Guardian reporter Sean Michaels has discovered a sort of epistolary parallel universe in which A Clockwork Orange is a late-’60s time capsule from hell: A recently unearthed letter from the period propositioned director John Schlesinger — presumably between his Oscar-winning films Darling and Midnight Cowboy — to helm the film with Mick Jagger in the lead. It gets better: The Beatles were reportedly interested in contributing songs. Alas, Schlesinger evidently had a problem with novelist Anthony Burgess’s infamous ultraviolence; “the film’s extreme delinquency wasn’t ‘the sort of subject I particularly want to tackle,’ ” the director told executive producer Si Litvinoff, thus opening the door for Stanley Kubrick’s dystopic 1971 masterwork starring Malcolm McDowell. Michaels spends a few minutes fancying the alternate Jagger/Beatles version, but really, we’d rather not imagine this at all unless… no. Just no. Sorry we even brought it up. No. [The Guardian]
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As Malcolm McDowell said in the Kubrick exhibition, there are some roles that you are born to play. At least the Kubrick movies are pretty much guaranteed not to be remade as the director got them right the first time.