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- For the novel by Richard Condon, see The Manchurian Candidate. For the 2004 film, see The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)
The Manchurian Candidate | |
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[[Image:The Manchurian Candidate 1962 movie.jpg|200px|]] | |
Directed by | John Frankenheimer |
Produced by | George Axelrod John Frankenheimer |
Written by | Novel: Richard Condon Screenplay: George Axelrod |
Starring | Frank Sinatra Laurence Harvey Janet Leigh Angela Lansbury Henry Silva James Gregory Douglas Henderson Leslie Parrish John McGiver Khigh Dhiegh |
Music by | David Amram |
Editing by | Ferris Webster |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date(s) | October 24, 1962 |
Running time | 126 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Manchurian Candidate (1962) is a Cold War political thriller film adapted by George Axelrod from the 1959 thriller novel, by Richard Condon. It was directed by John Frankenheimer and starred Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Angela Lansbury, and Janet Leigh. The central concept of the film is that the son of a prominent, right-wing political family has been brainwashed as an unwitting assassin for the International Communist Conspiracy. The Manchurian Candidate was nationally released on Wednesday, October 24, 1962, at the zenith of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
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[edit] Plot
During the Korean War the Soviets kidnap an American infantry patrol and take them to Manchuria, in Communist China. There, the Communists (Russian, Chinese and North Korean) implant false memories in the soldiers' minds to cover the kidnapping, and to provide a subconscious trigger in the mind of one soldier, Staff Sergeant Raymond Shaw. Brainwashed, the soldiers are covertly returned to their lines and, after reintegration into American society, unaware of what they went through.
As part of the process, Captain (later Major) Bennett Marco (Frank Sinatra), Sergeant Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey) and the rest of the platoon believe Shaw saved their lives in combat, for which he is awarded the Medal of Honor. Also, when asked to describe Raymond Shaw, each man automatically says: "Raymond Shaw is the kindest, bravest, warmest most wonderful human being I've ever known in my life". Privately however they know that Shaw is a cold, sad, unsociable loner. As Marco puts it: "It isn't as if Raymond's hard to like. He's impossible to like!"
After the war, Marco suffers a recurring nightmare: a hypnotized Sgt. Shaw kills two of his platoon before the assembled Soviet, Chinese, and Korean brass watching a practical demonstration of the Communist brainwashing technique. He wants to investigate, but receives no support from Army Intelligence, for whom he currently works, because he has no proof. This changes when he learns that another soldier from the platoon has also been suffering the same nightmare and identified the same assembled Communists.
Deciding that this is too much of a coincidence, Army Intelligence decides to support Marco's attempts to uncover the mystery.
Raymond Shaw is an unwitting Communist sleeper agent whose actions are triggered by a Queen of Diamonds playing card. When he sees it, he will obey the orders of whoever is with him. His intended role is that of a killer who, while carrying out his assignments, must also kill any witnesses and then forget his actions. As the brainwasher, Doctor Yen, in Marco's Manchurian nightmare, explains: Shaw's brain hasn't been 'washed', it has been dry-cleaned. To test the assassin's conditioning, Dr Yen orders Shaw to kill his newspaper publisher employer.
Raymond's mother, Eleanor Iselin is the driving force behind her husband Senator John Yerkes Iselin, a bombastic demagogue in the style of McCarthy and Nixon who is dismissed by most people as a fool. He is also Raymond's stepfather. Raymond hates them both, especially his domineering mother. Iselin is established when (per his wife's orders) he interrupts a televised Congressional briefing of the Secretary of Defense and accuses him of knowing that some 57 Defense Department employees are Communist agents. This provokes a chaotic reaction among journalists and an enraged reaction from the Secretary.
Unknown to everyone, even Raymond, the Iselins are in fact Communist agents with a plan that should take them to the White House. Mrs Iselin herself is the American operative for whom Raymond is the instrument with which to effect the operation's final step.
For a while Raymond does find happiness with Jocelyn Jordan, daughter of Senator Thomas Jordan, one his stepfather's political rivals. What begins as a joke on the lines of Romeo and Juliet turns into genuine romance and they marry. Although pleased with the match, Sen. Jordan makes it clear to Raymond's mother that he will still block her husband's bid for the U.S. Vice-Presidency. She in turn has Raymond assassinate Jordan and, in the process, he also kills Jocelyn, who witnessed the event.
Raymond of course has no recollection of this, and is grief-stricken when he hears of Jocey's murder.
Mrs. Iselin then primes Raymond to assassinate their party's presidential candidate at the nomination convention. Afterwards, Sen. Iselin, the vice-presidential candidate, will, by default, become the presidential candidate and will give an inflammatory anti-Communist speech (written by Communist agents). The assassination will cause mass hysteria in the U.S. and propel the demagogue Iselin to the White House and justify his presidential emergency powers "that would make martial law seem like anarchy". Thereby, U.S. President Iselin, the Manchurian Candidate, will be a Communist puppet.
In a cynically moving scene, Raymond's mother admits to the activated Raymond that she has been a Communist agent for years. She needed an assassin to complete her plan and regrets the fact that he is involved. After all, the world is full of killers who do not require brainwashing to do the job. The International Communist Conspiracy chose Sergeant Raymond Shaw as the assassin because it solidified their hold and control upon his mother, and she intends to strike back at them once in power.
Marco, however, figures how to block Raymond's subconscious triggers, presenting him with a trick deck composed entirely of Queen of Diamond cards. Although Marco's attempts appear to fail, Raymond keeps control over himself at the party convention and takes his revenge by killing his mother and stepfather. He then commits suicide while wearing his Congressional Medal of Honor, now truly earned.
[edit] Critical response
Angela Lansbury was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actress, and Ferris Webster was nominated for Best Film Editing. In addition, Lansbury was named Best Supporting Actress by the National Board of Review and won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress.
The film is No. 67 on the AFI's "100 Years...100 Movies", and No. 17 on its "100 Years...100 Thrills" lists. In 1994, The Manchurian Candidate was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
It has received a rare 100 percent rating from Rotten Tomatoes [1]. Prominent American film critic Roger Ebert ranks The Manchurian Candidate as an exemplary "Great Film", declaring that it "is inventive and frisky, takes enormous chances with the audience, and plays not like a 'classic' but as a work as alive and smart as when it was first released."[2]
In April 2007, Angela Lansbury's character was selected by Newsweek as one of the ten greatest villains in cinema history.
[edit] Production
For Raymond's mother, Sinatra had wanted Lucille Ball, but Frankenheimer had worked with Lansbury in a mother role in a previous film, All Fall Down, suggested having her for the part [1] and insisted that Sinatra watch the film before decisions were made.
Although Lansbury plays Raymond Shaw's mother, she was in fact only three years older than Harvey.
Janet Leigh plays Marco's love interest. A bizarre conversation on a train between her character and Marco has been interpreted by some — notably, film critic Roger Ebert — as implying that Leigh's character, Eugenie Rose Chaney, is working for the Communists to activate Marco's programming, much as the queen of diamonds activates Shaw's. It is a rather strange conversation between people who have only just met, and almost appears to be an exchange of passwords. Frankenheimer himself admits that he had no idea whether or not "Rosie" was supposed to be an agent of any sort; he merely lifted the train conversation straight from the Condon novel, in which there is no such implication [1]. The 2004 film version has her as an FBI agent.
On the DVD audio commentary of the film, the director stated his belief that it contained the first-ever Karate fight in an American motion picture. This is true insasmuch as this was the first fight scene in an American film in which a karateka faced off against a karateka, however the 1955 MGM film Bad Day at Black Rock featured a fight scene between a conventional fighter played by Ernest Borgnine and a karate expert played by Spencer Tracy.
During the fight scene between Frank Sinatra and Henry Silva, Sinatra broke his hand during a movement where he smashed through a table. This resulted in problems with his hand/fingers for several years and is said to be one of the reasons why he pulled out of a starring role in Dirty Harry, having to undertake surgery to alleviate pains.
The famous interrogation sequence where Raymond and Marco confront each other in the hotel room opposite the convention are the rough cuts. When first filmed Sinatra was out of focus and when they tried to re-shoot the scene he was simply not as effective as he had been in the first take. Frustrated, Frankenheimer decided in the end to simply use the original out-of-focus takes. Critics praised him for showing Marco from Raymond's distorted point-of-view [1].
For the scene in the convention hall prior to the assassination, Frankenheimer was at a loss as to how Marco would pinpoint Raymond's sniper's nest. Eventually he decided on a method similar to Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent, made in 1940. Frankenheimer notes that what would be plagiarism in the 1960s would now be looked upon as an homage [1].
[edit] Legacy
The Karate fight in Candidate takes place in Raymond's apartment between Marco and Raymond's Korean manservant (Henry Silva). Some have suggested that the battles between Inspector Clouseau and his Oriental manservant Cato in The Pink Panther movies were inspired by this scene.
Nu metal band Slipknot make reference to the film in their song Wait and Bleed. These lyrics were then adopted by the band Manchurian Candidate [3]. References to the film were also mentioned in the self-titled song Manchurian Candidate.
Angela Petrelli on the show Heroes was inspired by Mrs. Iselin, and is in fact named after Angela Lansbury, due to the fact that creator Tim Kring could not remember the first name of the character (which is not specified in the film).
[edit] 2004 film version
Jonathan Demme directed an up-to-date version of The Manchurian Candidate in 2004, starring Denzel Washington (as Major Marco), Liev Schreiber (as Congressman Raymond Shaw), and Meryl Streep (as Senator Eleanor Shaw (her husband is not included)). This contemporary adaptation made substantial changes to the source material by dropping the Cold War background for an anti-corporation story of private and business control of the U.S. government. The American soldiers are also shown being captured in Kuwait during the Gulf War between Iraq and UN forces.
Raymond is the brainwashed Manchurian candidate and Marco the brainwashed assassin. The novel explicitly depicts incest between Raymond and his mother. The social conventions of American cinema in 1962 limited Frankenheimer's depiction to a salacious adult kiss between mother and son. Demme's depiction of mother-son incest is more explicit.
Demme's version of The Manchurian Candidate was critically and commercially successful in its updated representation of the social, political, and economic evils that the novel depicted.
[edit] The Kennedy Assassination
Hollywood rumor holds that Sinatra removed the film from distribution after the John F. Kennedy assassination. Certainly the film was rarely shown in the decades after 1963, but it did appear as part of the Thursday Night Movies series on CBS on September 16, 1965 and again later that season. It was also shown twice on NBC, once in the spring of 1974 and again in the summer of 1975. Sinatra did not acquire distribution rights to The Manchurian Candidate until the late 1970s. He was involved in a theatrical re-release of the film in 1988. The film has aired on a fairly regular basis on the Turner Classic Movies and American Movie Classics cable networks.
Michael Schlesinger, who was responsible for the film's 1988 reissue, maintains that the film's apparent withdrawal was unrelated to the Kennedy assassination. He notes that the film was "simply played out" by 1963, and that MGM did not re-release it theatrically until 1988 due to disagreements with Sinatra's attorneys over the terms of the film's licensing [2].
Similar rumors and treatment surround the film Suddenly! in which Sinatra himself starred as a Presidential assassin.
[edit] See also
- Assassinations in fiction
- Conspiracy thriller
- Project MKULTRA, CIA mind-control research program
- The Bourne Identity
- Seven Days in May
- The Simultaneous Man
- Telefon
- "The Deadly Assassin"
- The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!
- Spy film
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- The Manchurian Candidate at the Internet Movie Database
- The Manchurian Candidate at Allmovie
- The Manchurian Candidate at Metacritic
- The Manchurian Candidate at the TCM Movie Database
- Storyline and key dialogue excerpts
- McCarthyism and the Movies
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Category:1962 films Category:Black and white films Category:Cold War films Category:Film noir Category:Films based on mystery books Manchurian Candidate Category:Films set in New York City Category:Rail transport in fiction Category:Political thriller films Category:Psychological thriller films Category:United States National Film Registry
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