Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
A Clock Work Blue
1972 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
A Clock Work Blue is a 1972 American sexploitation comedy film directed by Eric Jeffrey Haims. It stars Joe E. Tata as Homer, a clumsy researcher who acquires a watch that allows him to travel through time.
Remove ads
Cast
- Joe E. Tata as Homer
- Tracy Handfuss as Nancy
- Marie Arnold as Betsy Ross
- Susannah Fields as Marie Antoinette
- Shella Bancroft as Madame DuBarry
- Mady Maguire as Priscilla
- Rene Bond as Anne Boleyn
- Shannon West as Cleopatra
- Jayne Allison as Helen of Troy
- John Kirkland as Paul
- Ed Kelly as Thomas Cromwell
- Sebastian Brooke as Louis XVI
- Ray Sebastian as Paris
- Donn Greer as Julius Caesar
- George Berkley as Professor
- Bill Bagdad as Painter
Remove ads
Release and legal issues
A Clock Work Blue opened in 1972 at the Cinestage Theatre on Dearborn Street in Chicago, Illinois, six days after the film A Clockwork Orange had completed an 18-week run at the nearby Michael Todd Theatre.[2] This, combined with A Clock Work Blue's title and the fact that some of its advertising had made references to A Clockwork Orange (such as that the former film "makes Orange blush") resulted in legal action from Warner Bros., the distributor of A Clockwork Orange.[2] The case resulted in Warner Bros. winning a consent order which declared that A Clock Work Blue was not to be screened under that title in any other theater in Cook County, Illinois.[3]
Remove ads
Critical reception
Brian Orndorf of Blu-ray.com called the film "bizarre and relentless with its mediocrity", as well as "screamingly racist".[4]
Home media
In April 2014, A Clock Work Blue was restored in 4K and released on DVD and Blu-ray by Vinegar Syndrome as a double feature with the 1971 film The Jekyll and Hyde Portfolio, also directed by Haims.[1][5]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads