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| Patrick Magee | Mr. Alexander | |
| Michael Bates | Chief Guard | |
| Warren Clarke | Dim | |
| John Clive | Stage Actor | |
| Adrienne Corri | Mrs. Alexander | |
| Carl Duering | Dr. Brodsky | |
| Paul Farrell | Tramp | |
| Clive Francis | Lodger | |
| Michael Gover | Prison Governor | |
| Miriam Karlin | Catlady (Miss Weathers) | |
| James Marcus | Georgie | |
| Aubrey Morris | Mr. P. R. Deltoid | |
| Godfrey Quigley | Prison Chaplain | |
| Sheila Raynor | Mum | |
| Madge Ryan | Dr. Branom | |
| John Savident | Conspirator | |
| Anthony Sharp | Minister | |
| Philip Stone | Dad | |
| Pauline Taylor | Psychiatrist | |
| Margaret Tyzack | Conspirator | |
| Steven Berkoff | Det. Const. Tom | |
| Lindsay Campbell | Police Inspector | |
| Michael Tarn | Pete | |
| David Prowse | Julian (Frank Alexander's bodyguard) | |
| Jan Adair | Handmaiden in Bible Fantasy | |
| Gaye Brown | Sophisto (in the Korova Milkbar) | |
| John J. Carney | Detective sergeant | |
| Vivienne Chandler | Handmaiden in Bible Fantasy | |
| Richard Connaught | Billy Boy (gang leader) | |
| Prudence Drage | Handmaiden in Bible fantasy | |
| Carol Drinkwater | Nurse Feeley | |
| Lee Fox | Desk Sergeant | |
| Cheryl Grunwald | Rape Victim in Film | |
| Patrick Magee | Frank Alexander | |
| Malcolm McDowell | Alex DeLarge / Narrator / Prisoner 655321 | |
| Warren Clarke | Dim / Officer Corby | |
| Michael Bates | Chief Guard Barnes | |
| Clive Francis | Joe the Lodger | |
| Miriam Karlin | Catlady | |
| Aubrey Morris | Deltoid |
| Director |
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| Producer | Stanley Kubrick
Bernard Williams |
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| Writer | Stanley Kubrick
Anthony Burgess |
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| Cinematography | John Alcott
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| Musician | Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Edward Elgar Ludwig van Beethoven Gioacchino Rossini |
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Stomping, whomping, stealing, singing, tap-dancing, violating. Derby-topped hooligan Alex (Malcolm McDowell) has a good time - at the tragic expense of others. His journey from amoral punk to brainwashed proper citizen and back again forms the dynamic arc of Stanley Kubrick's future-shock vision of Anthony Burgess' novel. Controversial when first released, A Clockwork Orange won New York Film Critics Best Picture and Director awards and earned four Oscar® nominations, including Best Picture. Its power still entices, shocks and holds us in its grasp. |
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Features
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