final
chapter in which Alex chooses to give up violence and thereafter
becomes a useful member of society. Consequently, the film ends
with Alex still an unreformed character - something which Burgess, a
Catholic, found objectionable (although he was otherwise positive about
the film and would later defend it against its critics).
To some extent, Kubrick misses the point of Burgess's novel, which is
that, to earn his redemption, a man must be allowed to exercise his
free will and choose goodness, not have it brainwashed into him.
Kubrick's film is less about redemption and more an exploration
of a fundamental dichotomy in human nature, namely that we abhor
violence in real-life and yet we find it acceptable, if not desirable,
in our entertainment. It is also a film that warns of the
dangers of governments using extreme measures to try to control violence
in society - this is surely a one-way road that leads towards totalitarianism.
Although
A Clockwork Orange
was well-received by the critics on its initial release it was soon at
the heart of a storm of controversy when a spate of alleged copycat
crimes were reported in the media. Kubrick reacted to this by
withdrawing the film from circulation in the UK (although it could
still be seen in other countries). The film was not shown again
in the UK until after his death in 1999. It has since transpired
that the director had received threatening letters and so his
decision to pull the film may have been down to concerns that the
attacks portrayed in the film may be visited on himself and his family.
In the twenty-seven year interval between the film's withdrawal in the
UK and its long-awaited re-release in the year 2000,
A Clockwork Orange acquired a cult
status and a reputation as a dangerous film, which is, to some extent,
justified. Whilst the film isn't particularly graphic in its
depiction of violence (indeed it is tame by today's standards), its
sympathetic portrayal of a cruel psychopath who is addicted to thuggery
ensures that it will always be controversial. What the film does
do is to remind us of our ambivalence towards violence - we condemn it
in the real world, yet we find it exciting and entertaining when
projected onto a screen in front of us. Is this shameless
hypocrisy or something deeply fundamental in our psyche? Like
Alex and his droogies, it seems that we just can't get enough
of the old ultra-violence...
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Stanley Kubrick film:
The Shining (1980)
Film Synopsis
Alex DeLarge is a Beethoven-loving juvenile delinquent who spends his evenings indulging in
orgies of violence with his droogies. This involves beating up rival gangs, breaking
into houses and generally having a good time before heading back to the
Korova Milk Bar for some nourishing lactose-based
refreshment. Alex's mum and dad have no idea what their
wayward son gets up to, and are not even bothered by his poor record of
school attendance, unlike his social worker, Mr Deltoid.
Unfortunately, Alex goes a little too far when he assaults and kills a
woman with a phallus-shaped statue during one of his nocturnal
escapades. Whilst serving his stretch in prison, Alex hears about
an experimental aversion therapy technique which, it is claimed,
transforms violent criminals into harmless citizens. Knowing that
by doing so he will be released from prison, Alex volunteers for the
treatment, which involves him being given drugs that induce extreme
nausea when he sees images of a violent nature. Apparently cured,
Alex leaves prison and returns to his parents, only to find they have
let out his room to a stranger. He is then beaten up by two of
his fellow droogies, who, to his abject horror, have become
policemen. Barely conscious, Alex drags himself to the nearest
house, not knowing this is the home of one of his earlier
victims...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.