Review of A Clockwork Orange (1971) by Akash S — 30 Oct 2012
From the first frame till the last one, 'A Clockwork Orange' is intriguing, thought-provoking, meticulous and brilliant, like most other Kubrick films. The screenplay, cinematography (colourful & exquisitely photographed), set-design (very modern for its time), acting, background score - every aspect is almost flawless.
The story is a dark satire on a futuristic world, where they try to eradicate violence by conditioning criminals to abhor violence and sex by watching gory movies. Their (criminals') morals remain the same, but they just can't indulge in violence anymore; they become defenseless.
The movie gives rise to so many topics of discussion, and you can debate all day long on the different themes it explores.
Ultimately, the primary theme - if a human is stripped of his own choice of good and evil, he simply becomes mechanical, like 'clockwork'.
Alex DeLarge, the "humble narrator", the anti- hero, is one of the most important and fascinating characters in English Cinema.
The story, and its adaptation, is much ahead of its time. The liberties Kubrick takes in the field of violence and sex (in 1971) are quite commendable. No wonder it caused such a stir during the time of its release.
Even after so many years, the movie can be enjoyed completely - it speaks so much about violence, youth agitation, gangs, criminal reforms, politics, etc., which are relevant even today.
Final Word - 'A Clockwork Orange' remains Indelibly Remarkable even till this date.
This review of A Clockwork Orange (1971) was written by Akash S on 30 Oct 2012.
A Clockwork Orange has generally received very positive reviews.
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