What makes A Clockwork Orange a “Kubrick Movie?” | Screenwriting

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  • Опубліковано 16 гру 2018
  • BONUS FOR PATRONS Script Notes by Kubrick: bit.ly/2PCORmD
    Support this channel on Patreon: / cinematyler
    Hello cinephiles! Welcome to Making Film where we take an in-depth look at how cinema’s greatest artists made their films. My name is Tyler and, in this episode on the screenwriting of A Clockwork Orange, we are taking a look at the themes, many of which actually appear throughout Kubrick’s work as well as structural similarities to his other films.
    #Kubrick #Screenwriting #AClockworkOrange
    Twitter: / cinematyler
    Facebook: / cinematyler
    Tumblr: / cinematyler
    This video essay was written, edited, and narrated by Tyler Knudsen.
    Kubrick: "Certainly one thing which relates to the story is the question of how authority can cope with problems of law and order without becoming too oppressive and, more particularly, in relation to the ever-increasing view that politics are irrelevant to the solution of social problems, that there's no time for political and legal solutions, that social issues have to be solved immediately even if this means going outside law and politics. What solutions authority may evolve certainly concerns me, and is one of the great unanswered social problems."
    Sources:
    Cinephilia & Beyond - ‘A Clockwork Orange’: Kubrick and Burgess’ Vision of the Modern World - bit.ly/2CAfI0o
    The Old Ultra-Violence: A Clockwork Orange - January 30, 2018 Vincent LoBrutto
    Bluray Commentary
    Mind’s Eye: A Clockwork Orange - John Hofsess 1971
    Kubrick Archives - Alison Castle
    A Clockwork Orange (1971) - Turning Like Clockwork
    Interviews About Stanley Kubrick, 1970s - Film 31534
    GREAT BOLSHY YARBLOCKOS! Making A Clockwork Orange - Gary Leva
    My Droog Hell by Gareth Grundy
    Kubrick Exhibit Book
    Masks of Violence by Marisa Buovolo
    Kubrick New Perspectives
    Excerpts From Rare Kubrick Interview By Siskel In 1972 - March 08, 1999
    Interview with Stanley Kubrick regarding A Clockwork Orange by Philip Strick & Penelope Houston
    Anthony Burgess and Malcom McDowell analysis Clockwork Orange - James MacAndrew - • Anthony Burgess and Ma...
    Clips:
    The Killing (1956 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    2001: A Space Odyssey (1968 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    A Clockwork Orange (1971 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    Barry Lyndon (1975 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    The Shining (1980 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    Full Metal Jacket (1987 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    Eyes Wide Shut (1999 dir. Stanley Kubrick)
    Music:
    Epidemic Sound
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 268

  • @kyleshiflet7932
    @kyleshiflet7932 5 років тому +312

    KUBRICK is a genre of his own

  • @guy_incognito
    @guy_incognito 5 років тому +290

    "No one expects that the government would literally employ such a treatment,"? Ten years earlier Alan Turing submitted to chemical castration for his crime of "gross indecency" (consensual homosexual sex). Clockwork Orange was (and still is) a lot closer to the truth than many people are comfortable with.
    Just my 2c worth -- thanks for another great essay!

    • @CinemaTyler
      @CinemaTyler  5 років тому +29

      Good point... :/

    • @Figue-
      @Figue- 5 років тому +9

      JFQ
      The US still uses death penalty up to this day...

    • @ender2034
      @ender2034 5 років тому +7

      @@Figue- Not for homosexuality. Then again they were quite big with eugenics in the fourtys

    • @e8iMm7KE999
      @e8iMm7KE999 5 років тому +2

      The attempt to mind control Alex into being good through pain is man playing God. Man cannot do what God can do. Which is why you get the less than idea results of Alex being dehumanized. He is not able to defend himself when attacked. Self defense is a righteous act. Humans as usual cover up there mistakes and attempt to make the same mistakes again. Which is why the ending of the movie. Alex's mind control was with pleasure instead of pain. Only God can create a new heart within a human. Any attempt of man doing this will result is error. Man cannot do what God can do.
      "Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. Ezekiel 36:26
      Create in me a clean heart, O God, And renew a steadfast spirit within me. Psalm 51:10
      Jesus replied to him, "Truly, I tell you emphatically, unless a person is born from above he cannot see the kingdom of God." John 3:3
      Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come. 2 Corinthians 5:17
      And I say: In the Spirit walk ye, and the desire of the flesh ye may not complete; Galatians 5:16

    • @shortjohnsilver4605
      @shortjohnsilver4605 5 років тому +9

      There are states of America today that still haven't outlawed conversion therapy, and unfortunately some of those camps use or had used in the past similar technology to what we observe in A Clockwork Orange as fiction.

  • @allthingsfascinating
    @allthingsfascinating 5 років тому +174

    Tyler should get a PhD on Kubrick. You have enough material already

    • @porcupineracer2
      @porcupineracer2 5 років тому

      all things fascinating But then he’d need to continue presenting research annually and what kind of research journal would he submit to.

  • @smoshbooz
    @smoshbooz 5 років тому +138

    Try the WINE

  • @hellbenderdesign
    @hellbenderdesign 5 років тому +56

    If someone were to remake _Clockwork_ (please don't), they would most likely say that their version would be "closer to the book", which is the kiss of death (hey, 'Stephen King's The Shining', with Steven Webber!). Clockwork is so completely Kubrick, in that the greatest and most memorable things about it are the unique decisions that Stanley made. Burgess' book is absolutely amazing, and a must-read for any fan of the film, but Kubrick's hand, from art direction, shot selection, visual style, film speed, costuming, and so on, are the things that truly resonate, and the things you would miss from an inevitably inferior attempt to revisit this property.

    • @gullywumpus
      @gullywumpus 5 років тому +5

      IIRC, Burgess regarded "A Clockwork Orange" as one of his lesser works. Sure, the book has its charms, droog slang not being the least of them, but it's definitely not the book Burgess wanted to be the most remembered of his works.

    • @LissyBabyBop
      @LissyBabyBop 5 років тому +2

      Well said!! I still read this book to this day. Excellent book & excellent film, in their own rights!

    • @kirksART
      @kirksART 5 років тому +2

      I totally agree. The book is superb, and Kubricks film is very faithful to the book. The movie is perfect.kubrick is on top form and Malcolm McDowell owns every scene he is in. Remaking it will be a total pointless exercise that will fall flat. (You can't recreate genius)

    • @animageofsound5351
      @animageofsound5351 4 роки тому +1

      I love Kubrick's interpretation as much as any hard core fan. But the book stands on it's own without the film. It is a story that could be reinterpreted by others. The Book is already genius- another interpretation, if done well, would be hardly a pointless exercise.

    • @fredrikcarlstedt393
      @fredrikcarlstedt393 2 роки тому +1

      @@animageofsound5351 It could work as a
      tv miniseries, but with execution by a very
      competent craftsman .
      Spielberg perhaps ?

  • @louieandtommysdiscountedit3177
    @louieandtommysdiscountedit3177 5 років тому +126

    Tyler, you’ve done so many good videos on Kubrick that you should start informally referring to him as “Stan the Man” or “The Kubster”, like he’s an old fraternity buddy.

  • @michelvan97
    @michelvan97 5 років тому +30

    oh my Brothers and friends, what for excellent analysis !

  • @abigailsockeye1586
    @abigailsockeye1586 5 років тому +12

    Music plays a big part too. It's obvious he thinks deeply about what music to use.

  • @gonzolonzo1383
    @gonzolonzo1383 3 роки тому +4

    Paul Thomas Anderson kinda reminds me of Kubrick with how he uses satire to reel you in a bit, but he also frames his shots very similarly to Kubrick as well.

  • @poweroffriendship2.0
    @poweroffriendship2.0 5 років тому +94

    *_I am still drinking milk while watching this movie. It's nice to have my profile pic as Alex._*

    • @Haydn3560
      @Haydn3560 5 років тому +4

      And I just saw you on fact fiend

    • @AnneSofieLovesMozart
      @AnneSofieLovesMozart 5 років тому +2

      Real horroshow, my pal

    • @juztenable
      @juztenable 4 роки тому +1

      Milk with daggers

    • @atomsea03
      @atomsea03 4 роки тому +1

      +Juztenable It is “Moloko with Knives” you illiterate film person

  • @kremesauce
    @kremesauce 5 років тому +1

    Amazing analysis of my favorite movie! Love your videos and insight!

  • @davidj.thompson
    @davidj.thompson 5 років тому +2

    Really well-researched, Tyler! I like Kubrick's movies and this series has helped me understand why.

  • @papanugget2368
    @papanugget2368 5 років тому +1

    Dude, I love the background music! Nice video, keep it up!

  • @patricktaylor2733
    @patricktaylor2733 5 років тому +1

    Another truly excellent video about my favorite Kubrick film!

  • @bimmovieproductions6352
    @bimmovieproductions6352 5 років тому +3

    I was editing an episode in a series going on on my channel and this popped up, I clicked soooooo fast, and I was also kinda struck by suprise when I saw this video, because the themes of this movie are very similar to the series I was talking about, and to show that I have put in small references to a clockwork orange in the series to kind of translate the meaning. But I've got to say, great video!

  • @robertholmes12
    @robertholmes12 4 роки тому

    Awesome vids. I like the philosophy and theme work in your analysis.

  • @freestyleliteraryjournal8943
    @freestyleliteraryjournal8943 5 років тому

    I love your channel, each video is better than the last

  • @wunderkind56
    @wunderkind56 5 років тому +7

    Another great analysis but the game show music in the background with Kubrick's images is just jarring.

  • @johns123
    @johns123 5 років тому +10

    I would love to see what you'd say about Fellini. He is one of my favorite directors, and I think you'd do wonders with his stuff. Please do consider!

    • @CinemaTyler
      @CinemaTyler  5 років тому +7

      Thanks for the suggestion! Someday!

  • @daliasaravia1443
    @daliasaravia1443 5 років тому +1

    As always, fantastic video.

  • @eumoria
    @eumoria 5 років тому

    Dude, this was awesome. Excellent analysis link the book when it's out!

  • @BorisBerlin
    @BorisBerlin 5 років тому +26

    Excellent video, but... why the goofy cartoon music?

  • @brendanmccabe8373
    @brendanmccabe8373 5 років тому +16

    I often wonder if Napoleon would have been made if he decided not to make a clockwork orange I love Napoleonic history so it would be my favourite automatically

    • @joeroganofficial5433
      @joeroganofficial5433 5 років тому

      Brendan McCabe there was problems with the studios

    • @camorinbatchelder6514
      @camorinbatchelder6514 5 років тому

      The Power I don’t think there were.

    • @brendanmccabe8373
      @brendanmccabe8373 5 років тому +1

      The Power yes but he made a clockwork orange as something to do in between what were supposed to be two massive films 2001 and then Napoleon and then a clockwork orange came out and got a lot of controversy and maybe if he had kept trying to get Napoleon made instead of a clockwork orange someone would studio would have accepted it

    • @joeroganofficial5433
      @joeroganofficial5433 5 років тому +1

      Brendan McCabe yeah it was supposed to be a cheaply made movie wedged between two epics that had a big budget.

    • @gullywumpus
      @gullywumpus 5 років тому +2

      No. The film "Waterloo" bombed at the box office, and none of the major studios were in the mood to take another gamble on Napoleon or the Napoleonic wars. Kubrick had planned it as an epic on the scale of "Spartacus" and would have needed a huge budget. Apparently he put the project aside and just never came back to it. Pity.

  • @ryanegger4425
    @ryanegger4425 5 років тому

    great work man

  • @porcupineracer2
    @porcupineracer2 5 років тому +10

    I’m really glad your channel is growing. I really get a lot out of your videos. *brofist*

  • @skiesofrust
    @skiesofrust 5 років тому

    Wow this is amazing. Thank you.

  • @corbinmarkey466
    @corbinmarkey466 3 роки тому +4

    Kubrick is seriously the most underrated comedy director lol yes, Dr. Strangelove is hilarious, but I find Clockwork, Barry Lyndon and Full Metal Jacket nearly as hilarious.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Рік тому +1

      The Shining is hilarious in places too, thanks to Nicholson's over the top performance as Jack. 'Wendy, give me the bat.....' that whole bit has always make me laugh. I think my favorite is Eyes Wide Shut though. Yes, the film raises all sorts of serious questions about who holds the power in the modern world, but it is also a movie about a guy who can't get laid, even at an orgy!

  • @ricopaxton
    @ricopaxton 5 років тому

    Just discovered your channel..... THX!!!

  • @RacinZilla003
    @RacinZilla003 5 років тому +1

    1:38 I wasn't expecting memes from being a part of a Kubrick analysis and it had me bursting out laughing more than it should have

  • @EddieLensweiger
    @EddieLensweiger 2 роки тому

    damn this deserves multiple watches, hard to chew in some parts..the music is outstanding

  • @matias4572
    @matias4572 5 років тому +4

    Yuppie!, I missed you already

  • @valmarsiglia
    @valmarsiglia 5 років тому +1

    Barry Lyndon has some moments of pure comedy gold. The death of Lord Charles Lyndon, for example: like an 18th-century cartoon come to life.

  • @rivereuphrates8103
    @rivereuphrates8103 3 роки тому

    My God your videos are brilliant, man

  • @jackdaniels2905
    @jackdaniels2905 5 років тому +1

    Upon seeing this video title I received a tingle in my dingle.

  • @NostalgiNorden
    @NostalgiNorden 5 років тому +11

    Another great video.
    But that goofy background music makes it hard to take what you say seriously at times. Like "am i supposded to laugh at this"? :P

    • @helenaconstantine
      @helenaconstantine 5 років тому +1

      Oddly, the first bit was the zither theme from The Third Man, but played on a guitar.

  • @wrestledeep
    @wrestledeep 5 років тому +1

    Great job. i was looking for more information about the new book you mentioned: "i am jack's axe." Can you provide a link for this? I have been trying to study various perspectives of the film, The Shining for a long time.

    • @CinemaTyler
      @CinemaTyler  5 років тому

      Thanks! There's no link yet, but I'll make sure to update when one becomes available.

  • @deficitmusic9959
    @deficitmusic9959 5 років тому +68

    I generally don’t get scared by horror films, I am never phased by them, but everytime i watch a clockwork orange I always feel uncomfortable.

    • @joeroganofficial5433
      @joeroganofficial5433 5 років тому +4

      Fractured Films it’s disturbing

    • @Daniel-Rosa.
      @Daniel-Rosa. 5 років тому +2

      When we rented A Clockwork Orange, my friends and I had the worst time - out of simple weirdness.

    • @joeroganofficial5433
      @joeroganofficial5433 5 років тому +1

      Daniel Rosa
      I got that

    • @hanniffydinn6019
      @hanniffydinn6019 5 років тому +12

      Same with shining , not scared, but holy fuck the film makes me uncomfortable more than any horror film made. I have no idea why.

    • @joeroganofficial5433
      @joeroganofficial5433 5 років тому +1

      Stefan Brockelbank b
      I thought it was funny

  • @georgtabeling719
    @georgtabeling719 5 років тому

    Exactly what i need right now :P

  • @SuperSwagMaster99
    @SuperSwagMaster99 5 років тому

    More Kubrick!!!

  • @EvilDick1995
    @EvilDick1995 5 років тому +2

    Just started reading the book again!

    • @beckygould7509
      @beckygould7509 5 років тому

      Tyler Frazier would love to read the book is it still in print?

    • @EvilDick1995
      @EvilDick1995 5 років тому

      @@beckygould7509 oh yeah, you can get it on Amazon or they probly have it at your local Barns n Noble

    • @beckygould7509
      @beckygould7509 5 років тому

      Tyler Frazier TY !

  • @frodobagginz
    @frodobagginz 4 роки тому

    Great channel

  • @bijibadness
    @bijibadness 5 років тому +18

    It was directed by Stanley Kubrick.
    NEXT.

  • @mjaada
    @mjaada 5 років тому +9

    I think Clockwork is hilarious

  • @hyacinthlynch843
    @hyacinthlynch843 3 роки тому

    This is a very good viddy.

  • @vittoriostoraro
    @vittoriostoraro 3 роки тому

    Great work as usual, too bad about the inappropriate music though.

  • @etangbose4755
    @etangbose4755 5 років тому +2

    The fact Kubrick directed it...

  • @jamespfp
    @jamespfp 5 років тому +4

    6:15 -- I think perhaps you've missed a more obvious interpretation of the name of the book and the film. "Orange" is the opposite colour to Blue, which is often associated with being depressed. LIke Clockwork, they promise to fix Alex and make him Orange instead of Blue.

  • @hairycrocs5038
    @hairycrocs5038 5 років тому

    Simple, it’s great!

  • @ultimas20
    @ultimas20 5 років тому

    the cycle you're talking about is called Chiastic structure
    It's used a lot in fables, myths and religion going back to writings from the bronze age and still in use in more modern works like the LOTR.
    I wonder if this comes from Kubrick's use of literary elements and structures in film.

  • @lukedominick7742
    @lukedominick7742 5 років тому

    Love the Beethoven No. 9 Janissary music at the beginning

  • @AnthonyMonaghan
    @AnthonyMonaghan 5 років тому +1

    He is the American master...Barry Lyndon being his most under appreciated film.

  • @FireDubstep
    @FireDubstep 5 років тому

    Can you make a video about david fisher or some movies recomendations or directors recomendations ?

    • @CinemaTyler
      @CinemaTyler  5 років тому

      Thanks for the suggestion! I do have plans to do a recommendation video at some point.

  • @johnwatts8346
    @johnwatts8346 11 місяців тому +2

    clockwork might not be an actualy comedy but its certainly funny.

  • @1dbanner
    @1dbanner 5 років тому +2

    The theme of willingly conforming to violence would've been quite pronounced in Aryan Papers.

  • @LJTofficial
    @LJTofficial 5 років тому

    This is sick

  • @kamranrowshandel6395
    @kamranrowshandel6395 Рік тому +1

    The Chorus: "Is there any doubt that I have successfully hidden from you all information about what (which) things I dislike, and that this is the only source of my pride?"
    I'd bet that A Clockwork Orange is a cold war film mourning gambling (after it was made illegal in the Soviet Union [likely decades earlier]).
    About the chorus (in Greek plays):
    it's something which keeps track of everything which has unfolded but has no power (cannot punish) and is not the government or the leader in the story
    it must be there to ensure that being an audience member (audience members need to consensually be audience members) for the whole duration of the story is something which can be done while the audience members are *acting naturally* (so to speak). otherwise it's very weird for them to sit and observe the story (and what the fuck are they supposed to do while watching the play? whisper to each other? such questions can be transcended through the addition of a chorus. it's a very scientific thing because it includes consent)
    otherwise the audience members will not be able to keep track of the events naturally (their attention spans will be wasted and they won't understand the plot and it's obviously very bold to interrupt the theatre actors to ask them to"rewind").

  • @xcvsumextra
    @xcvsumextra 5 років тому +1

    My favourite movie ever.

  • @hifrommike2120
    @hifrommike2120 4 роки тому +1

    Alex is a symbol for humankind. That is why he is never really at odds with his society, which is monstrous. However, I do not think the film is pessimistic. It is full of energy, creativity, humor, & most of all, brilliantly used music.

    • @davidlean1060
      @davidlean1060 Рік тому

      If you pay close attention to the last shot, you will prove the point you are making. Ok, Alex may be enjoying carnality, but that is a wedding scene we are looking at. It's not the fast forward 3some we seem him involed in earlier, it's a man and his wife enjoying a good ole, healthy shag! Alex wasn't lying or being ironic when he says 'I was cured alright'.

  • @eeeeyuke
    @eeeeyuke Рік тому

    I'm just discovering your channel, but I wanted to give one critique, where everything else is perfect. Not a fan of game show-style background music during very pertinent information. Your script is always so thoughtful and laid out, that the music distracts from the information being laid out. Love your channel.

  • @NoCoverCharge
    @NoCoverCharge 4 роки тому

    my favorite movie

  • @elhombrequerie8884
    @elhombrequerie8884 5 років тому +1

    Please you must talk about Kubrick's Napoleon script

  • @tschango134
    @tschango134 4 роки тому

    is this matt the radar technician at 01:07 ??

  • @mjaada
    @mjaada 5 років тому +2

    1:53 you right about that?

  • @gunungmerapiapi1933
    @gunungmerapiapi1933 5 років тому +1

    14:27 I DON'T REMEMBER THAT SCENE AT ALL from Clockwork Orange

    • @NeedForMadnessSVK
      @NeedForMadnessSVK 5 років тому +3

      In prison, when he is talking about the Bible, he mentions that he likes Old Testament more because there was killing and action, and this is one of his fantasies

    • @gunungmerapiapi1933
      @gunungmerapiapi1933 5 років тому

      @@NeedForMadnessSVK oh yeah, thanks 😊

  • @MrCrispian
    @MrCrispian 5 років тому +1

    ID LOVE TO SEE THE 20 MINS CUT FROM EYES WIDE SHUT,,,OR GO THROUGH THE SCREENPLAY TO SEE ANY DIFFERENCES

    • @elkaluzi
      @elkaluzi 4 роки тому +1

      that movie killed stanley k.

  • @deeproff1294
    @deeproff1294 3 роки тому

    The book is AMAZING and by contrast .....

  • @Daniel-Rosa.
    @Daniel-Rosa. 5 років тому

    What do you think of "the Ludovico Lie", Tyler? It's in a couple of videos by Collative Learning - please look

  • @paulsmith2102
    @paulsmith2102 5 років тому

    Whether you like this film or hate it, it will definitely make you think and feel something no matter what,it's one movie you can watch that's garaunteed to leave you affected
    I

  • @1lightheaded
    @1lightheaded 4 роки тому +1

    Are you familiar with the three great movies by Linsey Anderson ? If , Lucky Man and Britannia Hospital with McDowell playing the lead protagonist in all three.

  • @MrCrispian
    @MrCrispian 2 роки тому

    why did he leave out the last chapter of the book from the film..?

  • @tonywords6713
    @tonywords6713 4 роки тому

    Paul Thomas Anderson said Barry Lyndon was a comedy in an interview lmao same with There Will Be Blood

  • @SavageCommentaryOriginal
    @SavageCommentaryOriginal 4 роки тому

    Hey I recently watched A Clockwork Orange and was really struck by how intentionally funny it was.

  • @UltimateKyuubiFox
    @UltimateKyuubiFox 5 років тому +2

    The film gives us perhaps the scariest ambiguity of all.
    What if the Ludovico Treatment, once undone, still actually worked? This, in my opinion, is the most cynical perspective of all. That the only way to redeem evil IS to strip its owner of personhood, and then regift them the ability to choose after they’ve been dehumanized. The ending of the film, in contrast to the book, doesn’t tell us whether Alex is a less violent person. But the implication, sexually, is that he is. One could make the argument the treatment worked-that only through the immense suffering the treatment made him endure does he become human. The question then becomes “Does society lose something invaluable by discontinuing the Ludovico Treatment for the sake of good publicity?” A far more harrowing and demented question.

  • @MichaelMan2000
    @MichaelMan2000 5 років тому +1

    What a great video 👍

  • @vincentacri94
    @vincentacri94 2 роки тому

    Well, I call that Jimmy Johnsoning. It always helps when you have a genius like Tom Landry or Anthony Burgess or Arthur C walk through the door first and leave lits on the shelves. He would the priests told me disavow Sparta cus because he didn't read Tacitus until after filmed the script by Dalton.

  • @pritush
    @pritush 5 років тому

    Gotttdyaaam this was good ...

    • @pritush
      @pritush 5 років тому

      Almost felt like reading Foucault and Nietzsche at the same time 😝..

  • @tonywords6713
    @tonywords6713 4 роки тому

    4:27 the word you are looking for is Palindromatic Structure

  • @lunarmoon1969
    @lunarmoon1969 5 років тому

    With having read the notorious 21st chapter, Alex becomes good as far as I'm concerned, on his own, he at the point of seeing Pete and his family in the diner, just gets it, like what life is about. At that point Alex abandoned his new droogies and goes off to become a family man. The End!
    However, watching Kubricks version, I always felt as if Alex returns to his evil self-indulgence and snickers silently at everyone knowing he has beat the system. Alex acts as though he is a good little boy and signs his waver to freedom and then starts a life in politics, gains wealth along the way, becoming a dictator with- Grand Delutions of Grandiose Prosperity gaining a stature greater than any other vile leader in history. And oh yes my brothers viddy well, viddy a horror show of the utmost ultraviolet light ever viddied in Alex's sureal playground of a carnaged plaged Society.... and all that cal.

  • @JayBee-cr8jm
    @JayBee-cr8jm 11 місяців тому

    Why is there music blasting throughout the video?

  • @traptionist5115
    @traptionist5115 5 років тому

    3:30 "committing "axe" of violence"

  • @betaneptune
    @betaneptune 5 років тому +4

    Can you please drop the music? It's like the Penny Lane video, where the video has nothing to do with the music.

    • @vittoriostoraro
      @vittoriostoraro 3 роки тому +1

      Exactly. It's the one area where Tyler often fails.

  • @garmind4868
    @garmind4868 4 роки тому

    Kubrick knew he was it. THE one, the creator, God . HE just didn't KNOW how he was doing it.

  • @Z0MB13M0DZ
    @Z0MB13M0DZ 4 роки тому +1

    Sorry love no time for the ol' in and out i'm only here to check the meter

  • @thebailey67
    @thebailey67 3 роки тому

    Any remake would be well..... ultra-sacrilegious.

  • @guyofminimalimportance7
    @guyofminimalimportance7 5 років тому

    It does make you wonder what parts of everyday life inspired Kubrick for Clockwork Orange. While the question of how much control over the public's morality the government should have isn't frivolous, the idea of the choice to do wrong being an inherent human right is somewhat original.

  • @JohnDoe-bm5lp
    @JohnDoe-bm5lp 5 років тому

    kubrick's comedy movie ? what about full metal jacket ?

  • @xxmartinfrielxx4158
    @xxmartinfrielxx4158 4 роки тому +2

    I love clockwork orange but some scenes is really fucked up

  • @poop-for-brains
    @poop-for-brains 3 роки тому

    11:27 "it's Hegelian dialectics."

  • @marcsteven6170
    @marcsteven6170 3 роки тому +1

    A lot of directors see things differently then the average person but that's what makes them special.. A little fucked up but special..

  • @sigvardbjorkman
    @sigvardbjorkman 3 роки тому

    1:29 "No you"

  • @ChromeJob
    @ChromeJob 5 років тому

    Great video, looking forward to your next one.
    Some of the satire masking cynicism that you identify in Kubrick’s other films is present in 2OO1: a space odyssey, you just have to look and listen for it IMHO. I think many viewers are so bowled over by the glorious epic nature of the film, the graceful visual effects, they overlook the rather ironic and caricatured way the principals behave, particularly Heywood Floyd and all those he meets.
    I confess I still haven’t seen EWS ... I’m allergic to Tom Cruise (and Nicole Kidman isn’t Benadryl enough to compensate). I wonder if the masked characters in EWS are related to the role that Alex & his droogs illustrate when they wear theatrical (or goofy) masks when they break into the writer’s home....

    • @jimbehr2291
      @jimbehr2291 5 років тому

      Personally I find all of Kubrick films very funny. His films have a very dark, truthful about the human condition humour. So close to the bone that if you don't laugh, you'll cry.
      I've seen EWS a couple of times and I need to watch it again.
      I didn't like Cruise (then) and I don't like Kidman either. So i was watching it only because it was by Kubrick. I don't mind Cruise now. He was more understated in his acting in EWS than anything else I've seen him in.
      I feel if the masks are related it would be in an abstract sense in that we all wear masks OR we hide ourselves to commit crimes but are we really hiding from ourselves?
      In EWS it was to hide their identities at the party/ceremony/ritual and we never find out who most of them are.
      But like I said, I'll have to watch it again and I'll keep this in mind when I do.

  • @ekinulasyildiz2840
    @ekinulasyildiz2840 5 років тому

    👍

  • @FirstPlace97
    @FirstPlace97 5 років тому

    I think Kubrick's films all have opportunistic and sadistic characters. Consider the general in Paths of Glory, Humbert in Lolita, Alex in A Clockwork Orange and of course Barry in Barry Lyndon. There is a lot of irony and satire in the suffering of his characters.

  • @nineteen8486
    @nineteen8486 Рік тому

    I’m British .. and i endorse this film

  • @canyoubeserious
    @canyoubeserious 5 років тому +1

    Excellent analysis undermined by requisite inappropriate music sound level in relation to narration, a mystifying and nearly universal trait of UA-cam videos.

  • @ChiefWindyCheeks
    @ChiefWindyCheeks 5 років тому +1

    It was directed by him.

  • @MusicGunn
    @MusicGunn 4 роки тому

    I very much find A Clockwork Orange to be a comedy, but I am a sick bastard.

  • @Baleur
    @Baleur 5 років тому

    8:52 you're wrong about this one, not the WILL to do evil, but the CAPACITY to do evil.
    We all NEED to have the power and capability to do evil, but the thing that makes us civilized and "men", is that we CHOOSE not to do the evil we're capable of, we rather CHOOSE to do something better. THAT is what makes a human being a human. Not the "will" to do evil, but the "ability", the "option".

  • @MrCrispian
    @MrCrispian 3 роки тому

    WHY THE CRAZY MUZAK?

  • @Tobacc0
    @Tobacc0 5 років тому

    The background music was a bit vexing...

    • @canyoubeserious
      @canyoubeserious 5 років тому

      Tobacc0 vexing background that interferes with the narration is requisite for UA-cam videos.