Pge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 12, 1972_ Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 12, 1972 THIS WEEK ONLY! M 91 E Magnetic Cartridge Was $4995 NOW $29.95 $ave $20.00 on -wdFi BUYS' H ILL ST. at MAIN 518 S. Main--769-4700 Comprehensive Repair Service Available SANS 522 E. WILLIAM 761-9891 Summer Clearance Sale Monda July 10-Saturday, July 16 MOST SHOES 20%-50% off Cinema "range By CHRISTOPHER PHILLIPS After 2001, we should have been prepared for what Stanley Kubrick would do to A Clock- work Orange. Again he relies too heavily on the use of gim- micks to hold the audience's at- tention, deals with a vague ahd partially developed theme and is unable to create characters on a humanistic level. A Clockwork Orange is set in the quasi-totalitarian . England of the future - a country wrack- ed by violence. Alex, the head of an adolescent gang of delinq- uents, thrives on "the old ultra- violence" and the music of Beethoven. Alex and his "droogs" (meaning "gang" in Nadsat, Burgess' teenage dia- lect) amuse themselves w i t h nightly rampages of bea4ing and raping. In one night, they beat up an old bum, rumble with a rival gang, assault a writer and rape his wife. While society looks upon Alex and his type with the greatest FOREIGN STUDENT ORIENTATION NEEDS 12 GROUP LEADERS COMMITMENT-train one evening/week-July 20-Aug. 31 " sporadic daily involvement at International Center Aug. 20-31 0 Off - campus program Sept. 1 -3 APPLY by July 17 at INTERNATIONAL CENTER BOB, 764-9310 : Overrated dud horror and loathing, Kubrick gives up no choice but to believe that Alex is only the result of his environment. Alex's love of violence, like his need to be in "the height of fashion," is a product of social conditioning. While Alex murders an ec- centric old lady with a phallic sculpture, his gang turns on him, smashes him in the head and leves him for the police. The police, in turn, arrest him, "in- terrogate" him, and send him to prison with all the "criminals and perverts." Society's tor- menter now becomes society's victim. After serving two years, Alex becomes a subject for the "Lucovico" method of rehabi- tation. In short, the "Ludovico" treat- ment is a modernistic, psycholo. gical nightmare of Pavloian con- ditioning. Injected with a spec- ial serum, eyes clamped open, and strapped into a chair, Alex is forced to watch hours of films of beating, torture, and rape; the very things that had given him so much pleasure. The treatment is so success- ful that Alex becomes nauseat- ed at the mere thought of vio- lence or sex and, as-a curious side effect, he is similarly con- ditioned against "luvly, luvly, Ludwig Van". As a mechanized creature; defenseless and docile, Alex has become a model citi- zen. He acts "good" not out of choice but to avoid ,the terrible sickness. Thus, Kubrick has created a totally amoral world and an amoral film. The violence com- mitted by Alex, as shocking as it might be, is no better or worse than the violence done to him by society. It's just t h at certain acts are sanctioned by society and others aren't. Any- thing that furthers the goals of the government is acceptable. Everything in the film is condi- tioned to function according to his own self-interest. Only the priest who helped Alex commit himself to the "Ludovico" treatment realizes the immense evil of the govern- ment's dehumanizing method of rehabilitation and voices one of Kubrick's possible themes. It is necessary for man to have a choice to be good or evil. "When a man cannot choose he ceases to be a man." But, man without free choice is amoral because good and evil cannot be pro- grammed, both must be the pro- duct of free will. Ungfortunately, the logic of that breaks down under the com- plexities and vagaries of t h e story. Alex and everyone else are products of the condition of society - they are all "clock- work oranges"-mechanical and without the capacity to make moral choices. Kubrick further reinforces the amoral nature of society by establishing an imper- sonal tone. The characters are blanched of humanism through- out the film. They exist only as one-dimensional charicatures of real people. No one has free will. While one can be programmed and repro- grammed, one is never free. Thus, there is no good and evil; just what has been defined as "good" or "evil" by society. Alex's programmed goodness, however, does not get him ahead in the world. His previous vic- tims - his droogs, now police- men, the bum he had beaten, the writer whose wife he raped -all come back to haunt him. Finally, he unsuccessfully a t - tempts suicide - and, amaz- ingly enough finds himself cured of the effects of the Ludovico Treatment. See 'ORANGE', Page 9 The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St,, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through sunday morning Univer- city year. Suscsription rates: $i0 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area>; $6.50 ocal mail tin Mich. or Oho); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). DIAL 5-6290 ENDING THURSDAY SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 From the Master of Shock A Shocking Masterpiece . SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 'TILL 9:00 P.M. CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAYS THROUGH AUGUST 12 for Miss J's grand evenings.. - Jonathan Logan's long halter dress with velveteen blazer makes a beautiful showing. A navy/burgandy plaid of nylon jersey swings wide in the bow-tied, bare-back dress.. the plush blazer tops it off in midnight blue cotton velveteen. 5-13 sizes. 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