Malcolm McDowell talks about A Clockwork Orange and Stanley Kubrick | BFI

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  • Опубликовано: 16 апр 2019
  • ‘The only movie about what the modern world really means’ - Luis Buñuel.
    Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of Anthony Burgess’ decline-of-civilisation novel remains a chilling, thrilling and unsettling cinematic vision of nihilistic violence and social control. It was so controversial upon its release that it was withdrawn by Kubrick himself, and not seen again in the UK until after his death in 1999. Set in a flamboyantly stylised near-future where gangs of disenfranchised teenagers indulge in narcotic cocktails and revel in acts of ‘ultraviolence’, the film centres on Alex (McDowell) and his band of droogs. With A Clockwork Orange Kubrick was striving to deconstruct classic Hollywood narratives and create a cinema that behaved like music - in doing so he created a new, viscerally disturbing mode of storytelling.
    Here the film's star, Malcolm McDowell, talks about making the film and his close bond with its director.
    Watch a longer conversation with McDowell on his whole career: • Malcolm McDowell in co...
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Комментарии • 214

  • @charlesmyers8150
    @charlesmyers8150 Год назад +24

    I was 17, and had read the book a couple months before the movie came out. I didn't know there was a movie, so when it came out I told a friend, we have to go see this movie. It was so great and different , and my friend , who didn't have any idea before seeing the movie , was stunned too. This movie is still futuristic, and totally original. My favorite movie.

    • @libertard6101
      @libertard6101 Год назад +1

      Lol, I went to a Christian High School and just like you, My cousin gave me the book .. but the movie came out and being under age we snuck in .. hahaha. I think I got a C , but did end up reading Anthony Burges book with the Russian glossary…. What at time , I miss the 70’s …. Stay Strong

  • @travisbickle9756
    @travisbickle9756 4 года назад +167

    His performance in that film is iconic and legendary, one of cinema's unforgettable anti-heros

    • @matthewr7570
      @matthewr7570 3 года назад +8

      Just like you

    • @kiaandavids755
      @kiaandavids755 3 года назад +9

      Alex is in no way whatsoever an anti hero

    • @matthewr7570
      @matthewr7570 3 года назад +4

      @@kiaandavids755 the definition of antihero is: a main character in a story who lacks conventional heroic qualities and attributes such as idealism, and morality.

    • @kiaandavids755
      @kiaandavids755 3 года назад +6

      @@matthewr7570 you’ve missed the point of the film if at any point you are trying to root for alex. Alex is a completely different entity in comparison with Travis Bickle.

    • @kiaandavids755
      @kiaandavids755 3 года назад +10

      @@matthewr7570 definitely an antagonist to literally everything in his surroundings. Travis is an antihero because he’s a bad person, but you want him to kill Sport to save Iris. Alex has no other goal other than pure destruction. He doesn’t have a single positive motif in anything he does.

  • @napoleonklein5205
    @napoleonklein5205 4 года назад +62

    It wasn't that "A Clockwork Orange" was so violent because it wasn't compared to other movies, it was the wantonness of the violence, the sadistic pleasure and nonchalance with which the characters, especially Alex DeLarge engaged in the violence that makes the movie unique. He rapes a woman in a home invasion with those grotesque masks as if he's having the time of his life, it's such fun. He beats up an old man in the tunnel with wanton glee. It's the way the violence was played out as if it was not just perfectly normal but such satisfying fun and pleasure to rape, assault and maim with utter gleeful abandon. This is what made the movie such a controversy and gave it an enduring allegiance by fans because that level of wanton, sadistic glee has never really been achieved in any other movie.

  • @mattiascloverleaf2076
    @mattiascloverleaf2076 4 года назад +145

    May he live long and healthy, he is phenomenal!

    • @visualsforyou7120
      @visualsforyou7120 4 года назад +7

      Michael Tarn (Pete) is doing fine. He was the only Droog who was actually a teenager.

    • @AshaNimo1
      @AshaNimo1 4 года назад +5

      No he's not. David Prowse and Michael Tarn are still alive

    • @endlessbreadsticks7436
      @endlessbreadsticks7436 4 года назад

      As is Georgie and Joe the lodger

    • @ianbentley7276
      @ianbentley7276 4 года назад

      what!!!!!!!!!!!?????????????????

    • @decemberstragicdrive
      @decemberstragicdrive 3 года назад

      @@AshaNimo1 david prowse.... not very alive anymore...

  • @JasonVoorhees10100
    @JasonVoorhees10100 5 лет назад +33

    I think mcdowell took personally his contribution of the "singing in the rain " scene because he chose the song and dance to introduce the home invasion. He came up with the idea. I dont think he felt appreciation of what he brought to the movie ( he has his cornea scratched during filming multiple takes of the theatre scene ) so he probably felt used up from what he probably feels is now an unbeatable performance.

  • @luisg.407
    @luisg.407 3 года назад +37

    Everyone imitates Tony Montana in Scaeface, I always imitated Alex in A Clockwork Orange. Malcom's performance was epic and iconic.

    • @wyattownby2886
      @wyattownby2886 9 месяцев назад

      I’ve never seen Scaeface before but whenever you have time, you should watch Scarface.

  • @andrewattenboroughtwothumb4697
    @andrewattenboroughtwothumb4697 4 года назад +9

    hope that a clockwork orange gets a 4K release this year for its almost 50th anniversary love it and it is one of my favourite movies and great video with Malcolm McDowell

  • @TheStockwell
    @TheStockwell 5 лет назад +152

    McDowell will be remembered for two things:
    1. Working with Stanley Kubrick as the star of "A Clockwork Orange"
    2. Spending over half a century complaining about working with Stanley Kubrick as the star of "A Clockwork Orange"

    • @mazza4190
      @mazza4190 5 лет назад +17

      TheStockwell......Donut....The interviews he faces spotlight A Clockwork Orange. This interview is about him and Clockwork. What else would you expect him to reiterate. He is not the first actor to speak of Kubrick as a hard task master.

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell 5 лет назад +8

      @@mazza4190 True, but McDowell has made it lifestyle to keep repeating - and expanding on - his "Stanley was mean to me!" stories. It was fascinating for the first three decades, but now it's getting annoying and sad.
      It's an epic tragedy, of course, that Kubrick didn't call li'l Malcolm on his birthday or hide a coin in his plum pudding each Christmas, but it's not as if Kubrick was his father - or promised to be. Yet, every time McDowell talks about Clockwork, it's ten percent "Kubrick was, of course, a genius" and ninety percent "I was expecting we'd be best friends for life - and he let me down!" You don't hear Dullea, Collins, O'Neal, Nicholson, or the cast of "Full Metal Jacket" whimpering, decade after decade, so MUCH about betrayal or whatever.
      At this point, in this interview, McDowell is telling us how HE needed to make the film "watchable for an audience and find somewhere - which is rare in a Kubrick movie - someone who is sympathetic in any shape or form." I'm happy he made the film watchable, of course, by creating a sympathetic character. Bless him. But, um, wasn't that his job? To do that "acting thing" he was paid to do?
      As a side note, it might be helpful at this point for McDowell to learn it's pronounced KOO-Brick, not CUE-brick.
      Now, with Kubrick gone, McDowell is probably going to keep nursing and building on his hurt - and telling us all about it. But, it's as the old saying goes: Hell hath no fury like an emotionally needy actor who feels wronged by an undisputed cinematic genius.

    • @mazza4190
      @mazza4190 5 лет назад +6

      @@TheStockwell I don't know his emotional content. I had read that Kubrick wasn't really up for making the film. I also read Burgess wasn't impressed with the adaptation. I cannot give you further. I would not be surprised if McDowell had suffered in his career taking the role. I would also suggest his first films did not pay him a fortune because they were outside the norm. IF...O' Lucky Man and Clockwork will not have made him a lot of money but what he did on the screen was edgy and convincing. He put in brilliant performances throughout all three of those films. A far cry from the big money of today, "what will you do with the big, big money" I appreciate him for being part of the adaptation that is now becoming a reality here in the U.K. I did not bother with the interview through to the end simply because neither Kubrick nor Burgess can reply or comment. His body of work for a young Northerner from the U.K. isn't great but their are some real gems of British cinema. Maybe an interview about his career without a mention of Clockwork would be appreciated. IF... is still one of my favourite films and A Clockwork Orange will always have a special place in my memories. Not really bothered about performers. KOO-brick, really? Keep the side note mate.being a Northerner you should here how much bastardization of the common English language goes on. My name is Mazur people insist on calling my name Mazza. Actually pronounced Maz-ool. Or so I have been told by Polish people. Such is life.

    • @robertgantt1727
      @robertgantt1727 4 года назад +5

      “If”

    • @Ekphrasys
      @Ekphrasys 4 года назад +3

      Only actors like Douglas, Nicholson, Cruise "survived" after Kubrick... Cause they were already stars...

  • @onebushbabe
    @onebushbabe 3 года назад +11

    Now in my 70’s and the movie just came to me, I looked up Malcom McDowell as he was so charismatic in that movie. Good the see how he has aged, as have I but must be tired of having the movie rehashed over and over.

  • @dennistognan3791
    @dennistognan3791 Год назад +9

    Clockwork Orange was an amazing film, with great acting, writing and directing.

  • @zepsabpurp999
    @zepsabpurp999 5 лет назад +28

    For me - still the most radical and daring film to ever find its way into cinemas, whether it be for a mainstream or cult audience. Full of humour, but still, very, very realistically worrying.

  • @WilliamAlanHarris
    @WilliamAlanHarris 4 года назад +16

    geez can this interviewer show some respect? He is giving such sass back to Malcolm show some praise for this guy and his legendary performer!

    • @uncletony6210
      @uncletony6210 3 года назад

      Malcolm hates being praised in interviews.

  • @theguitardude5613
    @theguitardude5613 3 года назад +9

    What a brilliant actor. And he seems such a lovely guy too.

  • @JoeSmith-yd1ex
    @JoeSmith-yd1ex 2 года назад +10

    Read the book when I was a punk teen. Then the movie came out in my 20's. Malcolm made this all work so well because he used the book and narration to make it come alive. I believe he is at least a responsible for the success of clockwork as Kubrick was. They took Burgess Frankenstein and added the spark that brought it to life.

    • @nicholasjanke3476
      @nicholasjanke3476 8 месяцев назад

      It's interesting that you bring up Frankenstein, as Burgess himself said:"A Clockwork Orange gives the message thats the opposite of Frankenstein. The message is that it's just as much a sin to unmake a monster, as it is to create one."

  • @DaveFisher-cq2dr
    @DaveFisher-cq2dr 4 года назад +20

    I've seen Malcolm McDowell at least three times in my life, I even saw him in a public restroom at one of the conventions he attended

  • @nibiru379
    @nibiru379 4 года назад +15

    The masterpiece film spoken about by the man that helped make it a masterpiece

  • @MegaMegola
    @MegaMegola 3 года назад +6

    He is such an incredible actor! So talented! It has been a pleasure watching him!

  • @GolDRoger-zd3wm
    @GolDRoger-zd3wm 4 года назад +16

    McDowell is a legend

  • @Emulous79
    @Emulous79 5 лет назад +68

    INTERVIEW ALL RIGHT!?

  • @luckyduckydrivingschool3615
    @luckyduckydrivingschool3615 3 года назад +7

    Malcolm McDowell is my favorite actor.

  • @fortunatomartino9797
    @fortunatomartino9797 Год назад +1

    This man's talents were never completely utilized
    I couldn't get enough of Malcolm McDowell

  • @thecinematicmind
    @thecinematicmind 5 лет назад +42

    A true cinematic legend

  • @josephcallahan1664
    @josephcallahan1664 5 лет назад +2

    Great performance, indeed. "The only movie about what the modern world really means"- Luis Buñuel. One could say that about a few Buñuel films as well. Thanks. !

  • @mikebasil4832
    @mikebasil4832 3 года назад +4

    Happy 50th Anniversary for A Clockwork Orange. 👏🏻

  • @almsecurity2857
    @almsecurity2857 4 года назад +4

    Mr McDowell was iconic in this film and in Gangster 1 he was epic too

  • @jacobbaranowski
    @jacobbaranowski 3 года назад +2

    he is going to talk about this movie till the end of time...I love to here him talk...his eyes and voce have not changed.

  • @rcicero53
    @rcicero53 3 года назад +2

    Good Job Malcolm! There will be not another performance of supernatural gifts like yours for another 100 years, not until the true zeitgeist of our era, that you have so masterly portrayed and anticipated, is over again. May you live a long life my friend, with happiness and health.

  • @marcusbarlow4231
    @marcusbarlow4231 3 года назад +15

    Good job he's so charismatic, because that interviewer is a total vacuum

  • @GordonStainforth
    @GordonStainforth 4 года назад +56

    It's almost impossible to imagine an interviewer more inept or out of his depth than this.

    • @uncletony6210
      @uncletony6210 3 года назад +13

      he asks the question, then shuts up and lets the guest talk. That's a good thing.

    • @rODIUMuk
      @rODIUMuk 3 года назад +5

      @@uncletony6210 HE's total crap

    • @uncletony6210
      @uncletony6210 3 года назад +1

      @@rODIUMuk why?

    • @iamacalmocean2080
      @iamacalmocean2080 3 года назад +1

      So terrible!!!! Looking at his watch, poor listening skills, seemed bored…I admire this actor more keeping his enthusiasm next to this douche!!

    • @iamacalmocean2080
      @iamacalmocean2080 3 года назад +4

      Wow…!!!! And I wrote that comment before I got to the 17 min mark. Who is he? Totally terrible interviewer

  • @tonijimenez9885
    @tonijimenez9885 5 лет назад +4

    Great actor. And he was wonderful too in Inhabited. Hugs from Spain.

  • @garlicbreathcomedy5670
    @garlicbreathcomedy5670 Год назад +2

    To this day, every time I pour someone a glass of red, I exclaim ‘TRY THE WINE’
    And then when I top them up, ‘Have another glahss’..

  • @maxpower001
    @maxpower001 Год назад +1

    Malcolms a treasure to humanity, i always wanted to get a beer n shoot some pool with him. Just chill n shoot the shit.. But what ive always loved about our friend and humble narrator o my brothers was he was a normal lookin kid. Not some big bad muscle man bar room smasher, he didnt need any of that cow.. He used intelligence, cold calculating planning and cunning as his weapon along with real horrorshow skills with the cutthroat britva... I saw Acwo when i was 13 totally by accident getting it from my public "biblio" library and it CHANGED my life instantly and as a kid it went right over my head but i knew for some reason i loved this film and story after viewing it another million times over the course of my life and READ the novel and listened to the audiobook which is done VERY VERY WELL whoever does the audiobook does all the characters perfectly.. a brilliant story and kinda becoming quite relevant in our own dystopia we got goin on here in shitty 202-what ever the fuck it is now.. like it matters anymore right-right droogs? 😂

  • @kelman727
    @kelman727 4 года назад +8

    Can’t they ever talk about If....?

  • @charleswinokoor6023
    @charleswinokoor6023 3 года назад +3

    I’m surprised that he was surprised that the audience at the Manhattan screening sat in silence through the whole movie.
    There was plenty of violence in Peckinpah’s “The Wild Bunch,” but it was not nearly as intentionally revolting as in “Clockwork Orange.”
    And that’s not meant as a criticism of Kubrick who made an arguably amazing film.
    But street crime back then in NYC and other urban areas had become more prevalent and frightening, so it’s not surprising that no one laughed while watching the movie.
    I didn’t see “Clockwork Orange” until the late seventies in a second-run theater.
    The audience, which was mostly all male and working class, didn’t laugh or talk during the movie either.
    The only vibe I picked up that night was kind of mean.
    When you get down to it, and if you bypass all the intellectual discussion, it’s a relentlessly violent movie about violence in modern society and the inability on the part of government to deal with it.
    And that’s why it got an X rating when it first came out.

  • @michaeldaugette802
    @michaeldaugette802 3 года назад +6

    Malcolm just an awesome actor !

  • @simonagree4070
    @simonagree4070 Год назад +1

    Winner of the "Most Peculiar Nose In Showbiz" prise! I love him. Really should do King Lear, he's at the precisely right age and energy.

  • @scottielambert9312
    @scottielambert9312 4 года назад +4

    One of the few well deserved large egos on earth. I truely do not believe a single actor outside perhaps Daniel Day Lewis could have brought that character to life in that so very Kubrick manner.

  • @crisdorcas4655
    @crisdorcas4655 3 года назад +2

    It's not a movie u would think you could watch over and over but it is. Its retrofuturistic

  • @interstellar618
    @interstellar618 Год назад +2

    The "singing in the rain" bit is what ultimately establishes his absolute menacing psychopathy. Its funny he see's it as somehow softening the edges of the brutal r^pe and murder.

  • @knotlock
    @knotlock 5 лет назад +3

    Danny Torrance and his mother was very sympathetic! :)

  • @simonagree4070
    @simonagree4070 Год назад +1

    I did see If... years later, after Clockwork Orange, and thought it would have done well if distributed properly, like The Graduate. In those years, the 1970s, we watched these movies in failing cinemas, often at midnight movies.

  • @houndwillie
    @houndwillie Год назад

    When you consider the year “Clockwork Orange” was produced it broke all boundaries, a revolutionary film to which it still gets better every time I watch it!

  • @stephenbrown5992
    @stephenbrown5992 5 лет назад +26

    Dr Monty.......

    • @phazebeast7373
      @phazebeast7373 4 года назад +2

      Its him 😁

    • @wutang-dan3489
      @wutang-dan3489 4 года назад +3

      @@phazebeast7373 Yeh but hes wearing a blue scarf wtf??? Treyarch are even putting spoilers in other companies video

    • @phazebeast7373
      @phazebeast7373 4 года назад +1

      @@wutang-dan3489 hahah !! Blue scarf means he might be returning in bo5 😂

    • @err_4044
      @err_4044 4 года назад +1

      Clockwork Orange is why Dr.Monty turned out to be evil

  • @spagett2487
    @spagett2487 4 года назад +2

    I just now figured this out; McDowell does the voice of John Henry Eden on Fallout 3.

    • @spagett2487
      @spagett2487 4 года назад

      @@nautical-edits doesn't everyone?
      EDIT: And you're lucky I knew what you meant.

  • @stregadisalem732
    @stregadisalem732 5 лет назад +1

    He has the best voice in the world!

  • @TheJoker-fg4es
    @TheJoker-fg4es 4 года назад +3

    Anyone know where I can contact Malcolm? I'd love to get my bowler signed.

  • @shaunbyrne1197
    @shaunbyrne1197 3 года назад +1

    Malcome is so exuberant, I've never seen him like this

  • @michealcurrie8272
    @michealcurrie8272 3 года назад

    God bless, Malcolm McDowell . If, a must see.

  • @rizkiawulan3747
    @rizkiawulan3747 5 лет назад +5

    Always healthy Sir. McDowell :)

    • @tinaholman956
      @tinaholman956 3 года назад

      I didn't realize he was a SIR ,I always thought he thought being a SIR was BULL 🐂 SHIT!!!!!!!!!!

  • @The_R-n-I_Guy
    @The_R-n-I_Guy Год назад +1

    My favorite movie ever!!!

  • @james5995
    @james5995 5 лет назад

    Excellent film but why did BFI not use the new restored print in the latest cinema re-release?

  • @jeremiahfry6799
    @jeremiahfry6799 4 года назад +11

    McDowell will be remebered for 3 things
    Dr. Monty: from Bo3 zombies
    Alex: clockwork orange
    Micheal Myers therapist

    • @enclaveradio6342
      @enclaveradio6342 4 года назад +2

      @Cameron Farrelly , that's exactly what I wanted to say. God bless the Enclave! God bless America!

    • @dannyoceanss
      @dannyoceanss 3 года назад +1

      Dr. Sam Loomis***

    • @kat.woah-man
      @kat.woah-man Год назад

      My Dad introduced me to Malcolm with Blue Thunder when I was about 6. I've been a fan ever since. I'm 25 now. He had many great roles. One of my all-time favorite actors.

  • @nicholasjanke3476
    @nicholasjanke3476 Месяц назад

    Stanley Kubrick was having alot of problems finding an actor to star in A Clockwork Orange, untill one day he went to see IF, and thought to himself when he saw McDowell:"Yup. I have found Alex!"

  • @moshomaniac1
    @moshomaniac1 3 года назад +1

    I love the story at 7:57

  • @nigeldonaldson1647
    @nigeldonaldson1647 3 года назад +2

    The response to the film in New York sounds like the response to The exorcist dead silence. Aparently its producer said "thats it, were dead" BUT there was light at the end of the tunnel because this is reguarded as a cult classic, controvercial films seem to take a long time for the public to digest

  • @teeniebeenie8774
    @teeniebeenie8774 4 года назад

    is there an interview where he talks more bout the eyeball scene ?

  • @joemitchell9981
    @joemitchell9981 Год назад +2

    I mean no disrespect to Mr. McDowell, because he is a fine actor and I LOVE his work in A Clockwork Orange but, is he inebriated in this interview?

  • @nicholasjanke3476
    @nicholasjanke3476 8 месяцев назад

    McDowell is about one of the few actors still alive from that film.

  • @Loy72bob
    @Loy72bob 3 года назад +2

    Coolest damn thing I had ever scene...Masterpiece

  • @nimos1
    @nimos1 5 лет назад +82

    The 'right-on' politically correct interviewer takes himself far too seriously and desperately needs a sense of humour and something even resembling a personality. Malcolm was pulling his leg and it went completely over his head.

    • @johnvalencia9927
      @johnvalencia9927 5 лет назад +12

      Yeah he really sucks. Good think McDowell carried 97% of the 22 minutes here.

  • @Shadowman4710
    @Shadowman4710 Год назад +1

    "He doesn't do sympathetic characters that well..."
    Kirk Douglas in "Paths of Glory?"

  • @momakesvids5704
    @momakesvids5704 3 года назад

    meeting him tomorrow im so excited

  • @nicholasjanke3476
    @nicholasjanke3476 Месяц назад

    I felt so sorry for Malcolm Mcdowell doing that film.s Especially when I read what he had to go through during the Ludivico therapy scenes. However McDowell's own physical torture during the scenes added something to the film.

  • @therealruckus5263
    @therealruckus5263 4 года назад +2

    I do believe there is subconscious guilt from Alex subtly manifested in the scenes between his release and attempt at suicide. The whole chain of events feel like Alex is making him self available to the punishment handed out to him, almost as if he is embracing society’s retribution against him. Most noticeably, when he’s reciting singing in the rain in the bath. On the face of it he’s happily re visiting the assault, but he must be aware that this could trigger the writer to realise who Alex actually is. And therefor sign his own death warren. It might appear accidental, but I think deep down Alex at least believed in an eye for eye, even if that meant at his own expense.

    • @bjornragnarsson8692
      @bjornragnarsson8692 4 года назад

      Interesting. I too have felt Alex, in the movie, acts as if he sort of embraces the punishment handed out to him by society.

    • @bballstarcrazy8
      @bballstarcrazy8 Год назад

      Disagree 100%. Alex goes into prison a child and is still a child when he comes out. He's feeling sorry for himself because he has nowhere to live and can no longer get satisfaction from being a degenerate. Him singing "Singing in The Rain" in the bath is almost a flex in a way. I raped/killed his wife and now here he I am bathing in his house as he feeds me and comforts me as if I am the victim. Obviously it's subjective, but I really do think people give this character way too much sympathy.

  • @barrycuda3769
    @barrycuda3769 Год назад

    How about some stories about Joseph Losey 'and Robert Shaw.

  • @theoneandonlycarlton
    @theoneandonlycarlton Год назад +1

    FOOD ALRIGHT? TRY THE WINE! HAHAHAHAHA I JUST SHOT BEER OUTTA MY FUCKING FACE HAHAHAHAHA I Truly Love Malcolm And That's One Of My Favorite Lines From The Whole Movie 👍👍

  • @andriaguillen8316
    @andriaguillen8316 Год назад +1

    This movie is sick, perverted, violent, and sadistic set to the tune of classical music and "Singing in the Rain." I think you can turn this sick, perverted, violent, and sadistic movie into a musical along with a live orchestra. It would be a hit because we live in a sick, perverted, violent, and sadistic society. Art imitates life and life imitates art.

  • @pederlettstroem980
    @pederlettstroem980 4 года назад +1

    Talking shit about actor McDowell. I’ve seen many films that I cannot remember the title of the films. So many. But he was also great in Cat People with Natasha Kinski and in a film about a school were the pupils made war against the teachers. I don’t remember the name of the movie. A great chiose of actor what showed the genius of Kubrick. And to let a mostly comic actor sich as Ryan O’Neal to play the leading part in Barry Lyndon was a choise that only a genius such as Kubrick could make.

  • @pauldeering6531
    @pauldeering6531 3 года назад +1

    I really thing he is slightly beered in this interview, but hes great👍

  • @tinaholman956
    @tinaholman956 5 лет назад +6

    His wife Kelley is a lucky woman maybe the luckiest woman in the world

  • @sebastianalegria3401
    @sebastianalegria3401 5 лет назад +5

    After Clockwork Orange, Malcolm couldn't make any other movie as good as that Kubrick's film, when he dies, Hollywood will know they had lost a great cinema legend.

    • @JustinBlazzzee
      @JustinBlazzzee 5 лет назад +1

      sebastian alegria The list of movies as good is fairly small so there’s no shame in that.

    • @rupertp6251
      @rupertp6251 3 года назад

      I mean who has made a movie better than that or on the same level tho lol - not many

  • @harryflash5202
    @harryflash5202 3 года назад +2

    Shoulda been a Clockwork Orange 2. These days there woulda been.

    • @kylehargreaves1784
      @kylehargreaves1784 2 года назад +1

      No I’m glad they kept it just the one film

    • @frostmafia1380
      @frostmafia1380 Год назад

      Well in the book version in the last chapter Alex amends his life, but its very short, and no-one would want to watch it lol

    • @nicholasjanke3476
      @nicholasjanke3476 Месяц назад

      Yes. There was an epilogue where Alex finally grows out of his criminal ways, he meets one of the droogs who's now married with a stable job, and the alternate reality authorities have now gotten rid of most of hoodlum gangs and the streets are now safe. Neither McDowell nor Kubrick liked the epilogue. Both thought it was stupid so they chose not to include it in the film. Kubrick:"A publisher pushed Burgess to include the epilogue so the book would end on a more positive note." McDowell:"The epilogue was stupid! It had Alex working in a bank or something."

  • @calebcompton9120
    @calebcompton9120 3 года назад +1

    He was put through hell making that movie. You couldn't put an actor through shit like that anymore, you would have law suits.

  • @MrGyftario
    @MrGyftario 5 лет назад +26

    He is still cute. Who hadn't a crush on him;

  • @thomasgary1219
    @thomasgary1219 3 года назад +1

    No disrespect to Anthony Hopkins but I wish they would've let Malcolm be Hannibal Lectur in silence of the lambs.

  • @nbalongboi9738
    @nbalongboi9738 4 года назад +2

    Maxis bawlsed everything up

  • @bubbercakes528
    @bubbercakes528 10 месяцев назад

    I’ve never been able to get through the movie.

  • @tenaciousandresilient9687
    @tenaciousandresilient9687 4 года назад

    This man turns into a monster over his fashion shows ;P

  • @simonagree4070
    @simonagree4070 Год назад

    I'm an American, of Irish, Scottish, and Welsh ancestry, but I love the northern English accent. Not so much the BBC.

  • @MrBurninCross
    @MrBurninCross 4 года назад

    So today 06/14/20 arrived, upon which I discovered after having watched 'Clockwork' the previous evening was on McDowell's birthday! How appropriate my inadvertent timing was! Was it coincidental that a couple of DeLarge's droogs, Georgie and Dim, went on to become cops? Pete, on the other hand, by the time he is 19, he has left the violent teen culture behind, married, and entered the adult world of work and family thereby exemplifying freedom of choice. DeLarge ultimately gets 'cured' by catastrophic injuries incurred during a suicide attempt, and subsequently cutting a deal with the real villain, the Minister of the Interior.

  • @miriamgreen3973
    @miriamgreen3973 Год назад

    I remember when shooting alcohol into a subway ticket takers booth and then lighting it afire was shown in a movie made for TV years ago and days later teens recreated it and killed the ticket taker who couldn't get out

  • @nicholasjanke3476
    @nicholasjanke3476 Месяц назад

    Compared to what film makers do now, makes A Clockwork Orange look like The Huckleberry Hound Show.

  • @abrarqadir503
    @abrarqadir503 4 года назад +1

    this guy is dope as fk

  • @kyeheather444
    @kyeheather444 2 месяца назад

    He's so funny. Alex is funny as well and it's ok, u know why? Because it's just a movie damn it.

  • @lcamuti7135
    @lcamuti7135 5 лет назад +8

    I don't believe for one moment that an audience attending Malcolm McDowell In Conversation at BFI Southbank is entirely made up of people too young to remember when IF came out.

    • @rupertp6251
      @rupertp6251 3 года назад

      I mean I’m way too young. Half of the fans of A Clockwork Orange are not from the period in which it came out

    • @unmixedunmastered2810
      @unmixedunmastered2810 2 года назад

      Unreasonably pedantic you’re being, aren’t u ?

  • @simonagree4070
    @simonagree4070 Год назад

    I liked Caligula, the movie. What the hell, I had read Suetonius. That's what it's based on.

  • @firstube
    @firstube 4 года назад +3

    18:15

  • @patrickbrannen2887
    @patrickbrannen2887 Год назад

    The Moloko Velocet.....

  • @keithashley6298
    @keithashley6298 Год назад

    Had a terrible nightmare after watching this and had to watch it back because I dreamt that I responded with some terrible remarks about the French. Thank God i didn’t.

  • @jimmoore811
    @jimmoore811 3 года назад

    Keep taking away individual rights and this great movie will come to life in 2020

  • @friedrichnietzsche7376
    @friedrichnietzsche7376 2 года назад

    Where did this guy go in the oscar nominations

  • @karenjanicehollick1545
    @karenjanicehollick1545 Год назад

    A good story teller , makes me laugh says it as it is

  • @splitnmelba
    @splitnmelba Год назад

    What a fantastic roll of ground-breaking films - If, Clockwork Orange, Caligula and then he gets to kill Captain Kirk to boot!

  • @tellmewhatyousawreviews
    @tellmewhatyousawreviews 4 года назад

    Mccdowell on Kubrick : "He doesn't do sympathetic characters that well.."
    This all day!: ruclips.net/video/VCY2nT1YUC0/видео.html

  • @cheekyegg
    @cheekyegg 3 года назад +1

    Viddy well

  • @michaelburke5907
    @michaelburke5907 Год назад

    The gratuitous violence of the film pales compared to the real life violence perpetrated in Britain by punk rockers, /skinheads, soccer hooligans, black gangs and neo Nazis. I mean, it was pretty scary back then.

  • @Charles-216
    @Charles-216 Год назад

    Videei well litle brother,videei well!!!

  • @roberthagan9512
    @roberthagan9512 5 лет назад +1

    After a brilliant start to his career in the Sixties and early Seventies he cashed in and settled for money, dross and ham acting.

    • @giovanna8187
      @giovanna8187 3 года назад +1

      robert hagan And why would he do that? Any guesses? To me, he just dropped out of sight, so I don't know what movies you're referring to.

  • @ppuh6tfrz646
    @ppuh6tfrz646 Год назад

    I much prefer it when McDowell talks like this rather than when he makes his occasional bizarre attempt at an American accent.

  • @ThatGalNoxious
    @ThatGalNoxious 3 года назад

    I knew Malcolm from 3 different things
    A Clockwork Orange
    Rob Zombies Halloween
    Call of Duty Black Ops 3
    Honestly I’ve always loved the way his voice sounds, awesome portraying characters in these movies and especially in call of duty, that was legendary