A Clockwork Orange movie review (1972) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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A Clockwork Orange movie review (1972) | Roger Ebert (1)

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Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange" is an ideological mess, a paranoid right-wing fantasy masquerading As an Orwellian warning. It pretends to oppose the police state and forced mind control, but all it really does is celebrate the nastiness of its hero, Alex.

I don't know quite how to explain my disgust at Alex (whom Kubrick likes very much, as his visual style reveals and as we shall see in a moment). Alex is the sort of fearsomely strange person we've all run across a few times in our lives -- usually when he and we were children, and he was less inclined to conceal his hobbies. He must have been the kind of kid who tore off the wings of flies and ate ants just because that was so disgusting. He was the kid who always seemed to know more about sex than anyone else, too -- and especially about how dirty it was.

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Alex has grown up in "A Clockwork Orange," and now he's a sad*stic rapist. I realize that calling him a sad*stic rapist -- just like that -- is to stereotype poor Alex a little. But Kubrick doesn't give us much more to go on, except that Alex likes Beethoven a lot. Why he likes Beethoven is never explained, but my notion is that Alex likes Beethoven in the same way that Kubrick likes to load his sound track with familiar classical music -- to add a cute, cheap, dead-end dimension.

Now Alex isn't the kind of sat-upon, working-class anti-hero we got in the angry British movies of the early 1960s. No effort is made to explain his inner workings or take apart his society. Indeed, there's not much to take apart; both Alex and his society are smart-nose pop-art abstractions. Kubrick hasn't created a future world in his imagination -- he's created a trendy decor. If we fall for the Kubrick line and say Alex is violent because "society offers him no alternative," weep, sob, we're just making excuses.

Alex is violent because it is necessary for him to be violent in order for this movie to entertain in the way Kubrick intends. Alex has been made into a sad*stic rapist not by society, not by his parents, not by the police state, not by centralization and not by creeping fascism -- but by the producer, director and writer of this film, Stanley Kubrick. Directors sometimes get sanctimonious and talk about their creations in the third person, as if society had really created Alex. But this makes their direction into a sort of cinematic automatic writing. No, I think Kubrick is being too modest: Alex is all his.

I say that in full awareness that "A Clockwork Orange" is based, somewhat faithfully, on a novel by Anthony Burgess. Yet I don't pin the rap on Burgess. Kubrick has used visuals to alter the book's point of view and to nudge us toward a kind of grudging pal-ship with Alex.

Kubrick's most obvious photographic device this time is the wide-angle lens. Used on objects that are fairly close to the camera, this lens tends to distort the sides of the image. The objects in the center of the screen look normal, but those on the edges tend to slant upward and outward, becoming bizarrely elongated. Kubrick uses the wide-angle lens almost all the time when he is showing events from Alex's point of view; this encourages us to see the world as Alex does, as a crazy-house of weird people out to get him.

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When Kubrick shows us Alex, however, he either places him in the center of a wide-angle shot (so Alex alone has normal human dimensions,) or uses a standard lens that does not distort. So a visual impression is built up during the movie that Alex, and only Alex, is normal.

Kubrick has another couple of neat gimmicks to build Alex into a hero instead of a wretch. He likes to shoot Alex from above, letting Alex look up at us from under a lowered brow. This was also a favorite Kubrick angle in the close-ups in "2001: A Space Odyssey," and in both pictures, Kubrick puts the lighting emphasis on the eyes. This gives his characters a slightly scary, messianic look.

And then Kubrick makes all sorts of references at the end of "A Clockwork Orange" to the famous bedroom (and bathroom) scenes at the end of "2001." The echoing water-drips while Alex takes his bath remind us indirectly of the sound effects in the "2001" bedroom, and then Alex sits down to a table and a glass of wine. He is photographed from the same angle Kubrick used in "2001" to show us Keir Dullea at dinner. And then there's even a shot from behind, showing Alex turning around as he swallows a mouthful of wine.

This isn't just simple visual quotation, I think. Kubrick used the final shots of "2001" to ease his space voyager into the Space Child who ends the movie. The child, you'll remember, turns large and fearsomely wise eyes upon us, and is our savior. In somewhat the same way, Alex turns into a wide eyed child at the end of "A Clockwork Orange," and smiles mischievously as he has a fantasy of rape. We're now supposed to cheer because he's been cured of the anti-rape, anti-violence programming forced upon him by society during a prison "rehabilitation" process.

What in hell is Kubrick up to here? Does he really want us to identify with the antisocial tilt of Alex's psychopathic little life? In a world where society is criminal, of course, a good man must live outside the law. But that isn't what Kubrick is saying, He actually seems to be implying something simpler and more frightening: that in a world where society is criminal, the citizen might as well be a criminal, too.

Well, enough philosophy. We'll probably be debating "A Clockwork Orange" for a long time -- a long, weary and pointless time. The New York critical establishment has guaranteed that for us. They missed the boat on "2001," so maybe they were trying to catch up with Kubrick on this one. Or maybe the news weeklies just needed a good movie cover story for Christmas.

I don't know. But they've really hyped "A Clockwork Orange" for more than it's worth, and a lot of people will go if only out of curiosity. Too bad. In addition to the things I've mentioned above -- things I really got mad about -- "A Clockwork Orange" commits another, perhaps even more unforgivable, artistic sin. It is just plain talky and boring. You know there's something wrong with a movie when the last third feels like the last half.

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Film Credits

A Clockwork Orange movie review (1972) | Roger Ebert (9)

A Clockwork Orange (1972)

Rated X

136 minutes

Cast

Michael Goveras Prison Governor

Michael Batesas Chief Guard

Malcolm McDowellas Alex

Miriam Karlinas Catlady

Patrick Mageeas Mr. Alexander

Anthony Sharpas Minister

Madge Ryanas Mum

Philip Stoneas Dad

Photographed by

  • John Alcott

Based on the novel by

  • Anthony Burgess

Music by

  • Walter Carlos

Produced, directed and written by

  • Stanley Kubrick

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A Clockwork Orange movie review (1972) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

Why was the movie Clockwork Orange so controversial? ›

The film premiered in New York City on 19 December 1971 and was released in the United Kingdom on 13 January 1972. The film was met with polarised reviews from critics and was controversial due to its depictions of graphic violence.

Why do people think A Clockwork Orange is a good movie? ›

The use of excellent imagery coupled with pretty out-of-the-place background score tells us about the uniqueness of this movie. Stanley Kubrick has really applied a lot of thought into this. The director wants the audience to feel something as bad not because he is showing it as bad but because it really is bad.

What is the meaning behind the movie A Clockwork Orange? ›

The importance of evil as well as good in human nature is a fundamental theme of A Clockwork Orange. Alex is despicable because he gives free rein to his violent impulses, but that sense of freedom is also what makes him human. Unlike so many of the adult characters in the film, he, at least, seems exuberantly alive.

What is the disturbing scene in Clockwork Orange? ›

A man gets a milk bottle broken over his head. A man grabs another's groin then gets punched in the face. As a result, his bandaged nose starts bleeding. There are disturbing scenes of violence including beatings and murder.

What's the moral of A Clockwork Orange? ›

The Inviolability of Free Will

In making Alex—a criminal guilty of violence, rape, and theft—the hero of the novel, Burgess argues that humanity must, at all costs, insist that individuals be allowed to make their own moral choices, even if that freedom results in depravity.

Why do they drink milk in A Clockwork Orange? ›

Milk. As a substance that primarily nourishes young animals, milk symbolizes the immaturity and passivity of the people who habitually drink it at the Korova Milkbar. Their drinking of milk suggests the infantilization and subsequent helplessness of the State's citizens.

Why do they speak so weird in A Clockwork Orange? ›

In A Clockwork Orange, Alex and his inferiors, the droogs, speak a teen-language, nadsat. This teen-language functions as a means to separate themselves from the novel's hegemonic dystopian culture, depicted as either tyrannical and inhumane or lifeless and unthinking.

Why is A Clockwork Orange so loved? ›

The novel is concerned with the conflict between the individual and the state, the punishment of young criminals, and the possibility or otherwise of redemption. The linguistic originality of the book, and the moral questions it raises, are as relevant now as they ever were.

Why is A Clockwork Orange considered a masterpiece? ›

Linguistically inventive, socially prophetic, and philosophically profound, it comes very close to being a work of genius. The story, set in the England of the near future (the book was published in 1962), is simple.

What do the eyelashes mean in A Clockwork Orange? ›

The lashes are a play on femininity, mocking the softness he preys upon by directly reflecting the people who fear him. Alex is innately evil until he undergoes behaviour modification. Behaviour modification strips him of his individualism, reflected in his overly plain appearance thereafter.

What is the main message of the Clockwork Orange? ›

The main theme of A Clockwork Orange is the importance of free will, morality, and the consequences of societal control. Anthony Burgess highlights the complexities of human nature, exploring whether true goodness can exist without the capacity for evil.

What is Clockwork Orange a metaphor for? ›

In a prefatory note to A Clockwork Orange: A Play with Music, he wrote that the title was a metaphor for "an organic entity, full of juice and sweetness and agreeable odour, being turned into a mechanism".

What does Quentin Tarantino think of A Clockwork Orange? ›

“A Clockwork Orange” (1971)

But Tarantino is fairly cold towards Kubrick's work in general, and he went on to complain that the remainder of the film was a “hypocritical” work from the legend: “His party line was, 'I'm not making a movie about violence, I'm making a movie against violence.

What is the trigger warning for Clockwork Orange? ›

Parents need to know that this is an extremely violent film. Within the first 13 minutes there is a violent beating of a homeless man, an attempted rape, a gang fight, another beating, and a rape. Sex and violence are paired. Hope for a "cure" for violence is scuttled.

Was Clockwork Orange banned in the US? ›

A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess has been banned for it's "objectable language" in Aurora, CO and Westport, MA in the late 1970s. In 1973 a Orem, UT bookseller was arrested for selling the novel. The charges were dropped, but the bookseller was forced to closed his store and move to another city.

What is the big deal about Clockwork Orange? ›

While some complained about its violence and language, others noted that the novel raised important ethical questions, such as whether it is better for a person to decide to be bad than to be forced to be good and if forcibly suppressing free will is acceptable.

Why is A Clockwork Orange banned in schools? ›

Banning and censorship history in the US

In 1976, A Clockwork Orange was removed from an Aurora, Colorado high school because of "objectionable language". A year later in 1977 it was removed from high school classrooms in Westport, Massachusetts over similar concerns with "objectionable" language.

What is the mental illness in Clockwork Orange? ›

Despite Alex not being diagnosed, it is evident that he suffers from ASPD, it is clearly expressed through his behaviors and mentality. Eventually, Alex is incarcerated preceding a murder he committed, in order to be released early he enlists himself to a treatment so that he could be cured.

Why do they talk so weird in Clockwork Orange? ›

Nadsat is the fictional slang invented by Anthony Burgess, for the novel 'A Clockwork Orange'. The words used are based on 'Russian, Romany and rhyming slang'. The dialect is used by the teenagers or 'nadsats', with the name coming from the Russian suffix for 'teen'.

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