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DETAILS

MPAA Rating - PG13

Length:
    127 Minutes

Genre:
    Thriller

Original Release Date:
    Jul 13, 2004

Director
    John Frankenheimer

Cast
    Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh, Angela Lansbury, Henry Silva

 
Movie Summary
An unusually tense and intelligent political hriller, The Manchurian Candidate was a film far ahead of its time. Its themes of thought control, political assassination, and multinational conspiracy were hardly common currency in 1962, and while its outlook is sometimes informed by Cold War paranoia, the film seemed nearly as timely when it was reissued in 1987 as it did on its original release. It opens with a group of soldiers whooping it up in a bar in Korea as their commander, Sgt. Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey), arrives to inform them that theyre back on duty. These men obviously have no fondness for Shaw, and he feels no empathy for them. While on patrol, Shaw and his platoon are ambushed by Korean troops. Months later, Shaw is receiving a heros welcome as he returns to the United States to accept the Congressional Medal of Honor, and several of the soldiers who served under Shaw repeatedly refer to him as the bravest, finest, most lovable man I ever met. It soon becomes evident that after their capture by the Koreans, Shaw and his men were subjected to an intense program of brainwashing prior to their release. While several are troubled by bad dreams and inexplicable behavior, its Capt. Bennett Marco (Frank Sinatra) who seems the most haunted by the experience. In time, Marco is able to piece together what happened; it seems Raymond Shaw was programmed by a shadowy cadre of Russian and Chinese agents into a killing machine who will assassinate anyone, even a close friend, when given the proper commands. On the other side of the coin, Shaw is also used for political gain by his harridan mother (Angela Lansbury), who guides the career of her second husband, John Iselin (James Gregory), a bone-headed congressman hoping to win the vice-presidential nomination through a campaign of anti-Communist hysteria.

The Manchurian Candidate features a host of remarkable performances, several from actors cast cleverly against type. Frank Sinatras edgy, aggressive turn as Marco may be the finest dramatic work of his career; Laurence Harveys chilly onscreen demeanor was rarely used to s better advantage than as Raymond Shaw; James Gregory is great as the oft-befuddled Senator Iselin; and Angela Lansburys ultimate bad mom will be a shock to those who know her as the lovable mystery writer from Murder, She Wrote. George Axelrods screenplay (based on Richard Condons novel) is by turns compelling, witty, and horrifying in its implications, and John Frankenheimers direction milks it for all the tension it can muster. While Frankenheimers career has had its ups and downs, The Manchurian Candidate and Seconds (1966) suggest that he deserves to be recognized as one of the most brilliantly paranoid American filmmakers of the 60s. Entertaining yet unsettling, both films indicate that things in the 60s were not what they seemed, with a resonance that still echoes uncomfortably in the present. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide


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