Humble opinion

Watson 2022-03-19 09:01:01

Why is Kubrick so good? hard water? I would like to thank you afterwards. Personally feel that it is inseparable from experience and perception. If there is no other experience, how do you think about individuals who fit the movie? I don’t think there is any awkwardness. This is what is awesome. Any of Kushen’s movies all show a magnificent worldview, and in the end, is it still integrated into a character? The old man’s thoughts are very disappointing in human society. They are out of order and do not follow the law. Other directors implicitly mention this in one stroke. Kushen talks about this in the entire movie. Isn’t it great? I like his character. I can retain such a strong heart for a lifetime. My current age is about the same as him, but I want to keep my heart. I think it is very difficult. He is a sustenance, an inner reflection. As far as "A Clockwork Orange" is concerned, the magnificent worldview made me stunned. The rhetoric and voice-over content of street bums all showed grand concepts. The work expresses super direct things. It seems to be full of resonance, without any modification, but you must know that you will be educated later, so that you can understand the world like a thread without any influence. Can it be great? The feeling conveyed is also unfathomable, depending on the depth of your thoughts. People who are adolescent and those who remember adolescence must feel different. The world born in the dark, the formation of patterns, the creation of utopia, are like things in his own mind. The choice of destiny, art and faith, pure things. It's all inner things. I once thought that he was a surreal person who traveled through the past and developed the movie because, isn't it similar to Leonardo's nature? The lines are magnificent, meaningful, full of hints, and are an attractive mental drug. It seems to feel like my own feelings, unspeakable feelings. The separation of sound and picture is good, what a sense of ritual! The atmosphere of the prison makes people hopeless and cranky. Bees live in extremely compact beehives all their lives. What is the meaning of it? Give me a thought about prison. Confident thinking about freedom! What was ushered in was proceduralization, Alex, when he encountered socialization, he looked like he was vomiting, "Society! You are disgusting!" Recite the fluent Bible, pungent irony. Faith will be like this? I don't know if he really regretted it or was an actor when he was watching a movie... This question is stupid. I believe he will not think too much about his age. What he wants is the contrast with who has been changed. For some profound issues, I think the director has handled them with great care, meticulousness, and heart. The set, I love it so much, this Kubrick is simply a genius. Then came the big world view in a small scene. The police are like that, don't they look like? It's really dry shooting. I admire the five-body cast. Seeing the big in the small is the main thing ,Is not it? so amazing! The buried foreshadowing is fresh and refined, and there is no shortage of words and rumors. Audiovisual language is really too strong. Exquisite! This old man! The feeling of this storytelling! The few events and places where they happened are probably the people living in a few patterns. Don't put him into your life completely! There is only one reason, you are not Kubrick. The rhythm is very unusual! Every lens has material! Later, everything went back to the original. Kushen should have read some of the early works of Laozi and Confucius, moderate! He tells you about the disorder in society and tells you what society is like. The director's power is that it allows me to see pictures like people and talk. He really looks like a big brother who is sometimes not serious and sometimes serious. This foreigner never explores superfluous things. He let me know that when one thing is done, there is infinite power to map other areas. The end of the movie. . . After reading it easily, I know that it belongs to Kubrick and it is called "A Clockwork Orange"!

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Extended Reading
  • Neoma 2022-03-25 09:01:02

    The first batch of banned films when I first received the DVD, the 1971 release now is still shocking, and the amount of information is quite large. Replaying Beethoven and Song in the Rain in the soundtrack, fast-moving sex and violent slow-moving, the ultra-modern setting and easter eggs are more impressive. Malcolm’s interpretation of good and evil is similar to each other from the front and rear appearances, which also proves all the possibilities of the individual, and the more harmful is obviously the various thoughts that are constantly instilled in your brain. As a result, we are completely cured. Museum Library God Film Exhibition.

  • Ara 2021-10-20 18:58:14

    Through a long and complete violent experiment, the film reveals the truth: people’s attitudes towards violence and the code of conduct are inadvertently contradictory. They both oppose violence and use violence to control violence. The human nature that Western society has been pursuing is yet to be seen in the film. No longer exists, which makes the film give people a kind of ethereal and wild feeling, and the deep ridicule of social politics and the collapse and confusion of people's life beliefs also express a deep exploration spirit~

A Clockwork Orange quotes

  • Frank Alexander: [hears knocking on the door] Who on Earth could that be?

    Julian: I'll see who it is.

    [goes to the front door]

    Julian: Yes, what is it?

    Alex: [barely audible] Help... please... help... help.

    Julian: [opens the door and Alex collapses at the doorway. He carries Alex into the house] Frank, I think this young man needs some help.

    Frank Alexander: [surprised by Alex's poor condition] My God! What happened to you, my boy?

    Alex: [voice-over] And would you believe it, o my brothers and only friends. There was your faithful narrator being held helpless, like a babe in arms, and suddenly realizing where he was and why home on the gate had looked so familiar, but I knew I was safe. For in those care-free days, I and my so-called droogies wore our maskies, which were like real horror-show disguises.

    Alex: [nervous] Police... ghastly horrible police... they beat me up, sir.

    [sees Frank has a foul look on his face, apparently not believing him]

    Alex: The police beat me up, sir.

    Frank Alexander: [excited] I know you!

    [pauses]

    Frank Alexander: Isn't it your picture in the newspapers? Didn't I see you on the video this morning? Are you not the poor victim of this horrible new technique?

    Alex: [relieved] Yes, sir! That's exactly who I am and what I am, sir. A victim, sir!

    Frank Alexander: Then, by God, you've been sent here by providence! Tortured in prison, then thrown out to be tortured by the police. My heart goes out to you, poor, poor boy. Oh, you are not the first to come here in distress. The police are fond of bringing their victims to the outskirts of this village. But it is providential that you, who are also another kind of victim should come here.

    Frank Alexander: [finally remembering Alex's state] Oh, but you're cold and shivering. Julian, draw a bath for this young man.

    Julian: Certainly, Frank.

    Alex: [as he is being carried off by Julian] Thank you very much, sir. God bless you, sir.

  • Alex: Hey dad, there's a strange fella sittin' on the sofa munchy-wunching lomticks of toast.

    Dad: That's Joe. He lives here now. The lodger, that's what he is. He rents your room.