14.5.07

Back to the future / volver al futuro (resubido).


Back to the Future.

Filme de ciencia ficción rodada en Estados Unidos. Dirigida por Robert Zemeckis, se estrenó en 1985. La historia se basa en un joven que accidentalmente es enviado al pasado y pone en peligro su propia existencia. Tras el éxito de la película se rodaron dos más, que prolongan la historia original: en 1989 se estrenó Back to the Future II y finalmente en 1990 Back to the Future III, concluyendo la trilogía.

El guión fue escrito por Bob Gale y Robert Zemeckis, mientras que sus protagonistas fueron Michael J. Fox, que interpreta a Marty McFly, y Christopher Lloyd, que interpreta al doctor Emmett Brown. Originalmente, el actor que iba a interpretar a Marty McFly era Eric Stoltz, pero fue despedido. La película recaudó 210 millones de dólares, por lo que se convirtió en la más taquillera de 1985.

El 17 de diciembre de 2002, Universal Home Video puso a la venta la trilogía de Back to the Future en DVD y VHS. La edición española en DVD tuvo que ser reeditada por problemas con el enfoque de algunas escenas, las cuales no respetaban el montaje original.

Sintesis.

La historia transcurre en el año 1985 y cuenta las aventuras del joven de 17 años Marty McFly, que vive con sus padres y sus hermanos en Hill Valley, California. Marty tiene por su mejor amigo al científico "Doc" Emmett Brown, el cual un día le pide a Marty que le ayude con su último invento, que resulta ser una máquina del tiempo fabricada en un automóvil De Lorean. Tras una exitosa prueba del invento, la cual consiste en hacer viajar a "Einstein" (el perro de Doc) un minuto en el futuro, Doc procede a explicarle a Marty cómo funciona la máquina del tiempo, y le muestra el "Condensador de flujo" (En España es Condensador de fluzo, y originalmente se dice Capacitor de flujo), que básicamente es lo que hace posible viajar en el tiempo. Sin embargo el Condensador requiere de una cantidad de energía eléctrica de 1,21 Gigawatts que se generan de un poco de plutonio que Doc le robó a unos terroristas libios. Éstos aparecen de repente en una furgoneta tras enterarse del engaño y le disparan al Doctor Brown enfrente de Marty.

Marty, para escapar, se mete en el De Lorean y por accidente viaja 30 años hacia el pasado, a 1955, la época en que sus padres eran adolescentes. Ahí, Marty descubre que se le ha acabado el plutonio para volver a su época e interfiere con el primer encuentro de sus padres, lo que causará que en el futuro ellos no se conozcan ni se casen, y esto hará que Marty empiece lentamente a ser borrado de la existencia.

Marty sólo cuenta con la ayuda del "Doc" Emmett Brown de 1955, quién al principio cree que el muchacho está loco o es un estafador. Pero al fin, después de que Marty le relata el momento en que Doc imagina por primera vez el condensador de flujo (hecho que acababa de ocurrir ese mismo día, en el baño) acepta la verdad y se compromete a hacerle regresar al futuro. Para poder hacerlo, el Doctor Brown debe buscar una nueva fuente de energía, dado que el plutonio que su "yo" del futuro había obtenido estafando a los terroristas, es imposible de conseguir en 1955. La nueva alternativa de energía es un rayo que caerá sobre la "Torre del Reloj" durante una fuerte tormenta eléctrica; conociendo la hora y fecha exactas del suceso, gracias a un folleto que Marty trajo de 1985.


Debido a la interrupción de Marty en el primer encuentro de sus padres; su madre, en ese entonces una joven, bella y totalmente extrovertida chica, se enamora de él. Y siendo su padre un joven temeroso e incapaz de afrontar sus miedos contra Biff Tannen, las cosas se le complican (todo lo cual podría crear además una paradoja). Pero después de varias alocadas y desesperadas ideas consigue juntarlos de nuevo, asegurando su propio nacimiento y el de sus hermanos.

Después de tantos líos, logra volver a 1985 para descubrir con sorpresa que algunas cosas eran diferentes, como que su amigo Emmett Brown sobrevive al ataque terrorista, o que su familia había prosperado y sus relaciones eran mejores.

Datos Curiosos Acerca
de Este Film.

El centro comercial en el que Doc y Marty prueban la máquina del tiempo se llama "Twin Pines Mall" (Centro comercial Los pinos gemelos), pero cuando al final de la película Marty regresa a 1985 y va corriendo a salvar a Doc, el lugar se llama "Lone Pine Mall" (Centro comercial El pino solitario). Esto se debe a que cuando Marty viaja en el tiempo hasta 1955 y se escapa de la granja de Peabody en el De Lorean, atropella uno de los pinos que estaba plantado en la zona. Así que ese pino era uno de los dos por los cuales el centro comercial obtuvo su nombre.

En una escena eliminada de la película, el Doc de 1955 encuentra la maleta que el Doc de 1985 había dejado en el maletero del De Lorean con cosas de 1985, como su ropa interior, un secador de pelo y una revista "Playboy" para el viaje que iba a hacer al futuro antes de que lo mataran.

El vagabundo que está acostado en el banco de la plaza de Hill Valley en 1985 la noche que Marty regresa, es el alcalde de Hill Valley en 1955, Red Thomas.

El actor que interpretaba a George McFly (Crispin Glover) fue reemplazado por Jeffrey Weissman en la segunda y la tercera parte, ya que Glover tuvo problemas y discusiones con los directores (en la grabación de la primera parte de la trilogía, éste solía discutir con los directores acerca de la personalidad de su personaje). Como Gale y Zemeckis no contaban con esto, debieron improvisar en la segunda parte para poner lo menos posible a George McFly, y así desarrollaron lo restante (por lo tanto, si Crispin Glover hubiera aceptado el papel, la segunda y la tercera parte serían distintas).

En uno de los primeros borradores de la película, Hill Valley se llamaba "Elmdale" y Marty era un falsificador de vídeos y el lugar donde se reúnen para ver el De Lorean por primera vez se llamaba "Three Pines Mall" (Centro comercial Los 3 pinos) y no "Twin Pines Mall" (Centro comercial Los pinos gemelos).

El set de producción de Hill Valley fue quemado intencionadamente por un guardia de seguridad, y el set de Hill Valley de 1885 se incendió a causa de un rayo.

El hijo de Peabody se llama Sherman y los nombres de ambos fueron sacados de un chico y su perro que viajaban en el tiempo en una película de 1961 llamada "Bullwinckle Show".

El programa que mira la familia de Lorraine y Marty mientras cenan se llama "The Honeymooners", pero el episodio que ellos miran no se emitió hasta diciembre de 1955. Además se vio a las 8:30 pm de Nueva York, lo que significa que en California (donde queda Hill Valley) se vio a las 5:30, lo que significa que es imposible que lo vean mientras cenan (a menos que cenen a esa hora y que en Hill Valley el sol se ponga a las 5 de la tarde).

En la casa del Doc de 1955, él escucha decir a su yo de 1985 en el vídeo que para hacer que el De Lorean viaje por el tiempo hace falta una descarga de 1,21 gigowatts, luego Doc exclama que es imposible producir una descarga eléctrica de 1,21 gigowatts, a lo que Marty pregunta: ¿Qué diablos es un gigowatt?, esta pregunta no es tan errada después de todo, ya que la palabra gigowatts no existe, en realidad se escribe gigawatts, pero los que escribieron los diálogos (Bob Gale y Robert Zemeckis) la escribieron así y así se pronuncia en todo el tiempo (en las versiones de Hispanoamérica).

Cuando Marty va a la casa de George McFly de noche, vestido con su traje antirradiación diciendo que era Darth Vader del planeta "Vulcano" (haciendo honor a Star Wars y Star Trek) para convencerlo de que invitase a Lorraine a ir al baile de la escuela ("The enchantment under the sea" o "El encantamiento bajo el mar"), lleva un secador de pelo en el cinturón que sacó de la maleta que Doc puso en 1985 en el De Lorean para su viaje al futuro antes de que lo mataran. En esta parte también hay otra parte cortada, que es cuando Marty para volver a dormir a George (lo había despertado con el sonido de la guitarra de Van Halen que tocó especialmente para la película) le pone en la cara un pañuelo con cloroformo, y es por eso que al día siguiente, cuando Marty le pregunta qué estuvo haciendo él le responde -"Me quedé dormido"-. En esta misma escena, se logra ver un error de secuencia de la película, Marty "ataca" a George, se logra ver en el principio el secador de pelo, sin embargo, cuando le arremete nuevamente con la música de Van Hallen, el secador "misteriosamente" no aparece, para ya la tercera escena que se muestra a Marty, el secador está de nuevo en su posición.

En la adaptación a la novela de la película, Marty provoca que salte la alarma contra incendios del colegio con un papel y una lupa para escapar de la detención que le había impuesto el Sr. Strickland por llegar tarde y así llegar a tiempo a la batalla de las bandas.

La canción que Marty y su banda (los "Pinheads") empiezan a tocar es una versión instrumental de una canción que aparece al principio de la película que se llama "The Power of Love" de Huey Lewis and the News. El señor del juzgado que dice por megáfono mientras tocan "¡Suficiente, lo siento chicos es demasiado ruidoso!" es Huey Lewis disfrazado. Huey Lewis and the News también toca la canción que se escucha en el radio-reloj despertador de Marty, "Back in Time", la mañana siguiente a primer regreso a 1985. Ambas canciones las compuso Lewis para la película; al principio sería sólo una (primero hizo "Back in time"), pero compuso la siguiente ya que los directores buscaban otro tipo de música ("The Power of Love").

Cuando Marty y George están caminando por la escuela hay un cartel que dice "Bulldogs vs. Indians" Bulldogs e Indians son los nombres de unos equipos de fútbol americano donde jugó el hijo de Bob Gale.


Los amigos de Biff en 1955 se llaman Skinhead, Match y 3D. Uno de estos actores iba a interpretar el papel de Tannen, pero los directores optaron por Thomas F. Wilson cuando lo conocieron.

Cuando Marty estaba tocando "Johnny B. Goode" en el baile del colegio, Marvin Berry (el líder de la banda) llama por teléfono a alguien llamado Chuck diciéndole que había encontrado el nuevo sonido que él había estado buscando, y a continuación le hace escuchar "Johnny B. Goode". Por supuesto "Chuck" no es otro que Chuck Berry, que escribió y cantó "Johnny B. Goode".

Las zapatillas que usa el Doc de 1955 son con cierre de velcro, pero es imposible que existiesen en 1955 ya que el cierre de velcro no se inventará hasta los años 60. Este fallo tiene una explicación plausible, las zapatillas se encontraban en la maleta que el Doc de 1985 guardó en el maletero del De Lorean, se puede ver en una escena eliminada que el Doc de 1955 abre el maletero del De Lorean.

El diario de Hill Valley se llama "Hill Valley Telegraph" (El telégrafo de Hill Valley).

En la escuela de Marty en 1985 hay un graffiti en una de sus paredes que dice "Bob", en alusión a Bob Gale, creador (junto a Robert Zemeckis).

En la furgoneta de Doc en 1985 se lee en el costado "Dr. Emmet L. Brown Enterprises 24 h. Scientific Services" (Compañías Dr. Emmet L. Brown 24 h. Servicios Científicos).

En la matrícula del De Lorean pone: OUTATIME (fuera de tiempo).

Los guionistas y directores de "Back to the Future" (Gale y Zemeckis) escribieron el guión de la primera película años antes de filmarla, pero ningún estudio les daba la aprobación, hasta que, después de mucho tiempo, lo obtuvieron de la mano de Universal Studios.

Al realizar la primera parte, no se contaba con el éxito taquillero obtenido (de hecho, los directores rezaban por recuperar gastos), por lo que la segunda y la tercera parte no estaban planeadas al hacer la primera. 

Anecdóticamente, los guionistas cuentan que, de haber sabido que "Back to the Future" tendría secuelas, no hubieran metido a Jennifer en el De Lorean al final de la primera parte; y que la excusa del final de viajar al futuro porque "tus hijos tendrán problemas" era a modo de chiste (tal vez no hubiera tenido ese final la primera parte si los guionistas y directores hubieran sabido que harían dos películas más).

Cuando Marty viaja a 1955 y se estrella en el granero, la familia Peabody va a ver que pasa, y cuando ven el coche no lo reconocen y piensan que es un OVNI, aunque en esa época hay coches, pero no con ese diseño de carrocería y apertura de puertas.

Cuando Marty se despierta en casa de sus abuelos y se encuentra a su madre de 1955, ella piensa que se llama Calvin Klein, por la marca bordada en sus calzoncillos. En el doblaje para España se le rebautizó como Levis Strauss.

En 1955, mientras el Doctor Brown instala el cable que recibirá el rayo, aparece un policia preguntandole que hace, a lo que él responde que es un experimento para la medición del clima. El policía le pregunta si tiene permiso a lo que el Doctor le dice que sí. 

En ese momento aparece en primer plano Marty, que momentos antes había escrito la carta que le cuenta al Doctor que iban a dispararle en 1985, y la deposita en el bolsillo de su saco, mientras el Doc habla con el policía en el fondo. Pero si vemos la escena que se desarrolla atrás, podemos ver que mientras el Doctor Brown le 'da el permiso', lo que está haciendo en realidad es sacar dinero de su billetera, sobornando al policía para que se vaya.

Back to the Future
dir. Robert Zemeckis / Bob Gale
1985


Elaborado por 
Eliel González / Danielevna kuryakov.

20.4.07

Zeebo: Una consola tentativa.


Una firma emergente llamada Zeebo Inc. planea lanzar una consola de videojuegos futurista en Brasil el mes próximo por 199 dólares y más tarde este año en otros países por 179. Fue desarrollada utilizando la tecnología de teléfonos celulares de Qualcomm Inc., la empresa de San Diego conocida por sus microcircuitos de teléfonos móviles. 

La unidad de Zeebo es liviana y un poquito más grande que la Wii de Nintendo. Pero en vez de manejar videojuegos en discos, Zeebo utilizará juegos cargados de manera digital, distribuidos por medio de redes de teléfonos celulares a los que los jugadores ni siquiera tienen que suscribirse. 

La consola no tiene el propósito de competir directamente con los más recientes mecanismos poderosos como PlayStation 3 de Sony Corp., Xbox 360 de Microsoft o Wii. 

En cambio, dijo el director general de Zeebo, John Rizzo, está destinada a los consumidores en los mercados emergentes como Brasil, India, China y naciones de Europa oriental que por lo general no pueden costear las consolas más avanzadas o los juegos que utilizan. En muchas de esas naciones el servicio de teléfono celular está más disponible y es más barato que la banda ancha alámbrica. 

Zeebo, presentada el lunes en la Conferencia de Creadores de Juegos en San Francisco, se conecta con cualquier televisor y usa una fracción de electricidad de la que necesitan las consolas más avanzadas. Sus baterías pueden ser recargadas con lo que luce como un cargador común de teléfonos celulares. 

La capacidad tecnológica de Zeebo está a mitad de camino entre la PlayStation original, lanzada en 1994, y su continuación del 2000, la PlayStation 2. 

Para los aficionados estadounidenses no es motivo de particular entusiasmo, pero Rizzo dijo que la gran mayoría del mercado al que está destinada no ha disfrutado de un videojuego moderno ultrarrealista. En Brasil, por ejemplo, un sistema de hace dos décadas, el Mega Drive (llamado Sega Genesis en Estados Unidos) todavía se vende bien, observó Reinaldo Normand, vicepresidente de desarrollo de negocios y licencias de Zeebo. 

Texto por Eliel González.

15.4.07

Audition (resubido).


Una realidad hecha pesadilla.

Quizá ningún otro realizador actual sea más prolífico que el japonés Takashi Miike (Osaka, 1960), que en menos de tres lustros ya lleva realizados cerca de sesenta films, para el cine, el video y la televisión. Completamente ignorado en Occidente hasta hace apenas tres años, cuando lo dio a conocer el Festival de Rotterdam, el cine de Miike ha venido desbordando desde entonces todo el circuito de festivales internacionales, entre ellos el de Cine Independiente de Buenos Aires, que exhibió un puñado de sus últimos films, a cual más desconcertante y diferente del otro, con variantes que van desde el cine de yakuzas hasta una comedia musical excéntrica. Pero su carta de presentación internacional, el título con el que se asocia inseparablemente su nombre, ha sido sobre todo uno: Audition, que ahora llega a un devaluado estreno porteño en una única sala, en formato DVD.

No es, por cierto, la mejor de las condiciones para acercarse por primera vez al ecléctico universo de Miike, pero aun así vale la pena atravesar la experiencia de Audition, un film inquietante y perturbador como pocos, que revela a un cineasta sin prejuicios, capaz de manejarse simultáneamente con códigos de distintos géneros y de hacer, como en este caso, una película romántica que es a la vez un meticuloso descenso a los infiernos, un film de terror que llega a ser, hacia el final, de visión casi intolerable.

Es preferible no adelantar demasiado la trama de Audition para no arruinar el valor de su metódica, precisa construcción, pero se puede contar que el protagonista Aoyama (Ryo Ishibashi, un actor popular en el cine y la TV japonesa) es viudo y vive sumido en el recuerdo de su esposa muerta, un letargo del que le parece imposible despertar. Su hijo adolescente le sugiere que vuelva a rehacer su vida, pero Aoyama no sabe cómo. Al fin y al cabo, él no es de esos que ponen un aviso en los diarios. Hasta que un productor amigo, que trabaja con él en la televisión, le propone una idea. ¿Por qué no convocar a una “audición”, esa prueba con la que la gente de cine lleva a cabo el proceso de selección de actores y actrices? La película puede llegar a hacerse o no, pero en todo caso es una excusa para que Aoyoma –que pretende una mujer “bella, culta y obediente”– encuentre pareja. El proyecto le produce cierto escozor, pero no tiene tiempo de elaborar sus reparos morales, porque caerá seducido por Asami (Eihi Shiina), una chica de 24 años, de aspecto muy sensible y que se presenta a la prueba con un aire tan sumiso como desvalido.

La parsimonia con que Miike va desarrollando esta relación, la respiración serena y pausada del film, van haciendo crecer no sólo la pasión de Aoyama por la chica. Junto a ella, progresa también la incomodidad del espectador, que no recibe mucha más información que el protagonista (no se sabe nada de Asami y los pocos datos que dio a sus entrevistadores no son ciertos) pero que va advirtiendo la inversión de los roles de poder entre ambos. Si una “audición” suele ser una situación humillante para una actriz, un estado de indefensión en el que puede llegar a sufrir las preguntas más indiscretas y personales de sus productores, Asami altera esa relación de opuestos al ir colocando al productor Aoyama en una posición de completa dependencia con respecto a su figura esquiva, inasible, vestida siempre de blanco, como si fuera una aparición, un fantasma.

Miike maneja con mano maestra este movimiento pendular y, de manera imperceptible, va atravesando el portal en donde el realismo deja su lugar al fantástico. Un mundo oscuro, onírico, violento, vicioso se va apoderando de la banalidad cotidiana de Aoyama. La cámara –que siempre parece estar en el lugar exacto, como si no hubiera otro– también se desequilibra y se torna difícil distinguir entre la subjetividad del protagonista y su realidad exterior. ¿Podrá ser Asami la materialización tanto de sus deseos como de sus miedos y sus culpas? ¿Estará hecha de la materia de los sueños? Esas preguntas parecen quedar sin respuesta, potenciando la ambigüedad de un film que –sin alardear de ello, como al pasar– pone en cuestión tanto el machismo de la sociedad japonesa como la idea romántica del amor absoluto.

por Monteagudo.

Audition / Oodishon
dir.: Takashi Miike
2000

30.3.07

Memories (resubido).


Memories de Katsuhiro Otomo consta de tres historias maravillosas, cada una contada con un estilo distinto pero siempre sorprendente.

Rosa Magnética.
Está basada en un manga de Otomo, en el que dos astronautas, siguiendo una señal de auxilio, son arrastrados al mundo fantástico creado por los recuerdos de una mujer.

Bomba Fétida.
Es la historia de un joven químico que se transforma por accidente en un arma biológica imparable que se encamina directamente a Tokyo.

Carne de Cañón.
Describe un día en la vida de una ciudad cuya única razón de ser es lanzar cañonazos a un enemigo desconocido.

Memories
dir. Katsuhiro Otomo
1995

por Eliel González.

17.3.07

Dr. Seuss y sus obras (resubido).


DR. SEUSS

Theodor Seuss Geisel (Springfield, Massachusetts, 2 de marzo de 1904 – San Diego, California, 24 de septiembre de 1991) fue un escritor estadounidense y caricaturista, más extensamente conocido por sus libros infantiles escritos bajo su seudónimo, Dr. Seuss. Ha publicado más de 60 libros para niños, que a menudo se caracterizan por sus personajes imaginativos, rimas y el uso frecuente del contador de trisílabas.

Dr. Seuss escribió libros tan populares como Hop on Pop, Cómo el Grinch robo la Navidad ("How The Grinch Stole Christmas"), The Lorax y El gato garabato ("The Cat in the Hat"). Usando cuentos e imágenes surrealistas, las obras de Seuss despiertan la imaginación de los lectores a la vez que tratan temas esenciales como el deterioro del medio ambiente o la adquisición de la propia identidad. El constante juego de palabras convierte sus textos en obras casi intraducibles.

En el año 1984 recibió una mención especial del premio Pulitzer, por su contribución a la literatura infantil e incluso Google Le condecoró un Doodle Especial.

Su Escritura en Silabas Métricas.

Dr. Seuss escribió la mayoría de sus libros en forma de rimas, la teoría métrica que utilizaba consistía de cuatro unidades rítmicas, estilo similar al de Lord Byron y otros grandes poetas. Estos versos y su interesante ritmo son apreciables únicamente en el idioma original inglés, aunque se han realizado traducciones que intentan preservar el estilo en verso del autor AngelitX.


Vida y Obras.

Theodor Seuss Geisel nació el 2 de marzo de 1904 en Springfield, Massachusetts, hijo de Henrietta Seuss y Theodor P. Geisel. También tuvo dos hermanas. Su padre fue un superintendente de parques, estaba encargado del Forest Park, en Springfield, un parque enorme que incluía dentro de sus límites un zoológico y estaba ubicado a tres cuadras de una librería. Acudió a la Universidad de Darthmouth y fue miembro de la hermandad Sigma Phi Epsilonin, también se unió al diario de la universidad y llegó a ocupar el cargo de editor en jefe.

Sin embargo, cuando las autoridades de la institución descubrieron una fiesta clandestina organizada por Theodor durante un período de ley seca, decidieron que el joven Geisel debía renunciar a todas sus actividades extracurriculares, al verse privado de su puesto como editor buscó la forma de continuar participando en la redacción del diario de su universidad, el Darthmouth Jack-O-Lantern, así que empezó a firmar sus textos como “Seuss”.

Geisel era miembro de una familia emigrante de Alemania por lo que el nombre Seuss se pronunciaría en realidad “zoiz”, sin embargo en Estados Unidos popularizaron la pronunciación “seus” y es la pronunciación aceptada casi universalmente al referirse al nombre de este escritor.

Entró luego a la Universidad Lincoln, en Oxford, Inglaterra, buscando un doctorado en literatura. En Oxford conoció a Helen Palmer Geisel, con quien contrajo matrimonio en 1927, finalmente regresó a Estados Unidos sin haber obtenido el título. El “Dr.” en su seudónimo es un tributo a los deseos de su padre quien añoraba que su hijo obtenga un doctorado en Oxford.

Empezó a enviar artículos humorísticos a medios escritos como Judge, The Saturday Evening Post, Life, Vanity Fair y Liberty. Además gozó de fama nacional gracias a una serie de avisos publicitarios que creó para el insecticida Flit.

Geisel se mantuvo económicamente y a su esposa durante la Gran Depresión haciendo dibujos publicitarios para General Electric, NBC y otras compañías. Además escribió y dibujó una caricatura de corta vida llamada Hejji, en 1935.

En 1937, mientras Seuss regresaba de Europa en un viaje marítimo, el ritmo del motor del barco inspiró el poema que se convirtió luego en su primer libro, Y pensar que lo vi en Mulberry Street. Seuss escribió tres libros infantiles más antes de que empezara la Segunda Guerra Mundial, dos de los cuales se encuentran redactados en prosa, cosa atípica en los textos de Seuss.

Al empezar la Segunda Guerra , Dr. Seuss se inclinó por las caricaturas de temática política, dibujó más de 400 tiras en dos años como caricaturista editorial para el PM, un periódico izquierdista de Nueva York.

Estas caricaturas luego publicadas en el libro Dr. Seuss va a la Guerra se oponían a Hitler y Mussolini y eran de alto contenido crítico. Otras caricaturas criticaban el racismo ante los judíos y negros y a los efectos nocivos del racismo en tiempos de guerra. Sus caricaturas apoyaban al Presidente Roosevelt y su manejo de la guerra, y atacaban frecuentemente al congreso, a la prensa y a otros por las críticas a Roosevelt, por las críticas ante la ayuda a la Unión Soviética, la investigación de los sospechosos de comunismo y demás ofensas que consideraba contribuían a la desunión del país.

En 1942, Dr. Seuss dirigió sus energías al apoyo directo a los esfuerzos de los Estados Unidos ante la guerra, primero trabajó dibujando posters para el Departamento del Tesoro y la Junta de Producciones de Guerra. Luego, en 1943, se unió a las Fuerzas Armadas y fue comandante del Departamento de Animación de la Primera Unidad de Películas de las Fuerzas Armadas de los Estados Unidos, allí escribió films que incluyeron 

Tu trabajo en Alemania, una película corta de 1945 acerca de la paz en Europa luego de la guerra, Diseño para Muerte, un estudio de la cultura japonesa que ganó un premio de la Academia a Mejor Documental en 1947, y el Soldado Snafu, una serie de films sobre el entrenamiento de la armada. Mientras formó parte de las Fuerzas Armadas se lo premió con la Legión del Mérito. Otras películas de corte no militar realizadas por Seuss en la época también tuvieron gran acogida, Gerald Mc Boing Boing se llevó el premio de la Academia al mejor corto animado en el año de 1950.

Después de la Guerra el Dr. Seuss y su esposa se mudaron a La Jolla, California. Regresó a trabajar en libros infantiles y escribió lo que muchos consideran sus mejores trabajos, incluyendo títulos como: If I ran the Zoo (Si yo dirigiera el Zoológico,1950), Scrambled Eggs Super! (¡Super Huevos Revueltos! 1953), On Beyond Zebra! (¡Más allá cebra! 1955), If I ran the Circus (Si yo dirigiera el circo, 1956) y How the Grinch Stole Christmas (Cómo el Grinch se robó la Navidad, 1957).

Al mismo tiempo, ocurrió algo que influenció mucho el trabajo posterior de Seuss. En mayo de 1954, la revista Life publicó un reportaje acerca de cómo los niños en las escuelas no estaban aprendiendo a leer correctamente debido a que sus libros eran aburridos. Entonces el publicista de Seuss hizo una lista de 400 palabras que consideró importantes, luego le pidió a Dr. Seuss redujera esta lista a 250 palabras y que escriba un libro usando únicamente estas palabras. Nueve meses después, Seuss, utilizando 220 de las palabras que le fueron dadas completo The Cat in the Hat (El gato en el sombrero).

El libro mantuvo los dibujos característicos de Seuss, la rima y todo el poder imaginativo de los trabajos anteriores de Dr. Seuss pero debido a su simple vocabulario podía ser disfrutado por lectores principiantes. Existe el rumor de que en 1960, Bennett Cerf apostó a Dr. Seuss $50 a que no podría escribir un libro usando solo cincuenta palabras. El resultado de tal apuesta es supuestamente Green Eggs and Ham (Huevos verdes y jamón), el rumor indica además que Cerf nunca le pagó los $50 a Dr. Seuss pero esto no ha sido comprobado. Estos libros alcanzaron un significativo éxito mundial y hasta el día de hoy son muy populares.


Dr. Seuss siguió escribiendo muchos otros libros infantiles, tanto en su nuevo estilo de vocabulario simplificado como en su antiguo y más elaborado estilo. Además en algunas ocasiones Seuss escribió también para adultos usando el mismo estilo de rimas y dibujos, tales fueron: The Seven Lady Godivas (Las siete Lady Godivas); Oh, The Places You'll Go! (¡Ah, los lugares a los que irás!); y You're Only Old Once (Sólo se es viejo una vez).

Durante una difícil enfermedad la esposa de Dr. Seuss, Helen Palmer Geisel se suicidó el 23 de octubre de 1967. Seuss se casó el año siguiente con Audrey Stone Dimond. Dr. Seuss falleció luego de varios años de enfermedad en La Jolla, California, el 24 de septiembre de 1991. En el 2002 el Jardín Nacional de Esculturas del Dr. Seuss fue inaugurado en su ciudad natal, Springfield, Massachussets, el jardín tiene varias estatuas de Dr. Seuss y de muchos de sus personajes. A pesar de haber dedicado gran parte de su vida a escribir libros para niños Dr. Seuss nunca tuvo hijos.

Dibujos.

Los primeros trabajos de Seuss a menudo empleaban la sombra y textura de los trazos a lápiz o de acuarelas, pero en los libros infantiles del periodo de posguerra empleaba generalmente trazos hechos a base de pluma y tinta, normalmente solo usaba blanco y negro para sus dibujos, a veces uno o dos colores extra. Sus libros más tardíos como El Lorax, tuvieron más colores.
Las figuras de Seuss son a menudo redondeadas y de hombros algo caídos. También casi todos los edificios o aparatos mecánicos que dibujó Dr. Seuss evitaban las líneas rectas, ninguna caricatura de Dr. Seuss tiene una sola línea recta a pesar de que dicho objeto tenga piezas rectas en la realidad. Seuss disfrutaba dibujar objetos muy elaborados arquitectónicamente, su amplia gama de palacios, rampas, plataformas y escaleras eléctricas están entre las más recordadas de sus creaciones.

Adaptaciones.

Durante la mayor parte de su carrera Dr. Seus se rehusó a que sus personajes tuvieran vida fuera de los libros. Sin embargo, permitió la creación de algunos dibujos animados, un arte en el cual ya tenía algo de experiencia gracias sus producciones durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
La primera adaptación de sus dibujos fue Horton Hatches the Egg (Horton empolla el huevo) en 1942, fue animada por Warner Brothers, el mismo estudio con el que trabajó al hacer Soldado Snafu y dirigido por Robert Clampett, Horton fue presentado como parte de los Looney Tunes e incluía una serie de bromas que no estaban en la versión original de la historia.

En 1959, autorizó el Dr. Seus (Geisel Revell), a conocida empresa de modelos de plástico para hacer una serie de "animales" que se quebraban así en lugar de ser pegadas podrían ser montadas, desmontadas y montadas de nuevo "en miles" de maneras. La serie se llamó "El Zoológico del Dr. Seuss " ("Dr. Seuss Zoo") e incluyó a Gowdy the Dowdy Grackle, Norval the Bashful Blinket, Tingo the Noodle Topped Stroodle and Roscoe the Many Footed Lion. Las partes basicas del cuerpo son las mismas y todas eran intercambiables, por lo que fue posible para los niños de combinar partes de diferentes caracteres en formas esencialmente ilimitado en la creación de sus propios personajes animales (Revell alentado por la venta de Gowdy, Norval y Tingo juntos en un " Set de regalo ", así como en forma individual). Revell también hizo una cola convencional junto al "kit de principiantes" de The Cat in the Hat.


En 1966 Seuss autorizó al eminente caricaturista Chuck Jones, su amigo y antiguo colega de guerra a hacer una versión animada de Cómo el Grinch se robó la Navidad. Dr. Seuss aparece en los créditos como Ted Geisel, coproductor. Esta caricatura fue muy fiel a la versión original y es considerada un clásico hasta nuestros días, es parte del catálogo de películas navideñas que se muestran cada año en televisión.

De 1971 a 1982, el Dr. Seuss (Geisel) escribió siete especiales de televisión, que fueron producidos por Enterprises DePatie-Freleng y al aire en CBS: The Cat in the Hat (1971), El Lorax (1972), el Dr. Seuss on the Loose (1973), The Hoober-Bloob Highway (1975), Halloween is Grinch Night (1977), Pontoffel Pock, Where Are You? (1980), and The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the Hat (1982). Varios de estos especiales fueron nominados y ganó varios premios Emmy.

Un cortometraje Soviético en pintura-en-vidrio-animada llamado Welcome (Bienvenido) ( una adaptación de Thidwick el Alce de gran corazón) se hizo en 1986. La última adaptación de las obras del Dr. Seuss (Geisel) antes de su muerte fue La Batalla de libros de Mantequilla (The Butter Battle Book), un especial de televisión basado en el libro del mismo nombre, dirigida por la leyenda de animación para adultos Ralph Bakshi. él mismo Geisel llama al especial "la más fiel adaptación de su obra."

Hacia el ocaso de su vida Seuss suavizó su política y permitió la realización de más series animadas y juguetes basados en sus personajes, por lo general de El Gato y El Grinch.
Cuando Seuss falleció a causa de cáncer en 1991 los derechos de sus creaciones pasaron a manos de su viuda Audrey Geisel quien aprobó una versión con actores reales de El grinch que se robó la Navidad protagonizada por Jim Carrey. También ha permitido la creación de musicales para Broadway uno llamado Seussical y una versión de The Grinch.

En el 2003 El Gato, fue llevada a la pantalla grande protagonizada por Mike Myers, a Audrey Geisel no le agradó esta versión cinematográfica y afirmó que no se harían más adaptaciones al cine con actores reales de ningún libro de Dr. Seuss.

Obras.

Un pez, dos peces, pez rojo, pez azul
El Gato Garabato
¡Los pensamientos que puedes pensar!
Trabalenguas de mareo
Huevos verdes con jamón
El Lórax
Oh, cuán lejos llegarás
Los 500 sombreros de Bartolomé Cubbins
¡Cómo El Grinch robó la Navidad!
El gato con sombrero viene de nuevo
Horton y el Mundo de los Quién
Hay un Molillo en mi bolsillo
Yo puedo leer con mis ojos cerrados

Se han hecho versiones animadas de tres de sus obras: How The Grinch Stole Christmas (El Grinch), The Cat in the Hat (El gato garabato) y ¡Horton hears a who! (Horton y el Mundo de los Quién).

2.3.07

Mi playlist de los 80's.


THE REAL THING you to me are everything
BOBBY BROWN on our own
THE DOOBIE BROTHERS what a fool believes
GQ disco nights
CHUCK MANGIONE feels so good
FALCO der kommissar
BACCARA yes sir, i can boogie
A FLOCK OF SEAGULLS i ran
DR. HOOK AND THE MEDICINE SHOW when you are in love with a beautiful woman
CAPTAIN & TENNILLE do that to me one more time
THE O'JAYS love train

EARTH, WIND AND FIRE boogie wonderland
CHRISTOPHER CROSS sailing
PSYCHEDELIC FURS love my way
BILLY IDOL white wedding
10CC i'm not in love
RICK JAMES super freak
BERLIN take my breath away
THE POINTER SISTERS i'm so excited
BARRY WHITE just the way you are
THE KNACK my sherona

DAVID SOUL don't give on us
BILLY SQUIRE rock me tonight
YVONNE ELLIMAN if i can't have you
PLAYER baby come back
BARRY MANILOW mandy
CHEAP TRICK i want you to want me
GARY NUMAN cars
THE HOLLIES the air that i breathe
KATRINA AND THE WAVES walking on sunshine
CHRIS DEBURGH lady in red
SPANDAU BALLET true

WHAM! careless whisper
PEACHES AND HERB shake your groove thing
THE HUES CORPORATION rock the boat
MADNESS our house
EURYTHMICS sweet dreams
HEATWAVE boogie nights
OTTAWAN hands up baby
JOHN PAUL YOUNG love is in the air
MUNGO PERRY in the summertime
THE DOOBIE BROTHERS long train runnin'
LIONEL RICHIE hello

TRACY CHAPMAN baby, can i hold you
VAN HALEN jump
KANSAS dust in the wind
RITA COOLIDGE higher and higher
INFORMATION SOCIETY what's on your mind
GLORIA GAYNOR i will survive
DEAD OR ALIVE you spin me right round
JUICE NEWTON it's a heartache
THELMA HOUSTON don't leave me this way
MADONNA like a virgen

TONI BASIL mickey
KC AND THE SUNSHINE BAND get down tonight
BONNIE POINTER heaven must have sent you
THE EAGLES new kid in town
ANDREA TRUE CONNECTION more, more, more
THE VAPORS turning japanese
GILBERT O'SULLIVAN alone again, naturally
BLONDIE heart of glass
THE THREE DEGREES when will i see you again
BILLY JOEL honesty

BONEY M. by the rivers on babylon
FLYING LIZARDS money, that's what i want
SOFT CELL tainted love
ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA last train to london
THE ROMANTICS talking in your sleep
SUICIDE MACHINES what i like about you
LTD FEATURING JEFFREY OSBORNE back in love again
EXTREME more than words
DEVO whip it
HALL AND OATES you make my dreams come true

THE CARS you might think
STYX mr. roboto
MEN AT WORK who can it be now
ERIC CLAPTON tears in heaven
TACO puttin' on the ritz
EVELYN CHAMPAGNE KING shame
LISA LOEB stay
STEVIE WONDER sir duke
YELLO oh yeah
TAVARES heaven must be missing an angel

JUICE NEWTON angel on the morning
NAZARETH love hurts
SALT N PEPA push it
MEN WITHOUT HATS the safety dance
GEORGE McGRAE rock your baby
PETER FRAMPTON baby, i love your way
RIGHT SAID FRED i'm too sexy
KYLIE MINOGUE locomotion
DEXYS MIDNIGHT RUNNERS come on eileen
ANITA WARD ring my bell

THE NEW SEEKERS i'd like to teach the world to sing
MICHAEL SEMBELLO maniac
SILVER CONVENTION get up and boogie
JOURNEY open arms
THE COMMODORES brick house
BOW WOW WOW i want candy
CHRIS ISAAK wicked game
LIPPS, INC funkytown
CARL DOUGLAS kung fu fighting
SIMPLE MINDS if you leave

THE B-52'S private idaho
TOTO hold the line
VILLAGE PEOPLE macho man
KOOL AND THE GANG celebration
THE CARPENTERS close to you (they long to be)
BONNIE TYLER total eclipse of the heart
MORRIS ALBERT feelings
CHERYL LYNN got to be real
THE OUTFIELD your love
VICKI SUE ROBINSON turn the beat around
A-HA take on me

SINNEAD O'C0NNOR nothing compares 2 u
TERRY JACKS seasons in the sun
AMBROSIA how much i feel
CHIC le freak
BUGGLES video killed the radio star
FOXY get off
SILVER CONVENTION fly robin fly
MICHAEL JACKSON billie jean
FOREIGNER i want to know what love is
WILD CHERRY play that funky music

PEACHES AND HERB reunited
THOMPSON TWINS hold me now
KOOL AND THE GANG ladie's night
ALICE BRIDGES in the nightlife
VAN McCOY the hustle
EARTH, WIND AND FIRE september
ABBA mamma mia
PETER SALETT heart of mine
TEARS FOR FEARS shout
PATRICK HERNANDEZ born to be alive

ANNIE LENNOX no more "i love you's"
PRINCE kiss
ANDY GIBB i want to be your everything
EAGLES new kid in town
DR. HOOK AND THE MEDICINE SHOW sharing the night together
BALTIMORA tarzan boy
RUPERT HOLMES escape (the piña colada song)
BANGLES walk like a egypcian
THE CURE boys don't cry
AIR SUPPLY making love out of nothing at all
THE POLICE every breathe you take

SCORPIONS still loving you
ROBERTA FLACK killing me softly
THE SMITHS this charming man
BEE GEES how deep is your love
R.E.M. orange crush
JOY DIVISION love will tear us apart
THE CLASH rock the casbah
THE RAMONES i wanna be sedated
JOHN LENNNON imagine
QUEEN bohemian rapsody
ROLLING STONES wild horses

DAVID BOWIE china girl
THOMAS DOLBY she blinded me with science
PIXIES where is my mind?
AC/DC you shock me all night long
KISS rock and roll all night
U2 two hearts beat as a one
PINK FLOYD comfortably numb
NEW ORDER bizarre love triangle
DEPECHE MODE personal jesus

Lista elaborada por Eliel González.

21.2.07

Stone Roses (resubido).


La banda que lo cambio todo.

The Stone Roses fue una banda originaria de Manchester, Inglaterra, la más representativa del movimiento Madchester de finales de los '80. Es uno de los grupos que más influyó a bandas de la escena Britpop en los '90.

Su música se caracteriza por tener atractivas melodías 'beatlescas' combinadas al sonido dance beat de la época. Con apenas un par de singles obtuvieron una aureola de culto y la prensa especializada los trató con reverencia. La banda sólo llegó a editar dos discos (un homónimo (The Stone Roses) en 1989 y un segundo disco, Second Coming en 1994) antes de separarse por problemas entre sus integrantes.

Historia.

La banda se formó a principios de los '80 con Ian Brown (voces), John Squire (guitarra solista), Alan Wren, alias "Reni" (batería), Pete Garner (bajo) y Andy Couzens (guitarra rítmica). Esta formación realizaría su primer concierto masivo en la Universidad de Manchester en 1985 y publicaría su primer single, el doble cara A "So Young/Tell Me". En 1986, el guitarrista Andy Counzens renuncia a la banda por problemas con el mánager Gareth Evans. En agosto de 1987 se marcharía el bajista Peter Garner, siendo reemplazado por Gary Mounfield, alias "Mani". Con la formación definitiva la banda publicó el single "Elephant Stone".

En 1989, la banda publicaría el disco The Stone Roses. Este trabajo fue muy bien recibido por la crítica especializada y de inmediato fue considerado como uno de los mejores álbumes británicos de todos los tiempos,ganando cuatro premios en los NME Awards en las categorías banda del año, mejor banda nueva, single del año por "Fool's Gold" y álbum del año.

A fines de 1994 se publica Second Coming, un trabajo largamente demorado por problemas legales con la discográfica Silvertone. El trabajo es más irregular pero con una producción brillante y esmerada (tiene por ejemplo decenas de "canciones" en blanco) con ráfagas de solidez aplastante.

En 1995 el baterista Reni sale voluntariamente de la banda y el 1 de abril de 1996 renunciaría el guitarrista John Squire. Squire no soportó las discusiones con el resto de sus compañeros (en especial con Brown). A su reemplazo llegó el guitarrista de sesión Aziz Ibrahim. Luego de unos shows desastrosos en el Festival Internacional de Benicassim y en el Festival de Reading, Mani y Brown deciden terminar con la banda en agosto de 1996.

Tras la separación, Ian Brown inició una carrera solista, mientras que Squire formó los Seahorses y Mani se unió a Primal Scream. De Reni, el primero en abandonar la banda, poco se supo hasta que recientemente anuncio la formación de una nueva banda llamada "The Rub", Ian sigue manteniendo contacto y amistad con varios integrantes de la banda, siendo también colaboladores de sus proyectos como solista.

Discografía.

1989 Stone Roses
1992 Turns into Stone [demos y rarezas]
1994 Second Coming
1996 Garage Flower [recopilación de grabaciones de 1985]
2002 The Very Best of Stone Roses (grandes exitos)

por
Eliel González.

16.2.07

American psycho (resubido).


A veces las apariencias engañan. Jamas nadie sabe que es lo que tiene uno en la mente.

Filme basado en la novela escrita en 1991 por Bret Easton Ellis. Describe en primera persona los episodios en la vida de un yuppie de Manhattan, Patrick Bateman, a finales de los ochenta.

Patrick Bateman tiene 27 años, es graduado por la Universidad de Harvard en 1984 y con un máster en la Escuela de Negocios de Harvard. Es soltero y metrosexual, con una novia llamada Evelyn (Reese Witherspoon) y una amante, Cortney (Samantha Matis).

Vive edificio American Gardens, en medio de la riqueza y sofisticación de la alta sociedad de Manhattan y de Wall Street, cultivando su cuerpo y su apariencia, prestando una gran atención a los objetos, a las marcas, y al diseño. Es el vicepresidente del departamento de fusiones y adquisiciones en la firma de inversión de su padre, Pierce & Pierce, en donde no tiene una misión que realmente lo ocupe.

Contrariamente a su apariencia, tiene la costumbre de practicar asesinatos, canibalismo, necrofilia y sexo ultraviolento.

American Psycho.
director: Mary Harron
2000

10.2.07

Script: A clockwork orange (resubido).


A Clockwork Orange 

Based on the novel by Anthony Burgess
Screenplay by Stanley Kubrick

Produced by Stanley Kubrick

Directed by Stanley Kubrick

Cast List:

Malcolm McDowell Alex
Patrick Magee Mr. Alexander
Michael Bates Chief Guard
Warren Clarke Dim
John Clive Stage Actor
Carl Duering Dr. Brodsky
Paul Farrell Tramp
Clive Francis Lodger
Michael Gover Prison Governor
Miriam Karlin Catlady
James Marcus Georgie
Philip Stone Dad
Sheila Raynor Mum


FADE IN:
INT. KOROVA MILKBAR NIGHT
Tables, chairs made of nude fibreglass figures.

Hypnotic atmosphere.

Alex, Pete, Georgie and Dim, teenagers stoned on their milk-plus, their feet resting on faces, crotches, lips of the sculptured furniture.

ALEX (V.O.)
There was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie and Dim and we sat in the Korova milkbar trying to make up our rassoodocks what to do with the evening. The Korova Milk Bar sold milkplus, milk plus vellocet or synthemesc or drencrom which is what we were drinking. This would sharpen you up and make you ready for a bit of the old ultra-violence. Our pockets were full of money so there was no need on that score, but, as they say, money isn't everything.
INT. PEDESTRIAN UNDERPASS TUNNEL ó NIGHT
A Tramp lying in tunnel, singing.

TRAMP
In Dublin's fair city
Where the girls are so pretty
I first set my eyes on sweet Molly Malone
As she wheeled her wheelbarrow
Through streets wide and narrow...

Shadows of the boys approaching fall across Tramp.

TRAMP
Crying cockless and mussels alive,
Alive O...
Alive, alive O... Alive, alive O...
Crying cockless and mussels alive,
Alive O...

ALEX (V.O.)
One thing I could never stand is to see a filthy, dirty old drunkie, howling away at the filthy songs of his fathers and going blerp, blerp in between as it might be a filthy old orchestra in his stinking rotten guts. I could never stand to see anyone like that, whatever his age might be, but more especially when he was real old like this one was.

The boys stop and applaud him.

TRAMP
Can you... can you spare some cutter, me brothers?

Alex rams his stick into the Tramp's stomach. The boys laugh.

TRAMP
Oh-hhh!!! Go on, do me in you bastard cowards. I don't want to live anyway, not in a stinking world like this.

ALEX
Oh ó and what's so stinking about it?

TRAMP
It's a stinking world because there's no law and order any more. It's a stinking world because it lets the young get onto the old like you done. It's no world for an old man any more. What sort of a world is it at all? Men on the moon and men spinning around the earth and there's not no attention paid to earthly law and order no more.

The Tramp starts singing again.

TRAMP
Oh dear land, I fought for thee and brought you peace and victory.

Alex and gang move in and start beating up on old Tramp.
INT. DERELICT CASINO ó NIGHT
Billyboy gang on stage tearing clothes off a screaming Girl.

ALEX (V.O.)
It was around by the derelict casino that we came across Billyboy and his four droogs. They were getting ready to perform a little of the old in-out, in-out on a weepy young devotchka they had there.

Alex and gang step out of the shadows.

ALEX
Ho, Ho, Ho... Well, if it isn't stinking Billygoat Billyboy in poison. How are thou, thou globby bottle of cheap stinking chip oil? Come and get one in the yarbles, if you have any yarbles, you eunuch jelly thou.

Billyboy snaps open a switchblade knife.

BILLY BOY
Let's get 'em boys.

The fight begins, chains, knives, kicking boots. Police siren.

ALEX
The Police... come on, let's go... come on.

Alex and the boys rush out of casino.
EXT. / INT. CAR ó NIGHT ó FAST DRIVING SHOTS
Swerving car, forcing other cars off the road, trying to hit pedestrians, etc.

ALEX (V.O.)
The Durango-95 purred away real horrorshow ó a nice, warm vibraty feeling all through your guttiwuts. Soon it was trees and dark, my brothers, with real country dark. We fillied around for a while with other travelers of the night, playing hogs of the road. Then we headed west, what we were after now was the old surprise visit, that was a real kick and good for laughs and lashing of the ultra-violent.
EXT. "HOME" ó NIGHT
A cottage on its own, on outskirts of a village.

Bright moonlight. Cheery light inside.

Car pulls to stop.

Alex shushes his giggling boys and gets out of the car.
INT. "HOME" ó NIGHT
Mr. Alexander typing. Bell rings.

MR. ALEXANDER
Who on earth could that be?

MRS. ALEXANDER
I'll see.

Mrs. Alexander, a good-looking red head in a red jumper suit.

MRS. ALEXANDER
Yes? Who is it?

ALEX
Excuse me, Mrs... will you please help, there's been a terrible accident.

She opens the door on the chain and peeps out.

ALEX
My friend's lying in the middle of the road bleeding to death. Could I please use your telephone for an ambulance?

MRS. ALEXANDER
I'm sorry, but we don't have a telephone. You'll have to go somewhere else.

ALEX
But Mrs... it's a matter of life and death.

From inside the sound of clack clacky clack clack clackity clackclack of Alexander typing stops.

MR. ALEXANDER
Who is it, dear?

MRS. ALEXANDER
There's a young man here. He says there's been an accident. He wants to use the telephone.

MR. ALEXANDER
Then you'd better let him in.

MRS. ALEXANDER
Wait a minute.

ALEX
Thank you, Mrs.

Mrs. Alexander opens door, saying...

MRS. ALEXANDER
I'm sorry, we don't usually let people in the middle of the night.

Alex and boys have put on their masks and rush into house, carrying and dragging Mrs. Alexander along with them.
INT. HOME ó NIGHT
They go roaring in.

Mr. Alexander is kicked in the face and goes down. Georgie leaps on him. Pete jumps up and down and the settee. Dim grabs hold of Mrs. Alexander. Alex whistles piercingly.

ALEX
Right, Pete. Check the rest of the house.

Alex turns to Dim who holds the struggling Mrs. Alexander.

ALEX
Dim...

Dim sets her down but holds her firmly. Alex starts to sing ó "Singin' in the Rain", accompanying it with a kind of tap dance.

ALEX
(singing)
I'm singing in the rain...

He kicks Mr. Alexander accenting the lyrics.

ALEX
(singing)
Just singing in the rain...

He clubs Mr. Alexander with stick, in the time to the music.

ALEX
(singing)
What a glorious feeling, I'm happy again.

He pushes a rubber ball into Mrs. Alexander's mouth and binds it with sellotape.

ALEX
(singing)
I'm laughing at clouds so dark up above.
The sun's in my heart and I'm ready for love.
Let the stormy clouds chase...

He kicks Mr. Alexander again.

ALEX
(singing)
... everyone from the place.
Come on with the rain...

He puts ball in Mr. Alexander's mouth and sellotapes it.

ALEX
(singing)
... I've a smile on my face.
I'll walk down the lane... to a happy refrain.
I'm singing... just singin' in the rain.

He knocks down the book cases and moves to Mrs. Alexander being held by Dim. Starts to repeat on song as he cuts slowly up each leg of her cat suit, until she is naked. This coincidences with the song finishing.

He turns to Mr. Alexander.

ALEX
Viddy well, my little Brother. Viddy well.
INT. KOROVA MILKBAR ó NIGHT
The boys enter yawning..

ALEX (V.O.)
We were all feeling a bit shagged and fagged and fashed, it having been an evening of some small energy expenditure, O my brothers, so we got rid of the auto and stopped off at the Korova for a nightcap.

Dim moves over to milk machine and speaks to the statue of the nude girl.

DIM
Hello Lucy, had a busy night?

Puts money in machine.

DIM
We've been working hard too.

Takes glass.

DIM
Pardon me. Luce.

He raises glass to breast, pulls red handle between her legs. Milk spurts into glass.

Dim joins the others. Alex looks at a party of tourists.

ALEX (V.O.)
There was some sophistos from the TV studios around the corner, laughing an govoreeting. The Devotchka was smecking away, and not caring about the wicked world one bit. Then the disc on the stereo twanged off and out, and in the short silence before the next one came on, she suddenly came with a burst of singing, and it was like for a moment, O my brothers, some great bird had flown into the milkbar and I felt all the malenky little hairs on my plott standing endwise, and the shivers crawling up like slow malenky lizards and then down again. Because I knew what she sang. It was a bit from the glorious 9th, by Ludwig van.

Dim makes a lip-trump followed by a dog howl, followed by two fingers pronging twice in the air, followed by a clowny guffaw.

Alex brings his stick down smartly on Dim's legs.

DIM
What did you do that for?

ALEX
For being a bastard with no manners and not a dook of an idea how to comport yourself publicwise, O my Brother.

DIM
I don't like you should do what you done. And I'm not your brother no more and wouldn't want to be.

ALEX
Watch that... Do watch that, O Dim, if to continue to be on live thou dost wish.

DIM
Yarbles, great bolshy yarblockos to you I'll meet you with chain, or nozh or britva, any time, not having you aiming tolchocks at me reasonless. It stands to reason, I won't have it.

ALEX
A nozh scrap any time you say.

Dim weakens.

DIM
Doobidoob... a bit tired maybe, everybody is. A long night for growing malchicks... best not to say more. Bedways is rigthways now, so best we go homeways and get a bit of spatchka. Right, right.
INT. ALEX'S FLATBLOCK ó MAIN LOBBY ENTRANCE ó NIGHT
Alex passes a mural in the hall. Nude men and women. Their massive stylised bodies embellished and decorated by handy pencil and ballpoint.

The elevator door is buckled.
INT. ALEX'S FLAT ó NIGHT
Alex pees in toilet.

Alex goes into his room. Tosses his loot into a drawer, full of money, wristwatches, cameras, etc.

Fifty small loudspeakers cover one wall.

He puts his pet boa constrictor on tree branch mounted on the wall, above four Christ figures who have their arms intertwined like a chorus line.

He puts a cassette into the tape player.

A heavy shockwave of sound ó Beethoven's 9th.

ALEX (V.O.)
It had been a wonderful evening and what I needed now to give it the perfect ending was a bit of the old Ludwig van.

Music starts.

ALEX (V.O.)
Then, brothers, it came. O bliss, bliss and heaven, oh it was gorgeousness and georgeosity made flesh. The trombones crunched redgold under my bed, and behind my gulliver the trumpets three-wise, silver-flamed and there by the door the timps rolling through my guts and out again, crunched like candy thunder. It was like a bird of rarest spun heaven metal or like silvery wine flowing in a space ship, gravity all nonsense now. As I slooshied, I knew such lovely pictures. There were veeks and ptitsas laying on the ground screaming for mercy and I was smecking all over my rot and grinding my boot into their tortured litsos and there were naked devotchkas ripped and creeching against walls and I plunging like a shlaga into them.
INT. ALEX'S FLAT ó DAY
He is asleep. The boa curled up at his feet. There is a knock on the door.

ALEX
What d'you want?

EM
It's past eight, Alex, you don't want to be late for school, son.

ALEX
Bit of pain in the gulliver, Mum. Leave us be and I'll try to sleep it off... then I'll be as right as dodgers for this after.

EM
You've not been to school all week, son.

ALEX
I've got to rest, Mum... got to get fit, otherwise I'm liable to miss a lot more school.

EM
Eeee... I'll put your breakfast in the oven. I've got to be off myself now.

ALEX
Alright, Mum... have a nice day at the factory.
INT. KITCHEN ó DAY
Pee sitting at breakfast table.

Em enters.

EM
He's not feeling too good again this morning, Dad.

PEE
Yes, I heard. D'you know what time he got in last night?

EM
No I don't know, luv, I'd taken my sleepers.

PEE
I wonder where exactly is it he goes to work of evenings.

EM
Well, like he says, it's mostly odd things he does, helping like... here and there, as it might be.
INT. EM'S BEDROOM ó DAY
Alex comes out of his room and finds P.R. Deltoid sitting on bed in parent's room.

ALEX
Hi, hi, hi there, Mr. Deltoid, funny surprise to see you here.

DELTOID
Ah, Alex boy, awake at last, yes? I met your mother on the way to work, yes? She gave me the key. She said something about a pain somewhere... hence not at school , yes?

ALEX
A rather intolerable pain in the head, brother, sir. I think it should be clear by this afterlunch.

DELTOID
Oh, or certainly by this evening, yes? The evening's a great time, isn't it, Alex boy?

ALEX
A cup of the old chai, sir?

DELTOID
No time, no time, yes. Sit, sit, sit.

Alex sits next to him.

ALEX
To what do I owe this extreme pleasure, sir? Anything wrong, sir?

Deltoid "playfully" grabs Alex's hair.

DELTOID
Wrong? Why should you think of anything being wrong, have you been doing something you shouldn't. Yes?

He shakes Alex's hair.

ALEX
Just a manner of speech, sir.

DELTOID
Well, yes, it's just a manner of speech from your Post Corrective Advisor to you that you watch out, little Alex.

He puts his arm round Alex's shoulder.

DELTOID
Because next time it's going to be the barry place and all my work ruined. If you've no respect for your horrible self, you at least might have some for me who'se sweated over you.

He slaps Alex on the knee.

DELTOID
A big black mark I tell you for every one we don't reclaim. A confession of failure for every one of you who ends up in the stripy hole.

ALEX
I've been doing nothing I shouldn't, sir. The millicents have nothing on me, brother, sir, I mean.

Deltoid pulls Alex down on the bed.

DELTOID
Cut out all this clever talk about milicents. Just because the Police haven't picked you up lately doesn't, as you very well know, mean that you've not been up to some nastiness. There was a bit of a nastiness last night, yes. Some very extreme nastiness, yes. A few of a certain Billyboy's friends were ambluenced off late last night, yes. Your name was mentioned, the word's got thru to me by the usual channels. Certain friends of yours were named also. Oh, nobody can prove anything about anybody as usual, but I'm warning you, little Alex, being a good friend to you as always, the one man in this sore and sick community who wants to save you from yourself.

Deltoid makes a grab for Alex's joint but finds his hand instead. Alex laughs. Derisively and rises. Deltoid distractedly reaches for a glass of water on the night table, and fails to notice a set of false teeth soaking in them. He drinks from the glass. The clink of the teeth sounding like ice-cubes.

DELTOID
What gets into you all? We study the problem. We've been studying it for damn well near a century, yes, but we get no further with our studies. You've got a good home here, good loving parents, you've got not too bad of a brain. Is it some devil that crawls inside of you?

ALEX
Nobody's got anything on me, brother, sir. I've been out of the rookers of the milicents for a long time now.

DELTOID
That's just worries me. A bit too long to long to be reasonable. You're about due now by my reckoning, that's why I'm warning you, little Alex, to keep your handsome young proboscis out of the dirt. Do I make myself clear?

ALEX
As an unmuddied lake, sir. Clear as an azure sky of deepest summer. You can rely on me, sir.

Deltoid drinks again but this time sees the teeth in the glass. He groans and retches.
INT. MUSIC BOOTICK ó DAY
Alex enters. Two pretty micro-boppers, Marty and Sonietta, sucking phallic ice sticks.

ALEX
Pardon me, brother. I ordered this two weeks ago. Could you see if it's arrived.

CLERK
OK. I'll see if it's in.

Clerk exits. Alex turns to the girls.

ALEX
Pardon me, ladies

He steps in between them and goes through the motions, looking through.

ALEX
Enjoying it then, my darling?... A bit cold and pointless isn't it, my lovely... What's happened to yours, my little sister?

Marty giggles.

MARTY
Who you getten bratty, Goggly Gogol? Johnny Zhivago? The Heaven Seventeen?

ALEX
What you got back home, little sister, to play your fuzzy warbles on? I bet you got little save pitiful portable picnic players. Come with Uncle and hear all proper. Hear angel trumpets and devil trombones. You are invited.
INT. ALEX'S BEDROOM ó DAY
The two girls, naked, jumping up and down on Alex's still unmade bed zonked by the booming, all engulfing sound of Alex's incredible Hi-Fi.
INT. ALEX'S FLATBLOCK ó LOBBY HALL ó DAY
Alex finds the gang waiting for him.

ALEX
Hi, hi, hi, there

ALL THREE
Well, hello.

DIM
He are here! He have arrived! Hooray!

ALEX
Welly, welly, welly, welly, welly, welly, well. To what do I owe the extreme pleasure of this surprising visit?

Georgie rises.

GEORGIE
We got worried. There we were waiting and drinking away at the old knify Moloko and you had not turned up and we thought you might have been like offended by something or other, so around we come to your abode.

ALEX
Appy polly loggies. I had something of a pain in the gulliver so had to sleep. I was not awakened when I gave orders for awakening.

DIM
Sorry about the pain. Using the gulliver to much like, eh? Giving orders and disciplining and that perhaps, eh? You sure the pain's gone? You sure you'll not be happier back up in bed.

ALEX
Lets get things nice and sparkling clear. This sarcasm, if I may call it such, does not become you, O my brothers. As I am your droog and leader, I am entitled to know what goes on, eh? Now then, Dim, what does that great big horsy gape of a grin portend?

GEORGIE
All right, no more picking on Dim, brother. That's part of the new way.

ALEX
New way? What's this about a new way? There's been some very large talk behind my sleeping back, and no error. Let me hear more.

GEORGIE
Well, we go round shop crasting and the like, coming out with a pitiful rookerful of money each.

DIM
Pitiful rookerful...

GEORGIE
And there's Will the English in the Muscleman coffee mesto saying he can fence anything that anything that any malchick tries to crast.

DIM
Yeah... Pete the English.

GEORGIE
The shiny stuff. The Ice. The big, big, big money is available's what Will the English says.

DIM
Big, big money.

ALEX
And what will you do with the big, big, money? Have you not everything you need? If you need a motor-car, you pluck it from the trees. If you need pretty polly, you take it.

GEORGIE
Brother, you think and talk sometimes like a little child. Tonight we pull a mansize crast.

ALEX
Good. Real horrorshow. Initiative comes to them as waits. I've taught you much, my little droogies. Now tell me what you have in mind, Georgie Boy.

GEORGIE
Oh, the old moloko-plus first, would you not say

DIM
Moloko-plus.

GEORGIE
Something to sharpen us up, you especially. We have the start.
EXT. FLATBLOCK MARINE ó DAY
The gang come out of the flatblock and walk along the marina.

ALEX (V.O.)
As we walked along the flatblock marina, I was calm on the outside but thinking all the time, so now it was to be Georgie the General, saying what we should do and what not to do, and Dim as his mindless, grinning bulldog. But, suddenly, I viddied that thinking was for the gloopy ones and that the oomny ones use like inspiration and what Bog sends, for now it was lovely music that came to my aid and I viddied at once what to do. There was a window open with the stereo on.
IN SLOW MOTION
Alex clubs Georgie into water with his stick. Dim swings chain. Alex ducks. Dim goes into water.

Alex kneels, hands behind back, takes knife from sword stick, offers hand to help Dim, and slashes Dim when he gets it.

Dim falls back into the water.

Alex laughs.
INT. DUKE OF NEW YORK PUB
The four boys sit round table.

ALEX (V.O.)
I had not put into any of Dim's main cables and so, with the help of a clean tashtook, the red, red kroovy stopped, and it did not take long to quieten the two wounded soldiers, down in the snug in the Duke of New York. Now they knew who was Master and Leader. Sheep, thought I, but a real leader knows always when like to give and show generous to his unders.

ALEX
Well, now we're back to where we were. Yes? Just like before and all forgotten? Right, right, right.

ALL BOYS
Right. Right. Right.

ALEX
Well, Georgie Boy. This idea you've got for tonight. Well, tell us all about it then.

GEORGIE
Not tonight ó not this nochy.

ALEX
Come, come, come, Georgie Boy. You're a big strong chelloveck like us all. We're not little children, are we, Georgie Boy? What, then, didst thou in thy mind have?

Confrontation. Georgie backs down.

GEORGIE
It's this Health Farm. A bit out of the town. Isolated. It's owned by this like very rich ptitsa who lives there with her cats. The place is shut down for a week and she's completely on her own, and it's full up with like gold and silver and like jewels.

ALEX
Tell me more, Georgie Boy.
INT. CATLADY'S HOUSE
Catlady doing yoga exercises.

Room is full of cats. Doorbell rings.

CATLADY
(softly to herself)
Oh shit.

She goes to the door.
EXT. CATLADY'S HOUSE
CATLADY
Who's there?

ALEX
Excuse me, missus, can you please help? There's been a terrible accident. Can I please use your telephone for an ambulance?

CATLADY
I'm frightfully sorry. There is a telephone in the Public House about a mile down the road. I suggest you use that.

ALEX
But, missus, this is an emergency. It's a matter of life and death. Me friend's lying in the middle of the road bleeding to death.

CATLADY
I... I'm very sorry, but I never open. I'm very sorry but I never open the door to strangers after dark.

ALEX
Very well, madam. I suppose you can't be blamed for being suspicious with so many scoundrels and rouges of the night about.

Alex walks away from door, then ducks into the bushes where the others are hiding. They put on their maskies and follow Alex round to the rear of the house.

ALEX
Dim, bend down.
(Alex points to an upstairs window)
I'm gonna get in that window and open the front door.

He climbs up drain-pipe to the bathroom window.
INT. CADLADY'S HOUSE
The Catlady enters and dials a number.

CATLADY
Hullo, Radlett Police Station. Good evening. It's Miss Weathers at Woodmere Health Farm. Look, I'm frightfully sorry to bother you but something rather odd has just happened... Well, it's probably nothing at all, but you never know... Well, a young man rang the bell asking to use the telephone... He said there had been some kind of accident. The thing that caught my attention was what he said ó the words he used, sounded exactly like what was quoted in the papers this morning in connection with the writer and his wife who were assaulted last night... Well, just a few minutes ago... Well, if you think that's necessary, but, well, I'm quite sure he's gone away now. Oh... alright. Fine. Thank you very much. Thank you.

She puts phone down, turns and nearly jumps out of her leotard when she sees Alex in the doorway.

ALEX
Hi, hi, hi there, at last we meet.

CATLADY
What the bloody hell d'you think you're doing?

ALEX
Our brief govereet thru the letter hole was not, shall we say, satisfactory, yes?

CATLADY
Now listen here, you little bastard, just you turn around and walk out of here the same way as you came in.

Alex eyes a giant white, fibreglass phallic sculpture on the table beside him.

ALEX
Naughty, naughty, naughty, you filthy old soomaka.

CATLADY
No! No! Don't touch it. That's a very important work of art. What the bloody hell do you want?

ALEX
You see, madam, I am part of an international student's contest to see who can get the most points for selling magazines.

CATLADY
Cut the shit, sonny, and get out of here before you get yourself in some very serious trouble.

He rocks the giant phallus which has a special weight swinging inside causing it to swing up and down an eccentric motion.

CATLADY
I told you to leave it alone. Now get out of here before I throw you out, wretched slummy bedbug. I'll teach you breaking into real people's houses. Get out!

She grabs up a bust of Beethoven and rushes at Alex. He grabs the giant phallic sculpture.

Circling, Alex fends off her mad rushes with skilful jabs of the giant phallus.

She ducks under and clobbers him with the heavy bust of Beethoven.

He goes down, pulling her off balance and they both wind up the floor.

In the struggle, Alex bashes her with the phallus.

Distant Police sirens.

He exits.
EXT. CATLDAY'S HOUSE ó NIGHT
Alex rushes out. Dim and the others are waiting.

ALEX
Come on. Let's go, the police are coming.

DIM
One minoota, droogie.

Dim smashes Alex in the face with a full milk bottle. He goes down. The others run away, laughing.

ALEX
(screaming)
You bastards... bastards.
INT. POLICE HQ ó NIGHT
Inspector takes out cigarette and lights up.

INSPECTOR
Right. Right , Tom, we'll have to our little friend, Alex, here that we know the law, too, but that knowing the law isn't everything.

He nods to Fatneck.

FATNECK
That's a nasty cut you've got there, little Alex. Spoils... all your beauty. Who gave you that then... eh... eh...

He presses Alex's nose, inflicting great pain. Alex sinks to his knees.

ALEX
Ow... what's that for, you bastard?

FATNECK
That was for your lady victim. You ghastly wretched scoundrel.

Alex grabs his balls.

Alex is beaten by the other Cop.

Inspector exits to outside office where Sergeant sits, sipping a cup of tea.

Deltoid has just entered.

INSPECTOR
Sergeant.

SERGEANT
Sir.

INSPECTOR
Ah, good evening, Mr. Deltoid.

DELTOID
Evening, Inspector.

SERGEANT
Would you like your tea now, sir?

INSPECTOR
No, thank you, Sergeant. We'll have it later. May I have some paper towels, please.

SERGEANT
Yes, sir.

INSPECTOR
We're interrogating the prisoner now. Perhaps you'd care to come inside.

DELTOID
Thank you very much

They move into Interrogation Room.

Alex is on the floor in the corner covered with blood.

DELTOID
Evening, Sergeant. Evening, all. Dear, dear, this boy does look a mess, doesn't he? Just look at the state of him.

FATNECK
Love's young nightmare like.

INSPECTOR
Violence makes violence. He resisted his lawful arrestors.

DELTOID
Well, it's happened, Alex boy, yes. Just as I thought it would, yes. Dear, dear, dear. Well, this is the end of the line for me... the end of the line, yes.

ALEX
It wasn't me, brother, sir. Speak up for me, sir, for I'm not so bad. I was led on by the treachery of others, sir.

INSPECTOR
Sings the roof off lovely, he does that.

ALEX
And where are my stinking traitorous droogs. Get them before the get away. It was all their idea, brothers. They forced me to do it. I'm innocent.

DELTOID
You are now a murderer, little Alex. A murderer, yes.

ALEX
Not true, sir. It was only a slight tolchock. She was breathing, I swear it.

DELTOID
I've just come back from the hospital. Your victim has died.

ALEX
You try to frighten me, sir, admit so, sir. This is some new form of torture. Say it, brother, sir.

DELTOID
It will be your own torture. I hope to God it will torture you to madness.

FATNECK
If you'd care to give him a bash in the chops, sir. Don't mind us. We'll hold him down. He must be a great disappointment to you, sir.

Deltoid spits in Alex's face.
HELICOPTER VIEWS OF PRISON
ALEX (V.O.)
This is the real weepy and like tragic part of the story beginning, O my brothers and only friends. After a trial with judges and a jury, and some very hard words spoken against your friend and humble narrator, he was sentenced to 14 years in Staja No. 84F among smelly perverts and hardened prestoopnicks, the shock sending my dadda beating his bruised and kroovy rookas against unfair Bog in his Heaven, and my mom, boohoohooing in her mother's grief as her only child and son of her bosom, like letting everybody down real horrorshow.
INT. PRISON CHECK-IN ROOM ó DAY
A bell rings and a Warder goes and unlocks first a wooden door and then a barred door.

GUARD
Morning. One up from Thames, Mister.

WARDER
One in from Thames, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Right. Open up, Mister.

WARDER
Yes, sir.

He opens door and steps back. Alex and another Warden move to Reception desk.

WARDER
Good morning, sir. Committal sheet.

CHIEF GUARD
(who shouts everything)
Thank you, Mister.

He signs sheet.

GUARD
Name?

ALEX
Alexander de Large.

CHIEF GUARD
You are now in H.M. Prison Parkmoor and from this moment you will address all prison officers as sir! Name?

ALEX
Alexander de Large, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Crime?

ALEX
Murder, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Right. Take the cuffs off him, Mister.

The cuffs are removed.

CHIEF GUARD
You are now 655321 and it is your duty to memorise that number.

He hands clipboard back to Warder.

CHIEF GUARD
Thank you Mister. Well done.

WARDER
Thank you, chief.

CHIEF GUARD
Let the officer out.

Officer exits.

CHIEF GUARD
Right. Empty your pockets!

Alex moves to desk and leans forward.

CHIEF GUARD
Are you able to see that white line painted on the floor directly behind you, 655321?

ALEX
Yes, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Then your toes belong on the other side of it!!!

ALEX
Yes sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Right carry on.

Alex tosses a bar of chocolate on the desk.

CHIEF GUARD
Pick that up and put it down properly.

Alex does so, and continues to empty his pockets.

CHIEF GUARD
One half bar of chocolate. One bunch of keys on white metal ring. One packet of cigarettes. Two plastic ball pens ó one black, one red. One pocket comb ó black plastic. One address book ó imitation red leather. One ten penny piece. One white metal wristlet watch, "Timawrist" on a white metal expanding bracelet. Anything else in your pockets?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Right. Sign here for your valuable property.

Alex signs.

CHIEF GUARD
The chocolate and cigarettes you brought in ó you lose that as you are now convicted. Now go over to the table and get undressed.

Alex walks to table and undresses. Chief Guard moves to table with his clipboard.

CHIEF GUARD
Now then, were you in Police custody this morning?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHECK-IN
One jacket ó blue pinstripe.

CHIEF GUARD
Prison custody?

ALEX
Yes, sir On remand, sir.

CHECK-IN
One neck tie ó blue.

CHIEF GUARD
Religion?

ALEX
C of E, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Do you mean Church of England?

ALEX
Yes, sir, Church of England, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Brown hair, is it?

ALEX
Fair hair, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Blue eyes?

ALEX
Blue eyes, yes, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Do you wear eye glasses or contact lenses?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHECK-IN
One shirt ó blue, collar attached.

CHIEF GUARD
Have you been receiving medical treatment for any serious illness?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHECK-IN
One pair of boots ó black leather, zippered, worn.

CHIEF GUARD
Have you ever had any mental illness?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Do you wear any false teeth or false limbs?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHECK-IN
One pair of trousers ó blue pinstriped.

CHIEF GUARD
Have you ever had any attacks of fainting or dizziness?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHECK-IN
One pair of socks ó black.

CHIEF GUARD
Are you an Epileptic?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHECK-IN
One pair of underpants ó white with blue waistband.

CHIEF GUARD
Are you now, or ever have been, a homosexual?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Right. The mothballs, Mister.

CHECK-IN
Mothballs, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Now then. Face the wall. Bend over and touch your toes.

Chief Guard inspects Alex's anus with a penlight.

CHIEF GUARD
Mmmmmmm... any venereal disease?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Crabs?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Lice?

ALEX
No, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Through there for a bath.

ALEX
Yes, sir.
INT. PRISON CHAPEL ó DAY
Priest in pulpit big rough state-proper type.

Convict audience.

Alex sits apart tending an overhead projector.

PRIEST
I ask you friends. What's it going to be then? Is it going to be in and out of institutions like this? Or more in then out for most of you? Or are you going to attend the divine word and realise the punishment that awaits unrepentant sinners in the next world as well as this. A lot of Idiots you are, selling your birthright for a saucer of cold porridge. The urge to live easy. I ask you friends, is it worth it? When we have undeniable proof ó yes, my friends, incontrovertible evidence that Hell exists. I know, I know, my friends. I have been informed in visions that there is a place darker than any prison, hotter than any human flame of fire, where unrepentant criminals, sinners like yourselves...

A convict burps.

All laugh.

PRIEST
Don't you laugh, damn you, don't you laugh. I say like yourselves ó scream in endless and unendurable agony. Their nostrils choked with the smell of filth, their mouths crammed with burning ordure. Their skins rotting and peeling. A fireball spinning in their screaming guts. I know... oh yes, I know.

A convict lets rip some lip music ó prrrrrrrp. There is laughter. Chief Guard moves forward ó points.

CHIEF GUARD
I saw you, 920537. I saw you.

CONVICT
Up yours, mate.

CHIEF GUARD
Just you wait, 744678. One on the turnip coming up for you.

PRIEST
Quiet, my friends. Quiet. Quiet, I say. We will now sing Hymn 258 in the Prisoner's Hymnal.

Piano starts up and Alex starts up overhead projector which displays the words of the hymn.

CHIEF GUARD
Show a little reverence, you bastards. Quiet!

Convicts and all start to sing.

SINGING
I was a wandering sheep.
I did not love...

CHIEF GUARD
Sing up damn you. Louder, sing up.

SINGING
... the fold
I did not love my shepherd's voice.
I would not be controlled.

CHIEF GUARD
Come on, sing up, damn you.

SINGING
I was a wayward child
I did not love my home
I did not love my father's voice
I loved afar to roam.

ALEX (V.O.)
It had not been edifying, indeed not, being in this hell hole and human zoo for two years now, being kicked and tolchocked by brutal warders, and meeting leering criminals and perverts ready to dribble all over a lucious young malchick like your story-teller.
INT. PRIEST'S LIBRARY ó DAY
Alex reading the Bible.

ALEX (V.O.)
It was my rabbit to help the prison charlie with the Sunday service. He was a bolshy great burly bastard, but he was very fond of myself, me being very young, and also now very interested in the big book.

Priest walks by and nods pleasantly.

ALEX (V.O.)
It had been arranged by the prison charlie, as part of my further education to read him the Bible. I didn't so much like the latter part of the book which is more like all preachy talking, than fighting and the old in-out. I liked the parts where these old yahoodies tolchock each other and then drink their Hebrew vino and, then getting on to the bed with their wives' handmaidens. That kept me going.
BIBLE FANTASY ó FIGHTING ó DAY
Biblical fighting shot. Alex slashing away. Blood spurting.
HANDMAIDEN FANTASY IN TENT ó DAY
Alex lying with three semi-nude handmaidens.
EXT. BIBLICAL STREET
Christ being whipped on by Alex, dressed as a Legionary.

ALEX
Move on there. Move on.

ALEX (V.O.)
I read all about the scourging and the crowning with thorns and all that, and I could viddy myself helping in and even taking charge of the tolchocking and the nailing in, being dressed in the height of Roman fashion.
BACK TO THE LIBRARY
Alex sits with his eyes closed.

Priest comes over and squeezes his shoulder.

Alex looks up at him and smiles.

PRIEST
(reading from Alex's Bible)
Seek not to be like evil men, neither desire to be with them, because their minds studieth robberies and their lips speak deceits.

ALEX
If thou lose hope being weary in the days of distress, thy strength shall be diminished.

PRIEST
Fine, my boy, fine, fine.

ALEX
Father, I have tried, have I not?

PRIEST
You have, my son.

ALEX
I've done my best, have I not?

PRIEST
Indeed.

ALEX
And, Father, I've never been guilty of any institutional infractions, have I?

PRIEST
You certainly have not, 655321. You've been very helpful, and you've shown a genuine desire to reform.

ALEX
Father ó may I ask you a question in private?

PRIEST
Certainly, my son, certainly. Is there something troubling you, my son? Don't be shy to speak up. Remember, I know all the urges that can trouble young men deprived of the society of women.

ALEX
No Father. It's nothing like that, Father. It's about this new thing they're all talking about. About this new treatment that you out of prison in no time at all and makes sure you never get back in again.

PRIEST
Where did you hear about this? Whose been talking about these things?

ALEX
These things get around, Father. Two Warders talk as it might be, and somebody can't help overhearing what they say. Then somebody picks up a scrap of newspaper in the workshops and the newspaper tells all about it. How about putting me in for this new treatment, Father?

PRIEST
I take it you are referring to the Ludovico Technique?

ALEX
I don't know what it's called, Father, all I know is that it gets you out quickly and makes sure that you never get in again.

PRIEST
That's not proven, 655321. In fact, it is only in the experimental stage at this moment.

ALEX
But it is being used, isn't it, Father?

PRIEST
It has not been used yet in this prison. The Governor has grave doubts about it and I have heard that there are very serious dangers involved.

ALEX
I don't care about the danger, Father. I just want to be good. I want for the rest of my life to be one act of goodness.
PRIEST
The question is weather or not this technique really makes a man good. Goodness comes from within. Goodness is chosen. When a man cannot chose, he ceases to be a man.

ALEX
I don't understand about the whys and wherefores, Father. I only know I want to be good.

PRIEST
Be patient, my son, and put your trust in the Lord.

ALEX
Instruct thy son and he shall refresh thee and shall give delight to thy soul.

PRIEST
Amen.

They cross themselves.
EXT. PRISON YARD ó DAY
Prisoners walking in circles.
INT. PRISON CORRIDOR
Guards stand either side of cell doors.

Chief Guard with Governor, Minister and entourage.

CHIEF GUARD
Mister.

GUARD
All present and correct, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Right. All present and correct, sir.

GOVERNOR
Very good, Chief.

They inspect cells.

CHIEF GUARD
Leave to carry on, sir, please?

GOVERNOR
Carry on, Chief.

CHIEF GUARD
Sir.
EXT. PRISON YARD
Chief Guard comes out of door.

CHIEF GUARD
Right, pay attention. I want you in two lines. Up against that wall facing this way. Go on move! Hurry up about it and stop talking.

The men line up. Chief Guard moves back to door and comes to attention.

CHIEF GUARD
Ready for inspection, sir.

He stands back and salutes as Governor, Minister and entourage enter and walk along line of men.

MINISTER
How many to a cell?

GOVERNOR
Four in this block, sir.

MINISTER
Cram criminals together and what do you get ó concentrated criminality... crime in the midst of punishment.

GOVERNOR
I agree, sir. What we need are larger prisons. More money.

MINISTER
Not a chance, my dear fellow. The Ggovernment can't be concerned any longer with outmoded penological theories. Soon we may be needing all of out prison space for political offenders. Common criminals like these are best dealt with on a purely curative basis. Kill the criminal reflex that's all. Full implementation in a year's time. Punishment means nothing to them, you can see that... they enjoy their so-called punishment.

Alex seizes his chance as they pass by.

ALEX
You're absolutely right, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
Shut your bleedin' hole!!!

MINISTER
Who said that?

ALEX
I did, sir.

MINISTER
What crime did you commit.

ALEX
The accidental killing of a person, sir.

CHIEF GUARD
He brutally murdered a woman, sir, in furtherence of theft. 14 years... sir!

MINISTER
Excellent. He's enterprising, aggressive, outgoing. Young. Bold. Viscous. He'll do.

GOVERNOR
Well, fine... we could still look at C-Block.

MINISTER
No, no, no. That's enough. He's perfect. I want his records sent to me. This vicious young hoodlum will be transformed out of all recognition.

ALEX
Thank you very much for this chance, sir.

MINISTER
Let's hope you make the most of it, my boy.

GOVERNOR
Shall we go to my office?

MINISTER
Thank you.
INT. GOVERNOR'S OFFICE ó DAY
Governor seated at his desk. There is a knock on the door.

GOVERNOR
Come in.

Door opens. Chief Guard enters with Alex.

CHIEF GUARD
Sir, 655321, sir.

GOVERNOR
Very good, Chief.

Chief Guard turns to Alex.

CHIEF GUARD
Forward to the white line, toes behind it. Full name and number to the Governor.

Chief Guard closes door.

ALEX
Alexander de Large, sir. 655321, sir.

The Governor takes off his glasses.

GOVERNOR
I don't suppose you know who that was this morning, do you? That was no less a personage than the Minister of the Interior and what they call a very new broom. Well, these new ridiculous ideas have come at last, and orders are orders, though I may say to you in confidence that I do not approve. An eye for an eye, I say, if someone hits you, you hit back, do you not? Why then should not the State very severely hit by you brutal offenders not hit back also? But the new view is to say no. The new view is that we turn the bad into good. All of which seems to be grossly unjust. Hmmmmmm.

ALEX
Sir...

CHIEF GUARD
Shut your filthy hole, you scum!!!

GOVERNOR
You are to be reformed. Tomorrow you go to this man, Brodsky. You will be leaving here. You will be transferred to the Ludovico Medical Facility. It is believed that you will be able to leave State custody in a little over a fortnight. I suppose that prospect pleases you?

CHIEF GUARD
Answer when the Governor asks you a question you filthy young swine!

ALEX
Oh yes, sir. Thank you very much, sir. I've done my best here I really have, sir. I'm very grateful to all concerned.

GOVERNOR
Sign this ó where it's marked.

Alex turns the paper to read it.

CHIEF GUARD
Don't read it ó sign it!

GOVERNOR
It says that you are willing to have the residue of your sentence commuted to the Ludovico treatment.

Alex signs. Governor gathers up papers.

Alex dots the last "i" and smiles.
INT. LUDOVICO CENTRE RECEPTION DESK ó DAY
ALEX (V.O.)
The next morning I was taken to the Ludovico Medical Facility, outside the town centre, and I felt a malenky bit sad having to say goodbye to the old Staja, as you always will when you leave a place you've like gotten used to.

Chief Guard briskly leads the way for Alex and escort. They move into reception hall where the Doctor stands.

CHIEF GUARD
(shouting like an RSM)
Right. Halt the prisoner. Good morning, sir, I'm Chief Officer Barnes. I've got 655321 on a transfer from Parkmoor to the Ludovico Centre, sir!

DOCTOR
Good morning, we've been expecting you. I'm Dr. Alcott.

Chief Guard checks the name from his clipboard.

CHIEF GUARD
Yes, Dr. Alcott. Are you prepared to accept the prisoner, sir?
DOCTOR
Yes, of course.

CHIEF GUARD
Well, I wonder if you'd mind signing these transfer documents, sir.

Doctor signs.

CHIEF GUARD
Thank you, sir. There, sir... there, and there, sir... and there. Thank you, sir. Prison escort move forward. Halt. Excuse me, sir. Is that the officer that is to take charge of the prisoner, sir?

Doctor nods. Officer steps forward.

CHIEF GUARD
If I might offer a word of advice, Doc. You'll have to watch this one. A right brutal bastard he has been, and will be again. In spite all his sucking up to the prison Chaplain and reading the Bible.

DOCTOR
Oh, I think we can manage things. Charlie, will you show the young man to his room now.

CHARLIE
Right, sir. Come this way, please.

Alex exits with Officer.
INT. ALEX'S ROOM ó LUDOVICO CENTRE ó DAY

Alex finishing breakfast tray in bed.

Room bright and cheery.

Dr. Branom, a tall woman in her fifties, enters with nurse carrying a sterile tray.

DR. BRANOM
(very briskly)
Good morning, Alex, my name is Dr. Branom. I'm Doctor Brodsky's assistant.

ALEX
Good Morning, Missus. Lovely day, isn't it?

DR. BRANOM
Indeed it is. May I take this

She removes his tray.

DR. BRANOM
How're you feeling this morning?

ALEX
Fine... fine.

DR. BRANOM
Good. In a few minutes, you'll meeting Dr. Brodsky and we'll begin your treatment. You're a very lucky boy to have been chosen.

ALEX
I realise all that, Missus, and I'm very grateful to all concerned.

DR. BRANOM
We're going to friends now, sir.

ALEX
I hope so, Missus.

She inserts a needle into the medicine vial.

ALEX (CONT'D)
What's the hypo for then? Going to send me to sleep?

DR. BRANOM
Oh no, nothing of the sort.

ALEX
Vitamins will it be then?

DR. BRANOM
Something like that. You are a little undernourished, so after each meal were going to give you a shot. Roll over on your right side please, loosen your pyjama pants and pull them half-way down.

He does, somewhat reluctantly. She gives him a shot in the bum.

ALEX
What exactly is the treatment here going to be then?

DR. BRANOM
It's quite simple really. Were just going to show you some films.

ALEX
You mean like going to the pictures?

DR. BRANOM
Something like that.

ALEX
Well, that's good. I like to viddy the old films now and again.
INT. AUDIO VISUAL LUDOVICO CENTRE ó DAY
Auditorium setting. Alex is bound in a examination chair in front of a large video screen. A white-coated Technician is strapping Alex's head to a medical device.

He then carefully attaches the eyelid locking to Alex's eyes.

ALEX (V.O.)
And viddy films I would. Where I was taken to, brothers, was like no cine I'd been in before. I was bound up in a straight-jacket and my gulliver was strapped to a headrest with like wires running away from it. Then they clamped like lidlocks on my eyes so I could not shut them no matter how hard I tried. It seemed a bit crazy to me, but I let them get on with what they wanted to get on with. If I was to be a free young malchick in a fortnight's time, I would put up with much in the meantime, my brothers.

At the back of the auditorium are ten or fifteen solemn medical Professionals in white coats watching the proceedings and occasionally taking notes. A film begins showing on the screen.

The Technician drops eyedrops into Alex's eyes.
VIOLENCE FILM
Man being beaten by four toughs wearing white.

Punches, kicks, grunts, blood.

ALEX (V.O.)
So far the first film was a very good professional piece of cine, looked like it was done in Hollywood.

Screams, moans, kicks, punches.

ALEX (V.O.)
The sounds were real horroshow. You could slooshy the screams and moans very realistic and you could even get the heavy breathing and panting of the tolchocking malchicks at the same time. And then, what do you know, soon our dear old friend, the red, red vino on tap. The same in all places like it's put out by the same big firm, began to flow. It was beautiful. It's funny how the colours of the real world only seem really real when you viddy them on a screen.

More kicks, punches, groans, thumps.

Girl being beaten, raped by six toughs.

Screams, music, laughing, grunts, heavy breathing.

ALEX (V.O.)
Now all the time I was watching this, I was beginning to get very aware of like not feeling all that well, but I tried to forget this, concentrating on the next film, which jumped right away on a young devotchka, who was being given the old in-out, in-out, first by one malchick, then another, then another. This seemed real, very real, though if you thought about it properly you couldn't imagine lewdies actually agreeing to having all this done to them in a film, and if these films were made by the good, or the State, you couldn't imagine them being allowed to take these films, without like interfering with what was going on.

Girl being raped.

ALEX (V.O.)
When it came to the sixth or seventh malchick, leering and smecking and then going into it, I began to feel really sick. But I could not shut my glazzies and even if I tried to move my glazballs about I still not get out of the line of fire of this picture.

Alex squirming and retching.

Dr. Brodsky clears his throat and quietly addresses his colleagues seated in the back of the room.

DR. BRODSKY
Very soon now the drug will cause the subject to experience a death-like paralysis together with deep feelings of terror and helplessness. One of our earlier test subjects described it as being like death, a sense of stifling and drowning, and it is during this period we have found the subject will make his most rewarding associations between his catastrophic experience and environment and the violence he sees.

Alex retching violently and struggling against his strait jacket.

ALEX
Let me be sick... I want to get up. Get me something to be sick in... Stop the film... Please stop it... I can't stand it any more. Stop it please... please.
INT. ALEX'S ROOM ó LUDOVICO ó DAY
DR. BRANOM
Well, that was a very promising start. By my calculations, you should be starting to feel alright again. Yes? Dr. Brodsky's pleased with you. Now tomorrow there'll be two sessions, of course, morning and afternoon.

ALEX
You mean, I have to viddy two sessions in one day?

DR. BRANOM
I imagine you'll be feeling a little bit limp by the end of the day. But we have to be hard on you. You have to be cured.

ALEX
But it was horrible.

DR. BRANOM
Well, of course, it was horrible. Violence is a very horrible thing. That's what you're learning now. Your body is learning it.

ALEX
I just don't understand about feeling sick the way I did. I never used to feel sick before. I used to feel like the very opposite. I mean, doing it or watching it, I used to feel real horrorshow. I just don't understand why, how or what.

DR. BRANOM
You felt ill this afternoon because you're getting better. You see, when we're healthy we respond to the presence of the hateful with fear and nausea. You're becoming healthy that's all. By this time tomorrow you'll be healthier still.
INT. AUDIO VISUAL LUDOVICO CENTRE ó DAY
Alex retching and screaming ó restrained again by a straight-jacket.

ALEX (V.O.)
It was the next day, brothers, and I had truly done my best, morning and afternoon, to play it their way and sit like a horrorshow co-operative malchick in the chair of torture, while they flashed nasty bits of ultra-violence on the screen.; though not on the soundtrack, my brothers. The only sound being music. Then I noticed in all my pain and sickness what music it was that like cracked and boomed. It was Ludwig van ó 9th symphony, 4th movement.

ALEX
Stop it... stop it, please!!! I beg of you!!! It's a sin!!! It's a sin!!! It's a sin, please!!!

Brodsky leans forward and turns down the sound.

DR. BRODSKY
What's all this about sin?

ALEX
That!... Using Ludwig van like that! He did no harm to anyone. Beethoven just wrote music.

DR. BRANOM
Are you referring to the background score?

ALEX
Yes!!!

DR. BRANOM
You've heard Beethoven before?

ALEX
Yes!!!

DR. BRODSKY
You're keen on music?

ALEX
Yes!!!

DR. BRANOM
(quietly)
What do you think about that, Dr. Brodsky?

DR. BRODSKY
(softly)
It can't be helped. Here's your punishment element perhaps. The Governor ought to be pleased... I'm sorry, Alex, this is for your own good, you'll have to bear with us for a while.

ALEX
You needn't take it any further, sir. You've proved to me that all this ultra-violence and killing is wrong and terribly wrong. I've learned my lesson, sir. I see now what I've never seen before I'm cured, praise Bog!

DR. BRODSKY
You're not cured yet, my boy.

DR. BRODSKY
You must take your chance boy. The choice has been all yours.

ALEX
But, Sir... Missus... I see that it's wrong! It's wrong because it's like against like society. It's wrong because everybody has the right to live and be happy without being tolchocked and knifed.

DR. BRODSKY
No, no, boy. You really must leave it to us, but be cheerful about it. In less than a fortnight now, you'll be a free man.
INT. AUDITORIUM ó DAY
VIP audience including Minister, Junior Minister, Prison Governor, Priest, Dr. Branom, Dr. Brodsky.

Dressed in street clothes Alex enters led by a white-coated Technician.

He is led onto stage and left standing there, blinking into lights.

The Minister rises and walks to the front of the auditorium.

MINISTER
Ladies and Gentlemen, at this point, we introduce the subject himself. He is, as you will perceive, fit and well nourished. He comes straight from as night's sleep and a good breakfast, undrugged, unhypnotized. Tomorrow, we send him with confidence out into the world again, as decent a lad as you would meet on a May morning. What a change is here, Ladies and Gentlemen, from the wretched hoodlum the state committed to unprofitable punishment some two years ago, unchanged after two years. Unchanged, do I say - not quite. Prison taught him a false smile, the rubbed hands of hypocrisy, the fawning, greased, obsequious leer. Other vices prison taught him as well as confirming him in those he had long practised before. Our party promised to restore law and order and to make the streets safe for the ordinary peace loving citizen. This pledge is now about to become a reality. Ladies and Gentlemen, this is an historic moment. The problem of criminal violence is soon to be a thing of the past. But enough of words ó actions speak louder than. Action now. Observe all.

He returns to his seat and leans close to his Junior Minister.

JUNIOR MINISTER
Our necks are out a long way on this, Minister.

MINISTER
I have complete faith in Brodsky. If the polls are right, we have nothing to lose.

Lights are dimmed. Enter Lardface, an elegantly dressed fag.

LARDFACE
Hello, heap of dirt. Pooh, you don't wash much do you, judging by the horrible smell.

ALEX
Why do you say that, brother? I had a shower this morning.

LARDFACE
Oh, he had a shower this morning. You trying to call me a liar?

ALEX
No, brother. What d'you want?

LARDFACE
What do I want?

ALEX
Sorry, brother. I didn't mean any offence.

LARDFACE
Oh. Oh, you're sorry are you, well you must think I'm awfully stupid.

He slaps Alex in the face.

ALEX
Why did you do that, brother? I've never done wrong to you.

LARDFACE
You want to know why I did that, well you see ó I do that...

He stamps on Alex's foot.

LARDFACE
... and this...

He pulls Alex's nose.

LARDFACE
... and that...

He pulls Alex's ear, pushes him off balance and plants his foot on his chest.

LARDFACE
... because I don't like you horrible type, do I, and if you want to start something... if you want to start... go on... well, you just start. Please do.

Alex retching.

ALEX
I'm gonna be sick.

LARDFACE
You're gonna be sick are you?

ALEX
I wanna be sick.

LARDFACE
You wanna be sick?

ALEX
Let me get up.

LARDFACE
You wanna get up? Well, you've gotta you see... well I want you to lick it. Go on... Lick it.

Alex, gagging and coughing, licks the sole of his shoe.

LARDFACE
... And again... Go on!!! Again! There's a good boy.

ALEX (V.O.)
And, O my brothers, would you believe your faithful friend and long suffering narrator pushed out his red yahzik a mile and a half to lick the grahzny, vonny boots. The horrible killing sickness had wooshed up and turned the like joy of battle into a feeling I was going to snuff it.

Minister rises.

MINISTER
Enough! That will do very well. Thank you.

Lardface does leading-man-bows. A smattering of applause.

LARDFACE
Thank you very much, Ladies and Gentlemen... Thank you.

Alex on floor ó still retching.

A beautiful nude Girl enters.

Alex looks up slowly.

ALEX (V.O.)
She came towards me with the light like it was the like light of heavenly grace, and the first thing that flashed into my gulliver was that I would like to have her right down there on the floor with the old in-out, real savage. But quick as a shot came the sickness, like a detective that had been watching around the corner and now followed to make his arrest.

Alex retching. Minister rises.

MINISTER
Thank you very much. Thank you my dear.

Girl bows and exits to loud applause.

MINISTER
Not feeling too bad now are you?

ALEX
(pulling himself together)
No, sir, I feel really great.

MINISTER
Good.

ALEX
Was I alright, sir? Did I do well, sir?

MINISTER
Fine. Absolutely fine. You see, Ladies and Gentlemen our subject is, you see, impelled towards good by paradoxically being impelled toward evil. The intention to act violently is accompanied by strong feelings of physical distress. To counter these, the subject has to switch to a diametrically opposed attitude. Any questions?

Priest rises and moves to Alex.

PRIEST
Choice! The boy has no real choice, has he? Self interest, fear of physical pain drove him to that grotesque act of self abasement. Its insincerity was clearly to be seen. He ceases also to be a creature capable of moral choice.

MINISTER
Padre, these are subtleties. We are not concerned with motive, with the higher ethics; we are concerned only with cutting down crime. And with relieving the ghastly congestion in our prisons... He will be your true Christian, ready to turn the other cheek. Ready to be crucified rather than crucify, sick to the very heart at the thought even of killing a fly. Reclamation, joy before the angels of God. The point is that it works!

Applause.
EXT. FLATBLOCK
Alex walking carrying his prison parcel wrapped in brown paper.
INT. ALEX'S FLAT
Ma, Pa and Joe the Lodger reading newspapers. Headlines ó all Alex.

Alex enters quietly. Loud radio music from sitting room prevents anyone from hearing him. He enters his won room which is the first off the hall.

ALEX
Hi. Hi. Hi, there my Pee and Em.

All three look up startled.

EM
Alex.

ALEX
(to his mother)
Hullo love, how are you?
(kisses her)
Nice to see you, Dad.

PEE
Hullo lad. What a surprise, good to see you.

ALEX
Keeping fit then?

PEE
(very ill at ease)
Fine, fine.

ALEX
Well, how are you then?

PEE
Oh fine, fine. Keeping out of trouble, you know.

ALEX
Well ó I'm back.

PEE
(with feigned enthusiasm)
Aye. Glad to see you back, lad.

EM
Why didn't you let us know what was happening, son?

ALEX
Sorry, Em, I wanted it to be like... a big surprise for you and pee.

PEE
Well, it's a surprise all right, a bit bewildering too.

EM
We've only just read about it in the morning papers.

PEE
Aye. You should have let us know, lad, not that we're not very pleased to see you again. All cured too, eh?

ALEX
That's right, Dad they did a great job on my gulliver, I'm completely reformed.

PEE
Aye.

ALEX
(looks in the kitchen)
Well, still the same old place then, eh?

PEE
Oh, aye, aye.

ALEX
(fake whisper)
Hey, Dad, there's a strange fella sitting on the sofa there munchy-wunching lomticks of toast.

PEE
Aye, that's Joe. He... ummmm, lives here now. The lodger. That's what he is... he... he rents your room.

Alex confronts Joe.

ALEX
How do you do, Joe? Find the room comfortable, do you? No complaints?

JOE
I've heard about you. I know what you've done. Breaking the hearts of your poor grieving parents. So you're back? You're back to make a life of misery for your lovely parents, is that it? Well, over my dead corpse you will, because you see, they've let me be more like a son to them than like a lodger.

Alex cocks his fist and starts to retch violently, almost at the same moment Joe drops back on the couch next to Em.

EM
Joe! Joe! Don't fight here boys!

Alex burps and retches.

JOE
Oh, please. Do put your hand over your mouth, it's bloody revolting.

Alex violently ill.

PEE
Well, what's the matter lad, are you feeling alright?

EM
Dad... It's the treatment.

More retching.

JOE
Well, it's disgusting. It puts you off your food.

EM
Leave him be, Joe. It's the treatment.

PEE
D'you think we should do something?

EM
Would you like me to make you a nice cup of tea, son?

ALEX
No thanks, Mum. It'll pass in a minute...
(after a pause)
... What have you done with all my own personal things?

PEE
Well. That was all took away, son, by the Police. New regulation about compensation for the victim.

ALEX
What about Basil? Where's my snake?

PEE
Oh well, he met with like an accident. He passed away.

Alex becomes a bit weepy.

ALEX
What's gonna happen to me then? I mean that's my room he's in ó there's no denying that. This is my home also. What suggestions have you, my Pee and Em, to make?

PEE
Well, all this needs thinking about, son. I mean we can't very well just kick Joe out... Not just like that, can we? I mean Joe is here doing a job. A contract it is, two years. Well, we made like an arrangement, didn't we Joe? You see, son, Joe's paid next month's rent already so, well, whatever we do in the future, we cant just say to Joe to get out, now can we?

JOE
No, there's much more than that, though. I mean I've got you two to think of. I mean you're more like a mother and father to me. Well, it wouldn't be fair now, would it, for me to go off and leave you two to the tender mercies of this young monster who's been like no real son at all. Look, let him go off and find a room somewhere. Let him learn the errors of his way, and that a bad boy like he's been don't deserve such a good mum and dad as he's had.

ALEX
Alright. I see how things are now. I've suffered and I've suffered, and I've suffered and everybody wants me to go on suffering.

JOE
You've made others suffer. It's only fair that you should suffer proper. You know I've been told everything you've done, sitting here at night round the family table, pretty shocking it was to listen to. It made me real sick, a lot of it did. Now look what you've gone and done to your mother.

Em bursts into tears.

ALEX
So that's the way it is then, eh? That's the way it is. Right, I'm leaving now, you won't ever viddy me no more. I'll make my own way. Thank you very much. Let it lie heavy on your consciences.

Alex exits.

PEE
(shouting after him)
Now don't take it like that son.

Em boohoohoos, Joe comforts her.
EXT. AMBANKMENT ó DAY
Alex walks along the Thames embankment still holding his paper parcel.

Tramp enters. The same man beaten by Alex and his gang earlier in the film.

TRAMP
Can you spare me some cutter, me brother? Can you spare some cutter, me brother?

Alex, without looking at him, reaches in his pocket and gives him some money.

TRAMP
Oh, thankyou, your honour.

The Tramp takes a second look at Alex.

TRAMP
Jamey Mack! Be the hokey fly! Holy Mother of God! All the Holy Angels and blessed saints in Heaven preserve us.

Alex breaks away but the Tramp toddles alongside him.

TRAMP
I never forget a face! I never forget any face, be God!

ALEX
Leave me alone, brother. I've never seen you before.

Tramp shouts to other Meths drinkers and Tramps.

TRAMP
This is the poisonous young swine that near done me in. Him and his friends beat me and kicked me and thumped me.

Alex breaks away again.

TRAMP
Stop him! Stop him!

A leg is stuck out and Alex goes down. The tramp swarm all over him.

TRAMP
They laughed at me blood and me moans. This murderous young pig is a prize specimen of the cowardly brutal young. He is in our midst and at our mercy. Give it to him. That's it.

Old Tramps begin to beat at Alex.

ALEX (V.O.)
Then there was like a sea of dirty, smelly old men trying to get at your humble Narrator, with their feeble rookers and horny old claws. It was Old Age having a go at Youth and I daren't do a single solitary thing, O my brothers, it being better to be hit at like that, than want to be sick and feel that horrible pain.

The Tramp crowd round Alex, shouting.

TRAMPS
Young hooligan... Vagabound... Kill him... Villain... Toad... Bastard... Kick his teeth in... Near killed poor old Jack, he did.

Police move in and push off crowd.

FIRST POLICEMAN
Alright, stop it now.

SECOND POLICEMAN
Alright, stop it now. Alright! Come on. Stop breaking the State peace. You naughty boys. Alright, that's enough.

Alex looks up.

ALEX
Oh, no.

DIM
Well, well, well, well, well, well, well, if it isn't little Alex. Long time no viddy, droog. How goes? Surprised are you?

ALEX
Impossible... I don't believe it.

GEORGIE
Evidence of the old glazzies. Nothing up our sleeves. No magic, little Alex? A job for two, who are now of job age. The police.
EXT. COUNTRY ROAD ó DAY
Police Landrover drives up.

Alex is pulled out by Georgie and Dim and hustled up a deserted lane.

DIM
Come on, Alex. Come for walkies. Hahahahaha.

ALEX
Come, come, my little droogies. I just don't get this at all. The old days are dead and gone. For what I did in the past I've been punished.

DIM
Been punished, yeah?

ALEX
I've been cured.

DIM
Been cured, yeah, that was read out to us. The Inspector read all that out to us. He said it was a very good way.

ALEX
I just don't get this all. It was them that went for me, brothers. You're not on their side and can't be. You can't be Dim. It was someone we fillied with back in the old days... Trying to get his own malenky bit of revenge after all this time. You remember, Dim?

DIM
Long time, is right. I don't remember them days too horrorshow. Don't call me Dim no more, either. Officer, call me.

GEORGIE
Enough is remembered though, little Alex.

Dim and Georgie laugh.

They drag Alex to a low water through.

DIM
This is to make sure you stay cured.

Georgie hits Alex in the stomach with his blackjack. Then, they push his head under the water and methodically start to beat him with their blackjacks.

After a full minute of this, they drag him out, halt-drowned,

DIM
(laughing)
Be viddying you some more, some time Alex.
EXT. "HOME" ó NIGHT ó HEAVY RAIN
Alex stumbles up the road to the entrance gate.

ALEX (V.O.)
Where was I to go, who had no home and no money. I cried for meself, Home, Home, Home. It was Home I was wanting and it was Home I came to, brothers, not realising in the state I was in, where I was and had been before.

Alex stumbles and crawls to the door.
INT. "HOME" ó NIGHT
Mr. Alexander at his typewriter.

Julian a 6'4" ó heavyweight weight-lifter lies across an exercise bench working with bar-bells.

The door bell rings.

MR. ALEXANDER
Who on earth could that be?

JULIAN
I'll see who it is.

He goes to the door.

JULIAN
Yes, what is it?

No reply. He opens the door. Alex falls into the hall.

ALEX
(barely audible)
Help. Help me... Help me... Police.

Julian picks him up like a child and carries him into the living room.
INT. "HOME" ó LIVING ROOM ó NIGHT
ALEX (V.O.)
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 realising where I was and why HOME on the gate had looked so familiar. But I knew I was safe. I knew he would not remember me for, in those carefree days, I and my so-called droogs wore our maskies which were like real horrorshow disguises.

JULIAN
Frank, I think this young man needs help.

MR. ALEXANDER
Dear, dear, dear. Whatever happened to you, my boy?

Mr. Alexander, now confined to a wheelchair, pushes himself away from his desk, and rolls up to Julian. The water drips off Alex's clothes. They look at each other.

ALEX
The police... The horrible ghastly Police. They beat me up, sir. The Police beat me up, sir.

Mr. Alexander stares at him. It becomes apparent he is insane.

MR. ALEXANDER
I know who you are! Isn't it your picture in the newspapers? Didn't I see you this morning on the video? Are you not the poor victim of this horrible new technique?

ALEX
Yes, sir, that's exactly who I am, sir... and what I am... a victim, sir.

Mr. Alexander becomes frenzied as the speech progresses.

MR. ALEXANDER
Then, by God, you have 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. But you're cold and shivering. Julian, draw a bath for this young man.

JULIAN
Certainly, Frank.

He carries Alex off.

ALEX
Thank you very much, sir. God bless you, sir.

Alexander bites his hand.
INT. "HOME" ó BATHROOM
Alex soaks, eyes closed, in a hot tub.

After a while he begins softly singing to himself: "Singin' in the Rain".
INT. "HOME" ó LIVING ROOM ó DAY
Mr. Alexander is hunched over the phone, talking in hoarse whipsers. The door to the bathroom is right behind him. While he speaks Mr. Alexander throws nervous glances over his shoulder.

MR. ALEXANDER
I tell you, sir, they have turned this young man into something other than a human being. He has no power of choice any more. He's committed to socially acceptable acts, a little machine capable only of good... He can be the most potent weapon imaginable to ensure that the Government is not returned at the next election. The Government's great boast, as you know sir, is the way they have dealt with crime in the last few months. Recruiting brutal young roughs into the police, proposing debilitation and will-sapping techniques of conditioning. Oh, we've seen it all before in other countries The thin end of the wedge. Before we know where we are we shall have the full apparatus of totalitarianism. This young boy is a living witness to these diabolical proposals. The people ó the common people ó must know... must see! There are rare traditions of liberty to defend. The tradition of liberty means all. The common people will let it go! Oh, yes ó they will sell liberty for a quieter life. That is why they must be led, sir, driven... pushed!!! Thank you very much, sir. He'll be here.

Trembling with excitement and madness, Mr. Alexander hangs up the phone. His eyes, shiny with anticipation. Then, suddenly, he becomes aware of Alex's voice coming from the other side of the door.
INT. "HOME" ó BATHROOM
Alex in bath, singing.

ALEX
I'm singing in the rain,
Just singing in the rain...
MR. ALEXANDER
His face horribly distorted in a Homeric rage.
INT. "HOME" ó NIGHT
Alex, alone, in complete silence. Eating a large plate of spaghetti. The giant, Julian, appears, carrying Mr. Alexander in his wheelchair. He deposits him at the table.

ALEX
Good evening, sir.

MR. ALEXANDER
(very weird)
Good evening.

ALEX
It was very kind of you to leave this out for me, sir. There was no-one around when I finished my bath, so I started. I hope that's alright, sir.

MR. ALEXANDER
(too loud ó voice out of control)
Of course. Food alright?

ALEX
Great, sir. Great.

MR. ALEXANDER
Try the wine!

ALEX
Thank you very much, sir. Cheers

Suddenly the thought occurs to Alex that the wine may be drugged or poisoned.

ALEX
Won't you join me, sir?

MR. ALEXANDER
No, my health doesn't allow it.

ALEX
(to Julian)
And you, sir?

JULIAN
No thank you.

Alex, stalling for time, reaches for bottle and reads the label.

ALEX
1960, Chateau, Saint Estephe, Medoc, very good brand, sir.

He doesn't get a penny's change for his remarks from Alexander and Julian.

He holds the glass up to the light.

ALEX
Very good colour, sir. Smells mice, too.Very good number, sir. Very good. Here's to it.

He downs the glass.

ALEX
Very refreshing, sir, very refreshing.

MR. ALEXANDER
(very arch)
I'm so pleased you appreciate good wine. Have another glass!

ALEX
Thank you, sir.

MR. ALEXANDER
My wife...

Alex freezes.

MR. ALEXANDER
... used to do everything for me and leave me to my writing.

ALEX
Your wife, sir? Has she gone away?

MR. ALEXANDER
No. She's dead!

ALEX
I'm sorry to hear about that, sir.

His face contorted in rage.

MR. ALEXANDER
She was very badly raped, you see. We were assaulted by a gang of vicious young hooligans in this house, in this very room you're sitting in now. I was left a helpless cripple. The doctors said it was Pneumonia, because it happened some months later during the 'flu epidemic. The doctors told me it was Pneumonia, but I knew what it was. A victim of the modern age, poor, poor girl.

Suddenly his mood changes. He wheels right up to Alex.

MR. ALEXANDER
And now you, another victim of the modern age. But you can be helped. I phoned some friends while you were having a bath.

ALEX
Phoned some friends, sir?

MR. ALEXANDER
Yes. They want to help.

ALEX
Help me, sir?

MR. ALEXANDER
Help you.

ALEX
Who are they, sir?

MR. ALEXANDER
They're very, very important people and they're interested in you.

Bell rings. Julian rises,

MR. ALEXANDER
Julian. This will be these people now.

Alex gets up.

ALEX
Look, sir. I'm sorry to have troubled you. I think I ought to be going, sir.

Julian bars the way.

MR. ALEXANDER
No, no my boy. No trouble at all.

Alex slowly sits.

MR. ALEXANDER
Have another glass of wine.

He pours. Alex picks up glass and takes a drink.
INT. "HOME" ó NIGHT
Dolin and Rubinstein enter with Julian.

DOLIN
(genial)
Hullo, Frank.

MR. ALEXANDER
Good evening, sir.

RUBINSTEIN
Frank.

DOLIN
So this is the young man?

ALEX
How do you do, sir?

DOLIN
Hullo.

ALEX
Missus. Very pleased to meet you.

RUBINSTEIN
Hullo.

DOLIN
I hope you forgive us for coming over at this ungodly hour, but we heard from Frank that you were in some trouble so we came over to see if we could be of any help.

ALEX
Very kind of you, sir. Thank you very much.

DOLIN
I understand that you had a rather unfortunate encounter with the Police tonight.

ALEX
Yes, sir. I suppose you might call it that, sir.

DOLIN
Hahaha, and how are you feeling now?

ALEX
Much better, thank you, sir.

DOLIN
Feel like talking to us. Answering a few questions?

ALEX
Fine, sir, fine.

DOLIN
Well, as I've said, we've heard about you. We are interested in your case. We want to help you.

ALEX
Thank you very much, sir.

DOLIN
But first we'd like to find out a few things about you.

ALEX
What would you like to know, sir?

DOLIN
Well, shall we get down to it?

ALEX
Yes, sir.

Rubinstein takes out a notebook.

RUBINSTEIN
The newspapers mentioned that in addition to your being conditioned against acts of sex and violence, you've inadvertently been conditioned against music.

ALEX
Well, er, I think that was something that they hadn't planned for, you see, Missus, I'm very fond of music and always have been, especially Beethoven, Ludwig van... Beethoven. B... E... E...

He leans over and looks at her writing in notebook.

RUBINSTEIN
It's alright, thank you.

ALEX
And it just so happened that while they were showing me a particularly bad film, of like a concentration camp, the background music was playing Beethoven.

RUBINSTEIN
So now you have the same reaction to music as you do to sex and violence?

ALEX
Oh well, it's... it's not all music you see, Missus. It's just the 9th.

RUBINSTEIN
You mean Beethoven's 9th Symphony?

ALEX
That's right. Er... I can't listen to the 9th any more at all. When I hear the 9th, I get like this funny feeling.

RUBINSTEIN
When you say this funny feeling, you mean the state of mind brought on by the treatment they gave you?

ALEX
That is correct, sir. And then all I can think about is like trying to snuff it.

RUBINSTEIN
I beg your pardon?

ALEX
Snuff it, sir... um... death, I mean, missus... Er... I just want to die peacefully like with no... pain.

RUBINSTEIN
Do you feel that way now?

ALEX
Um... oh no, sir, not exactly, I still feel very miserable, very much down in spirits.

RUBINSTEIN
Do you still feel suicidal?

ALEX
Um... well, put it this way... I feel very low in myself. I can't see much in the future, and I feel that any second something terrible is going to happen to me.

He pitches forward, face into the plate of spaghetti.

RUBINSTEIN
Well done, Frank. Julian, get the car, will you please?
INT. HI-FI ROOM ó DAWN
Alexander sits looking up. Rubinstein, Julian and Dolin also listening to Beethoven played loudly on tape recorder.
INT. DOLIN'S HOUSE ó PRISONER BEDROOM ó DAY
The 9th Symphony booming up through the floor.

Alex slowly regains consciousness.

ALEX (V.O.)
I woke up. The pain and sickness all over me like an animal. Then I realised what it was. The music coming up from the floor was our old friend, Ludwig van and the dreaded 9th Symphony.

He staggers to the door. It is locked. He kicks and tugs the door.

ALEX
Open the door... turn it off... turn it off.

CUT TO:
THE BILLIARD ROOM BELOW
Hi-Fi gear laid out on the table. Large speakers facing upwards. Mr. Alexander trembles and twitches. He is now completely mad. The others merely wait, coolly.
INT. DOLIN'S HOUSE ó PRISONER BEDROOM ó DAY
Alex on his knees. His hands cupped over his ears, banging his head on the floor.

Then he stops and slowly straightens up, staring at the window.

ALEX (V.O.)
Suddenly I viddied what I had to do, and what I had wanted to do ó and that was to do myself in, to snuff it, to blast off forever out of this wicked cruel world. One moment of pain perhaps and then sleep ó forever and ever and ever.
EXT. WINDOW ó DAWC
Alex leaps out of the window.
INT. HOSPITAL WARD
Alex in bed. Camera slowly tracks along length of his body. Everything is bandages and plaster splints, wire cages, blood drips.

ALEX (V.O.)
I jumped, O my brothers, and I fell hard but I did not snuff it, oh no. if I had snuffed it, I would not be here to tell what I have told. I came back to life, after a long, black, black gap of what might have been a million years.

We hear Alex moan, and then another moan. Alex and the other ó a few times.

Suddenly, some curtains which have been drawn around another bed in the ward are parted, and a nurse hurries to Alex, hastily buttoning up her uniform. She is trailed by a young Intern fumbling with his trousers.

NURSE
Oh, he's recovered conscienceness, Doctor.
INT. HOSPITAL ó DAY
Em and Pee sitting around the bed.

PEE
Hullo, lad.

EM
Hullo, son, how are you?

PEE
Are you feeling better?

ALEX
What gives, O my Pee and Em, what makes you think you are welcome?

Em sobs. Pee comforts her.

PEE
There, there mother, it's alright. He doesn't mean it. You were in the papers again, son. It said they had done great wrong to you. It said how the Government drove you to try and do yourself in... and when you think about it, son... maybe it was our fault too in a way... your home's your home when it's all said and done, son.

Em sobs.
INT. HOSPITAL
Psychiatrist wheels trolley to Alex's bed. He is sitting up.

ALEX
Good morning, Missus.

DR. TAYLOR
How are you feeling today?

ALEX
Fine. Fine.

DR. TAYLOR
Good. I'm doctor Taylor.

ALEX
I haven't seen you before.

DR. TAYLOR
I'm your Psychiatrist.

ALEX
Psychiatrist? Huh, do I need one?

DR. TAYLOR
Just part of hospital routine.

ALEX
What are we going to do? Talk about me sex life?

DR. TAYLOR
No... I'm going to show you some slides and you are going to tell me what you think about them Alright?

ALEX
Ohhh... jolly good. Perhaps you can explain me something to me first.

DR. TAYLOR
Yes?

ALEX
Well, when I was all like ashamed up and half awake and unconscious like, I kept having this dream like all these doctors were playing around with me gulliver. You know... like the inside of me brain. I seemed to have this dream over and over again. D'you think it means anything?

DR. TAYLOR
Patients who've sustained the kind of injuries you have often have dreams of this sort. It's all part of the recovery process.

ALEX
Oh.

DR. TAYLOR
Now then, each of these slides needs a reply from one of the people in the picture. You'll tell me what you think the person would say. Alright?

ALEX
Righty, right.

The doctor reads aloud the dialogue printed in the cartoon balloon ó a peacock.

DR. TAYLOR
Isn't the plumage beautiful?

ALEX
I just say what the other person would say?

DR. TAYLOR
Yes. Yes, well don't think about it too long, just say the first thing that pops into your mind.

ALEX
Right... Knickers... Cabbages... It doesn't have a beak.

Alex laughs. Slide of woman speaking to boy.

DR. TAYLOR
Good. The boy you always quarrelled with is seriously ill.

ALEX
That's right and I'll smash your face for you, yarblockos.

Slide of watch shop.

DR. TAYLOR
Good. It wa your fault... you sold me a crummy watch. I want my money back.

ALEX
Bollocks. You know what you can do with that watch? You can stick it up your arse.

Slide of nude woman in bed, a man at the window.

DR. TAYLOR
Good. What do you want?

ALEX
Excuse me, missus. No time for the old in-out, I've just come to read the meter.

Slide of bird's nest with eggs.

DR. TAYLOR
Good. You can do whatever you like with these.

ALEX
Eggiwegs. I would like to smash 'em. Pick up th elot and f... owww...

He slams his hand down and cries out with pain.

ALEX
Fucking hell...

DR. TAYLOR
Fine. Well, that's all there is to it. Are you alright?

ALEX
I hope so. Is that the end then?

DR. TAYLOR
Yes.

ALEX
I was quite enjoying that.

DR. TAYLOR
Good. I'm glad

ALEX
How many did I get right?

DR. TAYLOR
It's not that kind of a test. But you seem well on the way to a complete recovery.

ALEX
And when do I get out of here then?

DR. TAYLOR
I'm sure it won't be long now.
INT. HOSPITAL ó DAY
Alex sitting up, being fed by Nurse.

ALEX (V.O.)
So I waited and, O my brothers, I got a lot better munching away at eggiwegs, and lomticks of toast and lovely steakiweaks and then, one day, they said I was going to have a very special visitor.

Doctor enters followed by Minister and Matron.

MINISTER
Good evening, my boy.

ALEX
Hi, hi, hi there, my little droogies.

DOCTOR
Well, how are you getting on today, young man?

ALEX
Great, sir. Great.

DOCTOR
Can I do anything more for you , Minister?

MINISTER
I don't think so, Sir Leslie. Thank you very much.

DR. TAYLOR
Then I'll leave you to it. Nurse.

They exit. Minister moves to Alex.

MINISTER
You seem to have a whole ward to yourself, my boy.

ALEX
Yes, sir, and a very lovely place it is too, sir, when I wake up in the middle of the night with my pain.

MINISTER
Yes... well good to see you on the mend. I've kept in constant touch with the hospital, of course, and now I've come to see you personally to see how you're getting along.

ALEX
I've suffered the tortures of the damned. The tortures of the damned, sir.

MINISTER
Yes I can... Oh look, let me do that for you, shall I?

ALEX
Thank you, sir.

MINISTER
I can tell you that I... and the Government of which I am a member are deeply sorry about this, my boy. Deeply sorry. We tried to help you. We followed recommendations had been made to us that turned out to be wrong. An enquiry will place the responsibility where it belongs. We want you to regard us as friends. We've put you right, you're getting the best of treatments. We never wished you harm, but there are some that did and do, and I think you know who those are. There are certain people who wanted to use you for political ends. People who would have been glad to have you dead because then they would have been able to blame it all on the Government. I think you know who those are. There is also a certain man ó a writer of subversive literature ó who has been howling for your blood. He's been mad with desire to stick a knife into you, but you're safe from him now, we've put him away. He found out that you had done wrong to him ó at least he believed you had done wrong. He had formed this idea in his head that you had been responsible for the death of someone near and dear to him. We put him away for his own protection... I'm sorry, I thought you were ready.

ALEX
Where is he now, sir?

MINISTER
We put him away where he can do you no harm. You see we are looking after your interests. We are interested in you, and when you leave here you will have no further worries. We shall see to everything... a good job on a good salary.

ALEX
What job and how much?

MINISTER
You must have an interesting job at a salary which you would regard as adequate. Not only for the job which you are going to do and in compensation for what you believe you have suffered, but also because you are helping us.

ALEX
Helping you, sir?

MINISTER
We always help our friends, don't we?
(smiles)
It is no secret that the Government has lost a lot of popularity because of you, my boy. There are some that think that at the next election we shall be out. The press has chosen to take a very unfavourable view of what we tried to do.

ALEX
Well, who can blame them, sir?

MINISTER
Mmmm, possibly. Yes. But public opinion has a way of changing and you, Alex, if I may call you, Alex?

ALEX
Certainly, sir. What do they call you at home?

MINISTER
ument Error^^^My name is Frederick. As I was saying, Alex, you can be instrumental in changing the public verdict. Do you understand, Alex? Have I made myself clear?

ALEX
As an unmuddied lake, Fred. As clear as an azure sky of deepest summer. You can rely on me, Fred.

MINISTER
Good... good boy. Oh yes, I understand you're fond of music. I have arranged a little surprise for you.

ALEX
Surprise?

MINISTER
One I think you will like... as a, how shall I put it, as a symbol of our new understanding. An understanding between two friends.

ALEX
Thank you, Fred. Thank you.

Minister turns and signals.

Door opens and a crowd of cameramen and reporters rush in.

Aides push two 6-foot loudspeakers and a Hi-Fi on a trolley.

ALEX (V.O.)
And what do you know, my brothers and only friends, it was the 9th, the glorious 9th of Ludwig van. Oh, it was gorgeosity and yummy yum yum. I was cured.
CLOSE SHOT ALEX
ALEX (V.O.)
As the music came to its climax, I could viddy myself very clear, running and running on like very light and mysterious feet, carving the whole face of the creeching world with my cut throat britva. I was cured all right.

THE END