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combining the protagonist of “A Clockwork Orange” (Alex) with the fictional, experimental process used to cure his violent tendencies (the Ludovico technique). “Pop culture, in general ...
This is the case with A Clockwork Orange ... part of A Clockwork Orange. However, in one scene, Alex is subjected to a type of aversion therapy called the Ludovico Technique.
Despite the book being called A Clockwork Orange, Kubrick initially had the screenplay titled "The Ludovico Technique" after the seminal scene where Alex is subjected to aversion therapy.
Irrespective of the value of his other work, however, A Clockwork Orange ... The Ludovico Method, then, was not a far-fetched invention of Burgess’s but a simplified version—perhaps a reductio ad ...
Come, me droogies, and viddy this list on the horrorshow book and cine, A Clockwork Orange. There’s something ... The controversial Ludovico technique used on Alex to condition him to become ...
I went with “A Clockwork Orange,” because I’d heard so much about it ... Alex ends up in jail and is eventually treated to an experimental testing of the “Ludovico technique” — a two-week treatment ...
“For ‘Black Isn’t Black,’ my crew and I tried to push the concept of a therapy session with the Black Angels as far as we could, and [Clockwork Orange’s] Ludovico technique seemed to fit ...
Clockwork Orange's Ludovico Technique isn't the only thing Chuck and Lost have in common. In this week's episode, while Chuck is given an image test to see how many government secrets are stored ...