A Clockwork Orange (1972)
Facts
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A Clockwork Orange (Two-Disc Special Edition)
DVD Price: You save 59%! As of Nov 17 6:22 EST (details)
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| Directed by | Stanley Kubrick |
| Cast | Malcolm McDowell, Patrick Magee, Michael Bates, Warren Clarke, John Clive and Adrienne Corri |
| Theatrical Release | February 2, 1972 |
| DVD Release | October 23, 2007 |
| Running Time | 136 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 012569806726 |
| Buy this item | $10.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 17 6:22 EST (details) 2 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed) |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A dazzling masterpiece! |
In the near future of the UK, a gang called the Droogs lead by young 15 year old Alex (Malcom Mcdowell) as the future has no proper law where they have their own bit of fun every know and they have their own version of fun which means drugs, sex, rape, robbing and the bit of the ol' ultraviolence. Alex always skips school and always been a troublemaker from the start, but during one night when he invades the home of a rich woman as he attacked and killed her, he is confined for a 14 year life sentence in Prison. But two years later the Government decides to make a program that can reabiliate crooks through special programming that can make them nice and normal citizens without commiting any crime as Alex is the first person to go through this program but can he remain sane and rational or will his horrible past haunt him?
A brilliant and unique Sci-fi drama from Stanley Kubrick is one of his greatest movies ever! this is based on a book by Anthony Burgess and has became one of the most influential movies ever. The performances by the cast including Star Wars's David Prowse as one of Alex's Droogs is superb especially McDowell. The film tells about society in the future gone terribly mad that uses memorable images, disturbing subject matter and an unforgettable electronic music score by Wendy Carlos. This is one trippy and wild motion picture no film fantatic should miss, it's a once-in-a-lifetime cult classic that has been acclaimed by critics everywhere and even caused controversy in it's time.
This Blu-Ray features spectacular picture and sound with some cool extras like audio commentary, two documentaries, Career Profile on Malcom Mcdowell and Trailer. November 12, 2008
| Eh, I was hoping for more. |
| Classic Movie! Must Have! |
The Blu-Ray is even better with the remastering, as well as the special features. Great buy! November 3, 2008
| Pretty Good Set, Gorgeous Transfer. |
The packaging is very nice, I love the black-and-orange color scheme rather than the "classic" white and orange. The DVDs themselves look nice too: the main disc features the same artwork as the cover, and the bonus disc has the "clockwork eye" pop art poster image from the re-release. The menus are fairly well-done and simple, not too fancy or annoying. As for special features, the documentaries are pretty interesting, especially the making-of. Don't expect too much, this is an older film and there's not a ton of bonus material. However, if you are a big Clockwork Orange/Malcom McDowell/Kubrick fan, the few extras make the set worth buying. The best feature of the set is by far the Malcolm Mcdowell commentary, which is entertaining and informative. It really makes this a must-buy for fans of the film.
I owned the older DVD of this film beforehand, which had a pretty cruddy transfer with not-so-great colors and NO special features. On the other hand...this new edition has a GORGEOUS transfer, the same one used for the HD-DVD and Blu-ray. I really noticed the brightness of the colors this time, especially in Alex's house. The image is crisp and free of scratches/dust/deterioration. It looks absolutely stunning. I noticed many things I'd never noticed before in the older print, and the gaudy colors really enhance the experience of the film. November 1, 2008
| A Brightly Painted Hooker |
"A Clockwork Orange" is one of the most lyrically beautiful, ritualistically brutal films ever made. The violence can be so off-putting that you feel compelled to turn away from the screen, but the sheer beauty of Kubrick's stylized barbarism makes it impossible to look away.
The visual poetry of the film is entrancing. The premise is fascinating: that a quasi-Hobbesian futuristic society attempts to cure a nihilistic cutthroat thug (Alex) by treating him like a Pavlov dog. The rights of the individual are subjugated to the rights of the state. The film presents us with the horns of a dilemma: do we sympathize with a bloodthirsty punk like Alex, or with a cold-blooded omnipotent state that employs the methods of stimulus-response behaviorism to brainwash its individuals to conform in the name of the group?
All in all, "A Clockwork Orange" comes off as emotionally bankrupt (like the society it lampoons), and therefore, emotionally uninvolving and devoid of passion, all gussied up like a brightly painted hooker, like Alex himself, for that matter, tricked out in his meritricious, eye-catching costumes.
--Bryan Cassiday, author of "Fete of Death"
October 26, 2008
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