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Character page for A Clockwork Orange (the novel and the Stanley Kubrick film).


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Novel & Film Characters

The Droogs

    The Droogs in General 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/droogs.jpg
"There was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie, and Dim, and we sat in the Korova Milk Bar trying to make up our rassoodocks what to do with the evening."

The gang of delinquents led by Alex DeLarge. They get a kick out of drugged milk, violence, fast driving, rape and other such things.


  • Bad Guy Bar: They hang out at the Korova Milk Bar to "sharpen" themselves before going on their ultra-violence business. While the bar does have bouncers (which indicates there might have been trouble there before), nothing indicates that it's full of other folks who would be up to no good otherwise (though it does serve drugs in the milk).
  • Dark Is Evil: In the book, their outfits were predominately black while it's inverted in the movie adaptation.
  • Delinquents: They're young, and they love beating up tramps or other gangs, robbing houses, and raping women.
  • Drunk on Milk: Alex's opening narration is quick to point out that the milk they drink at the Korova Milk Bar is laced with various psychotropic drugs to "sharpen you up for a bit of the old ultraviolence."
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Alex (melancholic), Dim (sanguine), Georgie (choleric), and Pete (phlegmatic).
  • Future Slang: They speak Nadsat, a kind of slang based largely on Russian (for example, one of Alex's favorite adjectives, "horrorshow", sounds a bit like Russian khorosho, "very good"), but not as much in the film as the book did.
  • Gang of Hats:
    • In the movie, they all dress in white shirts, white pants, and white suspenders and wear a white codpiece over their pants, possibly to match the aesthetics of the Korova Milk Bar. They also wear black hats.
    • The book is almost entirely different from the movie version, dressed with jackets with cravats, black tights, and shoulder pads. The only part that they kept intact was the codpieces, yet they had emblems on them that were absent from the movie.
  • Makeup Is Evil: In the movie, each of the four droogs wears a female beauty product on his face: false eyelashes on Alex's right eye, lipstick for Dim, orange pencil on Georgie's left eyebrow, dark blue shadow on Pete's left eye.
  • Pet the Dog: Subverted. While they prevented Billy Boy and his gang from raping an innocent girl near the beginning of the story, it's only because they were itching to fight them as well as cock blocking them.

    Alexander "Alex" DeLarge 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/humblednarration_0.jpg

Portrayed by: Malcolm McDowell

The main protagonist of the story, a psychopathic young man who leads a gang he calls "Droogs". He loves violence, rape and classical music (that of Ludwig van Beethoven above all), and peppers his phrases with a made-up slang called Nadsat. He couldn't care any less about the consequences of his behavior... until they start catching up to him after a while, in much unpleasant ways for him.


  • Adaptational Nice Guy: While nowhere near considered a hero in the movie, he at least does not stoop so low as to intoxicate and rape two 10-year-old girls.
  • Adaptational Villainy: However, the ending of the movie implies that he is back to being driven by his lust over violence, given his newfound fantasy, instead of being tamed by the end of the book. This is Played With, because this last chapter was omitted in the American edition of the novel on which the movie is based.
  • Age Lift: Alex specifically states at the end of Act 1 that he was 15 at the start of the book. In the film, he is 17 at the very least (Malcolm McDowell was invoked27 at the time).
  • Bad Boss: Downplayed. He is bossy towards his gang members but doesn't harm them for the most part, except for the fact that he insults Dim often, but the other members also do that. Also, Alex does start a fight with the other members, but only because Georgie plotted a mutiny against him.
  • Born in the Wrong Century: He pretends to go along with the latest trends and fashion, but deep down, his interests are different. He despises the popular pop and rock music of this generation, and instead enjoys listening to classical music. Also, he does not show any interest in television that folks in those days were interested in watching, and instead enjoys firsthand experience, mainly in action.
  • Creepy Blue Eyes: Has plenty of creepiness shown, with blue eyes to match this sentiment in the film. Whether or not he has blue eyes in the book is not revealed.
  • Cult of Personality: Rather enthusiastic over classical music.
  • Drives Like Crazy: Once he gets behind the wheel of a Durango 95, he really puts his foot on the pedal and speeds on a highway, scattering shocked passerby and hitting animals along the way.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones:
    • At least this is what Alex himself claims. According to him, he does want a good relationship with his parents and is shocked when the tenant that lived in their house while he was arrested tried to take his place as a son and is genuinely saddened at being basically disowned by them.
    • In the movie he owned a pet snake named Basil which he treated kindly and was sad to hear the snake passed away while he was in prison.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Alex always has an impeccably polite tone that he never drops, even while committing assault, rape and murder.
  • For the Evulz: He does horrible things because he enjoys ultra violence.
  • Got Me Doing It: He finds it rather odd that he caught the Verbal Tic of P. R. Deltoid, yes?
  • Karma Houdini: In the movie version. He gets out of jail early thanks to the Ludovico treatment, which is later undone due to the media outrage it generates and earns Alex a well-paying job as compensation. Though he does have to endure a lot of pain to get there, in the end, he still gets off lightly despite being an unrepentant rapist and murderer.
  • Named by the Adaptation: His surname is not revealed in the book, although he calls himself "Alexander The Large" at one point, though this was probably an allusion to his erect penis, which he used to commit rape. In the film, he is given the surname DeLarge, which is an actual surname, by the way.
  • Psycho Knife Nut: He really favors the weapons he used as a delinquent. In the novel, he had a straight razor. In the film, he had a knife hidden in his cane.
  • Sinister Sweet Tooth: In the novel, he admits to having a "sladky tooth," practically shoveling sugar into his tea and adding jam to his egg-on-toast.
  • Sissy Villain: Downplayed. He wears long eyelashes on one eye and in the book the clothing he wears while doing ultra violence is in a dandy style, but besides that, he isn't effeminate.
  • Villain Protagonist: He's the novel and film's protagonist and committed several crimes, although victims of his crimes taking revenge on him when he's defenseless post-Ludovico treatment isn't necessarily depicted as a good thing.
  • Wicked Cultured: Obsessed with mindless violence, rape, and Classical Music.

    Georgie 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cw09.jpg

Portrayed by: James Marcus

One of Alex's gang members. He challenges Alex's authority over the gang and plans a mutiny.


  • Adaptational Wimp: The book depicts him being quite a challenge to Alex and quick to respond in a knife fight. The movie shows him quickly getting knocked out by Alex while off-guard.
  • Ambiguously Jewish: He mentions that he had been celebrating last Sabbath.
  • Asshole Victim: Alex does not feel bad for him at all in the book when he finds out that Georgie has been killed.
  • The Bad Guys Are Cops: He joins the police along with Dim in the movie after the gang disbands. When the two of them, as cops, bump into post-Ludovico treatment Alex, they can't resist brutalizing him.
  • Hidden Depths: He had a special skeleton key that he used to start up car engines, and that was how they got the Durango 95 moving.
  • Killed Offscreen: In the novel, Alex learns that he was murdered in a robbery in the second act.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Is killed offscreen in the novel, but appears as one of the two cops alongside Dim who beat Alex up in the film.
  • The Starscream: Is the gang member who plots the mutiny against Alex.

    Dim 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/e26519d8d504477c49a86df8b32962e5.jpg

Portrayed by: Warren Clarke

The strongest and most simple-minded member of Alex's gang. He ends up going along with Georgie's mutiny plans.


  • Adaptational Attractiveness: In the book, Alex notes that Dim is very very ugly and unable to win a girl. In the movie, his actor doesn't look half bad.
  • The Bad Guys Are Cops: He joins the police along with Georgie (Billy Boy in the novel) after the gang disbands, and his violent nature remains intact. When the two of them, as cops, bump into post-Ludovico treatment Alex, they can't resist brutalizing him.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: Gets treated by his fellow droogs as the braindead comic relief, hence his nickname. However, he returns later in the book as one of the coppers who torture Alex and leave him for dead.
  • Chain Pain: The only one of the four who uses a chain as a weapon, as opposed to knives/razors (book) or canes (film).
  • Dumb Muscle: He's not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but he's a force to be reckoned with in a fight.
  • Genius Ditz: He may be very dense, but he is skillful and artistic with his chain.
  • Meaningful Name: Dim as in "dimwitted", befitting a Dumb Muscle.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: Alex and the others all refer to him as "Dim" and no information is known about his real name.
  • The Dog Bites Back: Alex used to ridicule him a lot. After Alex's release from prison, Dim who became a cop took advantage of his position to brutalize Alex.
  • Token Good Teammate: Downplayed. He joins in the gang's heinous activities, but he has shown a pet the dog moment. Also, considering the other gang members pick on him frequently for being dense, he probably attacked Alex only because the latter provoked him.
  • Pet the Dog: While at the train station, he wanted to buy some chocolate bars to give to the homeless.

    Pete 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tumblr_o9p3zmmxlw1usuqlbo1_400.jpg

Portrayed by: Michael Tarn

The fourth member of Alex's gang.


  • Demoted to Extra: He has something approaching a redemption arc in the novel, but in the film, he's Out of Focus and never heard of again after Alex's arrest.
  • Heel–Face Turn: He has reformed by the third act of the novel.
  • Out of Focus: Alex, Georgie and Dim get all the focus and dialogue in the early part of the film, Pete just hangs around with them without saying anything and does nothing special beyond partaking in the gang's crimes and in the betrayal of Alex.
  • The Quiet One: He's never heard saying anything in the film.

Other Characters

    The Tramp 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/paul_farrell_in_a_clockwork_orange_1971.jpg

Portrayed by: Paul Farrell

Dubbed by: Henri Virlogeux (European French)

An alcoholic tramp the Droogs beat up as their first "entertainment" in the film. Alex bumps into him again post-Ludovico treatment, and this time he brings friends along.


  • The Alcoholic: He's drunk when the Droogs come across him, but his red face tells this is far from being the first time.
  • Composite Character: In the film he is this of the Tramp from the Novel and the Librarian, being the one to encounter Alex again post-treatment and beating the shit out of him with his peers.
  • The Dog Bites Back: In the film, Alex encounters him again after getting the Ludovico treatment. Violence makes Alex sick so he can't fight back, and this time the Tramp has friends around him to gang up on Alex.
  • Drunken Song: He sings "Molly Malone" while being drunk when the Droogs come across him.
  • Oireland: An Irish actor plays him and he sings a famous Dublin song while drunk.

    Billyboy 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/2110.jpg

Portrayed by: Richard Connaught

Dubbed by: Daniel Russo (European French)

The leader of a rival delinquent gang to the Droogs.


  • Adaptational Heroism: Not really, but in the film he and his gang chose a woman as their rape victim and not a child like they did in the novel.
  • Attempted Rape: He and his gang try to rape a woman in an abandoned theater, and get interrupted by the Droogs' arrival and Alex's taunting.
  • The Bad Guys Are Cops: In the novel, Billy Boy and Dim become cops and when they encounter Alex after his release from jail, they waste no time beating him and nearly drowning him in a pig trough.
  • Demoted to Extra: His presence in the film is reduced to the empty theater fight at the beginning.
  • Formerly Fat: By the time he has become a ruthless officer, he is not as fatty as he was at the beginning of the story.
  • Putting on the Reich: He and his gang wear some military symbols from Nazi Germany. Himself wears an Iron Cross and a Wehrmacht officer cap in the film. In the book, it is implied that he and his droogs wear the same type of teenage fashion going on at the time.
  • The Rival: He and his gang are rivals to Alex and his Droogs.
  • Sinister Switchblade: His weapon is a switchblade.
  • Would Hurt a Child: In the novel at least.

    Frank Alexander 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/patrick_magee.jpg

Portrayed by: Patrick Magee

A writer who ended up paralyzed from the waist down following an assault of Alex and his Droogs on his house. They also raped his wife, who died of pneumonia. One day, Alex unwittingly comes back to his house, and upon recognizing him, Frank snaps.


  • Became Their Own Antithesis: He is against the inhuman Ludovico treatment initially... but he throws that out the window the moment he figures out who Alex is and uses music to torture Alex instead.
  • Being Tortured Makes You Evil: Understandably, losing his ability to walk and seeing his wife being raped and murdered has not been best for his mental health. So when his assailant walks into his home, he's not exactly going to react well.
  • Disabled in the Adaptation: Is able to walk fine after the raid on his house in the book. In the movie, not so much.
  • Evil Cripple: While he is a victim of Alex, his Faux Affably Evil demeanor once he recognizes Alex is unsettling and the way he gleefully enacts his revenge doesn't really serve justice.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Once he has recognized Alex and gets eager for revenge, he shows his "hospitality" to Alex in a manner that couldn't be creepier if he tried.
  • Heroic BSoD: Hearing Alex sing "Singin' in the Rain" while the latter takes a bath shocks him straight back to the memory of when the former Droog did the same while raping his wife and he can't do anything but snap and convulse for a few seconds, putting two and two together and recognizing the guy who ruined his life.
  • Large Ham: After his traumatic ordeal, he becomes vocally unhinged too.
  • One-Steve Limit: His surname "Alexander" coincides with Alex's name.
  • Revenge: He hears of Alex's sickened reactions to classical music caused by the Ludovico treatment's chemicals, drugs Alex and locks him in a house with the stereo playing, trying to drive him to suicide.
  • Tranquil Fury: Once he recognizes Alex, he looks ready to jump at his throat at any moment, but instead adopts a hammy Faux Affably Evil tone when talking to him until he's drugged.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He intends to use Alex (then, once he recognizes him, Alex's death) as a tool in his political crusade against the corrupt government, being against its inhuman methods that are embodied in the Ludovico treatment.

    Mary Alexander 

Portrayed by: Adrienne Corri

The wife of Frank Alexander. Alex and his Droogs raped her during their invasion of her husband's home, and she died shortly afterwards.


  • Bound and Gagged: Alex and his droogs improvise ball gags out of rubber super balls and cellophane tape when they break into Alexander's house, bounding and gagging Frank and his wife. Then Alex cuts through the wife's clothes and rapes her.
  • Disposable Woman: She exists only to be raped and die so the revenge plot of Frank towards Alex can advance later on.
  • The Lost Lenore: Her rape and death devastated Frank, and he's eager for revenge once he recognizes Alex.

    Mr. and Mrs. DeLarge 

Portrayed by: Philip Stone (father), Sheila Raynor (mother)

Alex's parents.


  • Adults Are Useless: They're utterly oblivious to what kind of monster their son is, and when they realize this, they're just content with him being in prison and quickly find a Replacement Goldfish in Joe.
  • Unnamed Parent: Alex only ever refers to them as M and P.

    P. R. Deltoid 

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/deltoid.jpg

Portrayed by: Aubrey Morris

A Post-Corrective Advisor who is assigned to Alex after his time at a corrective school.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: The book portrays him as a bit sympathetic towards Alex. The film, however, shows him as just as leery and disrespectful towards Alex as the rest of the corrupt officers.
  • Adaptational Sexuality: Possibly. The book implies that he is heterosexual, considering that he at one point suddenly became fixated on an advert featuring an attractive Yugoslavian young woman. In the film, he has a rather intense fascination with Alex.
  • Adults Are Useless: Zigzagged. He truly wants what's best for Alex, and warns him about the consequences of his actions. However, he doesn't give out very professional advice and his demeanor comes across as creepy more than anything else.
  • Beleaguered Bureaucrat: Alex notes that he is an overworked man with hundreds on his books, and he constantly appears tired. Considering that he is a corrective officer in a current Teenage Wasteland, this is unsurprising.
  • Can't Take Criticism: He is clearly not pleased with Alex's snark about his unhelpful work to change him for the better.
  • Disappointed in You: When he hears the news of Alex's arrest and comes to the room he's held in under interrogation, he is clearly unsurprised and voices how this is very bad for his work, and looks very coldly at Alex as he says this.
  • Ephebophile: He gets very touchy feely with Alex.
  • Groin Attack: He hits Alex in the balls at one point when they're on the bed.
  • Large Ham: Is quite the energetic person in the movie.
  • Non-Giving-Up School Guy: He shows up at the flat to find out why Alex isn't at school as it's bad for his career if he can't reform the teenagers he works with.
  • Spiteful Spit: He spits in Alex's face the last time they see each other.
  • Verbal Tic: He has a habit of saying "yes" at the end of many of his sentences, yes?

    Jack 

Portrayed by: Billy Russell

A librarian who ends up being attacked by Alex and his droogs. He later comes across Alex again when he visits the library, and he gets his fellow librarians to aid him in attacking Alex.


  • Adapted Out: Like in the book, the professor had a large role in the early version of the movie, but it was deleted in the final one. The deleted scenes are currently lost and Jack's actor died later that year, so it would have been his last role in a movie.
  • Badass Bookworm: Has become this by the second time he and Alex cross paths, or at least, whenever he has company. He instantly recognizes him, and he gathers other librarians around him to swarm Alex. They would have beaten him to a pulp if they were younger and had more strength.
  • False Teeth Tomfoolery: As part of their attack on Jack, he had his dentures wrenched out of his mouth by Dim. Alex tried to stomp on them on the ground, but they were unable to be broken by his boot.
  • Shameful Strip: Alex and his droogs rip his clothing off, leaving him to hobble away wearing only an undervest and ancient long underpants, which caused Dim to roar with laughter at the sight.

    Marty and Sonietta 

Portrayed by: Barbara Scott (Marty), Gillian Hills (Sonietta)

Two girls Alex meets at his favorite record shop and seduces (they are ten in the book, while they're about the same age as Alex in the film). Alex ends up raping them in the book, while they end up in a threesome with consent in the film.


  • Adaptation Dye-Job: The book has their hair as strawberry blonde. In the film, this stays the same for Sonietta, but for Marty, she is now a brunette.
  • Adaptational Consent: They get raped by Alex in the book after he drugged them on alcohol, while in the film they consent to a threesome with Alex. Stanley Kubrick quickly realized he would get into much trouble if he stuck closer to the book in that particular scene.
  • Age Lift: While they are around ten years old in the book, the film ages them up to be teenagers about the same age as Alex.
  • Big Eater: In the book, as soon as Alex convinces them to accompany him, the two girls ask that he take them out for lunch. So he brings them to a pasta parlour around the corner where they feast themselves on many courses.
  • Children Are Innocent: Are they ever. They are just unaware of what a monster Alex is. This leads to him luring them to his apartment, intoxicating them with Scotch mixed with soda, and raping them.
  • The Dividual: Alex notes that although they were not sisters, they looked very similar and had the same ideas or lack thereof.
  • Everyone Has Standards: In the book, while they may have been trying to woo Alex, and were completely comfortable with stripping naked in their room along with him, that was all that they bargained for. After Alex beats and rapes them while they are drunk, they become sober and realize what a terrible situation they are in.
  • Future Slang: Have their own slang that is not Nadsat.
  • Likes Older Men: They are quite eager to please and flirt with Alex, and both simultaneously accept his invitation to accompany him back to his place.
  • No Name Given: They're not named in the film, but the script shows their names.
  • Sweet Tooth: They lick lollipops in the film when Alex meets them. As a sexual metaphor, of course.
  • Three-Way Sex: Alex has sex with both of them at the same time (with their consent) after seducing them at the record shop in the film.
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behavior: In the book, they try to act like sophisticated young ladies even though they are ten, and wear padded bosoms and plenty of red lipstick.

    Miss Weathers (The Cat Lady) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cw65.jpg

Portrayed by: Miriam Karlin

A lone woman who owns a lot of cats and a big house. Alex ends up killing her during a robbery that turns out to be the moment Georgie, Dim and Pete choose to betray him and cause his arrest.


  • Adaptational Sexuality: The only piece of artwork mentioned in the book is a simple nude statue, which could be stylized rather than eroticized. No giant dick sculptures here! Alex instead use a Beethoven Bust to kill her.
  • Age Lift: Goes from an elderly woman in the book to a middle-aged woman in the film.
  • Collector of the Strange: She collects sex-themed art, most prominently paintings of women in sexual positions and a wobbling plaster phallus.
  • Crazy Cat Lady: She is more a pretentious and eccentric artiste-type, but she does by all appearances live alone (in a well-appointed, if oddly decorated, house) with a number of cats.
  • Cruel and Unusual Death: In a blatantly obvious oral sex metaphor, Alex crushes her head in the mouth area with a big plaster phallus he finds in her home.
  • Death by Irony: Her collection of sex-themed art implies she's a Dirty Old Woman, and her brutal death mimics oral sex.
  • Dirty Old Woman: She's not quite young and collects sex-themed art.
  • Fiery Redhead: She's got quite a temper, although seeing her home being invaded doesn't help. This is a contrast from the book, in which she had very grey hair.
  • Named by the Adaptation: Is only known as a crazy cat lady to Alex in the book, but while on the phone to the police in the movie, she reveals that her last name is "Weathers".
  • Redhead In Green: She's a redhead, and wears a green bodysuit top.

    Det. Const. Tom 

Portrayed by: Steven Berkoff

Dubbed by: Francis Lax (European French)

The police officer who approaches Alex and antagonizes him while he's in custody, which causes him to retaliate at him.


    Prison Chaplain 

Portrayed by: Godfrey Quigley

The chaplain of Parkmoor Prison where Alex is detained after the murder of the Cat Lady. Alex calls him the "prison charlie" (a pun on Charlie Chaplin)


  • Adaptational Heroism: In the book, he's a Pedophile Priest and wants to bugger Alex.
  • Good Shepherd: He works hard to try to reform the inmates, but Alex certainly won't listen.
  • Horrible Judge of Character: He seems to think Alex is a repentant delinquent who is trying to find God and take the righteous path to redemption. He isn't, to say the least.
  • Large Ham: He's very much of the old-school preacher variety and says almost every word as though he's on stage.
  • Only Sane Man: He's the only one at the prison to be against the treatment and to oppose taking away free will as a solution to violent behavior. Stanley Kubrick himself states that the chaplain is the most morally upright character in the film.

    Prison Governor 

Portrayed by: Michael Gover

The head of the prison that Alex is ordained in.


    Frederick, Minister of the Interior 

Portrayed by: Anthony Sharp

The current head of the department, who decides that Alex would be the first test subject of the Ludovico Technique.


    Dr. Brodsky 

Portrayed by: Carl Duering

The doctor in charge of the Ludovico Technique for Alex.


    Dr. Branom 

Portrayed by: Madge Ryan

The assistant to Dr. Brodsky.


    Chief Guard Barnes 

Portrayed by: Michael Bates

The head guard of Parkmoor Prison.


    Joe 

Portrayed by: Clive Francis

A lodger who comes to live at the DeLarge residence when Alex leaves.


  • Adaptational Attractiveness: The description Alex gives for Joe in the book is very unflattering, even going so far as to call him very ugly. As for the movie, he is quite handsome.
  • Dirty Coward: Joe is very critical and demeaning toward Alex when they first meet, and he instantly retreats and falls over when Alex tries to push back with violence. When it's clear that the Ludovico Treatment has left him helpless, Joe quickly goes back to being a jerk.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: While Joe was particularly mean and critical towards Alex, who was feeling the effects of his treatment, Joe was also quite right in that Alex's crimes were sickening.
  • Preferable Impersonator: Alex's parents take a liking to him, treating him with respect that they never did for Alex and refuse to kick him out. Alex himself is not pleased upon finding this out.
  • Put on a Bus: Due to a mishap with the police, he was forced to go back to his homeland, leaving the DeLarge residence. This turns out to be a Contrived Coincidence, as this leaves a spare room for Alex to return to his parents.

    Rex 

The other police officer who arrests Alex.


  • Demoted to Extra: What little role he had in the book was downgraded to simply being briefly seen as an unknown extra in the front wheel of the police car as Alex is escorted to the farmland in the movie.
  • Police Are Useless: While Alex is being beaten up by former rivals of his whom are now officers, Rex himself just sits in the car reading.
  • Token Good Teammate: Played with. He truly sees Alex as a victim and comforts him after he is attacked by the elderly. However, he doesn't intervene when his other companions begin roughing him up.

    Z. Dolin, "Something Something" Rubinstein, and D. B. da Silva 

Portrayed by: John Savident, Margaret Tyzack, and Alec Wallis

The conspirators whom are phoned up by Mr. Alexander to get the story of Alex's tragedy out to the public.


    Nurse Feeley 

Portrayed by: Carol Drinkwater

The nurse whom is assigned to care for Alex while he's stuck in the hospital.


  • Sex at Work: She's having sex with a doctor in Alex's room when Alex awakens from his coma.

Novel-only Characters

    Leo 

The second-in-command of Billyboy's gang.


    Rick, Len, and Bully 

Alex's new gang members.


Film-only Characters

    Julian 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cuar3wfwuaaga52.jpg

Portrayed by: David Prowse

A tall and muscular man Frank Alexander hired as personal assistant and bodyguard following the Droogs' home invasion that put him in a wheelchair.


  • The Big Guy: He has an imposing build and stands out compared to the crippled Frank and his other associate when they enact Alexander's revenge upon Alex.
  • Canon Foreigner: He was created solely for the movie.
  • The Dragon: He becomes Frank Alexander's right-hand man when the latter enacts his revenge upon Alex.
  • Real Men Wear Pink: He wears a pink shirt during the dinner scene at Alexander's home.

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