Wtf? It is just a coincidence.
I didn't know you had a son The Final Fantasy Forums - View Profile: RagnaII
Okay, I SUPPOSE
Yo. I am an MSN user since I am European, so invite me to that little usergroup, if you will?
Haha. Awesome.
I'll remember that EDIT: Oh wow, as soon as I read that, this was on tv: YouTube - Easy Curves Commercial
I see. I really like that haircut. Size is irrelevant. Shape matters.
hahaha, Bangs= hair, the part that hangs over your forehead My boobs aren't that great I only have a B cup
Bangs = boobs?
No, it's not haha I made it, randomly. She has the same bangs I do though
I've always wondered: Is that avatar a picture of you?
haha, Thank youuu <3 both you and Alpha
Yo! Girl! Happy birthday! Have fun today. Also, Alpha says hi and wishes you a happy birthday too.
Basically in the last Chapter, Alex realizes that he wants to live a meaningful life, after seeing that Pete is Married now and doing something with his. I'm not sure if the movie included that last chapter or not, but it was the best part of the book, there's more you have to read it. The novelist’s response Anthony Burgess had mixed feelings about the cinema version of his novel, publicly saying he loved Malcolm McDowell and Michael Bates, and the use of music; he praised it as “brilliant”, even so brilliant, it might be dangerous. His initial response to the cinematic A Clockwork Orange was very enthusiastic; his only bother was the deletion of the story’s last chapter of redemption, an absence he blamed upon his U.S. publisher (this final chapter was omitted in all U.S. editions of the novel prior to 1986) and not director Kubrick. From last Chapter: "There was a like young couple at this table, peeting and smoking filter-tip cancers, and govoreeting and smecking very quietly between themselves, but I took no notice of them and just went on peeting away and like dreaming and wondering what was going to happen to me. But I viddied that the devotchka at this table who was with this chelloveck was real horrorshow, not the sort you would want to like throw down and give the old in-out in-out to, but with a horrorshow plott and litso and a smiling rot and very very fair voloss and all that cal. And then the veck with her, who had a hat on his gulliver and had his litso like turned away from me, swivelled round to viddy the boshy big clock they had on the wall in this mesto, and then I viddied who he was and then he viddied who I was. It was Pete, one of my three droogs from those days when it was Georgie and Dim and him and me. It was Pete like looking older though he could not now be more than nineteen and a bit, and he had a bit of a moustache and an ordinary day-suit and this hat on. I said: 'Well well well, droogie, what gives? Very very long time no viddy.' He said: 'It's little Alex, isn't it?' 'None other,' I said. 'A long long long time since those dead and gone good days. And now poor Georgie, they told me, is underground and old Dim is a brutal millicent, and here is thou and here is I, and what news hast thou, old droogie?' 'He talks funny, doesn't he?' said the devotchka, like giggling. 'This,' said Pete to the devotchka, 'is an old friend. His name is Alex. May I,' he said to me, 'introduce my wife?' My rot fell wide open then. 'Wife?' I like gasped. 'Wife wife wife? Ah no, that cannot be. Too young art thou to be married, old droog. Impossible impossible.' A Clockwork Orange | Last chapter | Anthony Burgess
No, I haven't read the book yet. And what part of the story was taken out then? (I'm not sure what happens in the last chapter.) And the movie isn't that violent. It was back then, in the 70's, but compared to some stuff from today, it's not really violent.