This week we finished watching the film "A Clockwork Orange". What it is important to highlight from this movie is the way in which visual and media elements are all combined to produce specific meanings beyond language and how a aesthetic of violence is created.
Some of you might have disliked the movie. That's normal since the sequences of violences and the sarcastic view of society the film portrays are hard to watch for many viewers.
Here are some reviews and viewers comments about this film. I hope this comments can serve as model for your own comments when you present a film review in two weeks.
Agent10 wrote in IMDB: Even after 34 years, this film still speaks volumes about our current
culture, which many ideals are ringing true today. The younger
generations are out of control due to lack of parental control, junk
culture is becoming commonplace, violence is desensitizing the masses,
and we all seem to be enjoying the ride on the way down. It's very
difficult to find movies which can make such startling commentary, yet
hold on to such accusations for an extended period of time.
Christian Jahnsen wrote in IMDB: with all the perversity bursting out of this film, you will
probably NOT like this film the first time you see it. I know I didn't.
Fortunately, I gave it a second chance, and thought: Hey, it was actually
not bad at all. After the third time, I was lost for words.
After the fourth time, there was little doubt in my mind, that this was the
finest film ever made, and regardless of how many great masterpieces I see,
A Clockwork Orange still towers above them. I'm sure you'll agree, if you
give it the chance it deserves, although it may require for you to see it
more than once.
Ikcytang wrote in IMDB: The first viewing left me
speechless, unable to describe how weird and terrible I felt. I thought it
was the film that left me in this mood, so of course that was the easy
target to blame. It was just a bad movie, overrated and stupid and a waste
of time. But upon further thought, I realised the film did exactly what it
was supposed to. It showed how the world can be a weird and horrible place,
and how this young man who goes around torturing people and being a wicked
person ultimately doesn't have to pay for what he does. And it's funny too.
So this film brilliantly satirises this world, showcasing pure evil and
people who ordinarily do not perform such evil are forced to laugh and
observe what we all hate to admit is the truth. It's sick, but at the same
time brilliant. And when one gets down to the core, you can't really
explain it. It just is what it is. It's real.
varun_iitian wrote in IMDB: Another glorifying feature is the central idea of the movie. If a human
is striped of the choice to choose from good and evil, he no longer
remains a human, he becomes a clockwork. When Alex is brain-washed and
"programmed" to choose only good, he wasn't accepted by the society and
this shows the irony in the objectives of the British Government. The
word Orange from the title presumably comes from the word "Ourange"
that loosely means man. And hence the title is so appropriate to the
movie.
The artificiality in dialogues and sets give the movie a unique feature
and enhance the grip on it. This also means that the viewer has to get
more involved. This is definitely one of the best technically shot
movies, another masterpiece of Kubrick like the Space Oddessey.
Lastly, I would like to say that you may be compelled to leave the
movie in between, but if you are watching it for art and cinematic
experience, I recommend you to sit through.
Reviews were taken from: "A Clockwork Orange" at the Internet Movie Database.
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