Film Review
One of the unequivocal highpoints of John Frankenheimer's prolific and
notoriously variable filmmaking career is this masterful satire on
paranoia and political intrigue, a film that is both chilling and blackly comedic
and which somehow still has a profound resonance. Frankenheimer
was at his creative peak when he made
The
Manchurian Candidate. He had just completed the powerful
prison drama
Birdman of Alcatraz (1962) and
would go on to make two other notable films,
Seven Days in May (1964) and
The
Train (1964). Subsequently, his output would vary
wildly between the sublime and the ridiculous, something that harmed
his reputation as a serious filmmaker and prevented him from receiving
the lasting recognition he was due. A groundbreaking realist
fantasy,
The Manchurian Candidate
shows Frankenheimer at his best, a master craftsman with a flair for
imaginative storytelling.
The film is very much a product of its time. It was released in
October 1962, the same month as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the closest
that humanity has so far come to nuclear obliteration. This was
the height of the Cold War, and America was experiencing a resurgence
of anti-Communist paranoia of the kind that had deeply scarred the
nation in the 1950s, through the efforts of one Senator Joseph
McCarthy.
The Manchurian
Candidate captures the mood of the era brilliantly and is
one of the most effective political satires of all time, showing us
that the left and right ends of the political spectrum are
indistinguishable and leaving us in no doubt that no politician can be
trusted with anything, not even a deck of playing cards.
Directed and edited with a razor-sharp precision, photographed in a way
that suggests a bleak and murky Kafkaesque pseudo-reality,
The Manchurian Candidate is as
visually arresting as it is dramatically intense. In the last
great performance of his career, Frank Sinatra is harrowingly
convincing as the flawed military man who tries to thwart a conspiracy
whilst fighting against mental collapse and the complacency of his
peers. Laurence Harvey is sinister and sympathetic as the
programmed assassin who finds himself ruthlessly exploited by villains
on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Sinatra and Harvey
each turns in a gripping performance here but both are
pretty well eclipsed by Angela Lansbury, who is truly
terrifying as the mother from Hell, a kind of
grotesque amalgam of Hillary Clinton and the wicked mother in every
Hitchcock film, with a touch of Lady Macbeth thrown in for good
measure. The fact that Lansbury was only three years older than
Harvey and yet is supposed to be playing his natural mother emphasises
the creepily Oedipal aspect of the mother-son relationship, making the
film even darker and quirkier than it may have been intended.
The assassination of John F. Kennedy thirteen months after the film's
first release has invited comment and speculation of the degree to
which
The Manchurian Candidate
may or may not have influenced events. Certainly, there are some
striking similarities between the film's climactic execution sequence
and Lee Harvey Oswald's killing of the American president. The
view has been posited that Oswald, like Laurence Harvey's character,
was brainwashed into assassinating Kennedy by either foreign or
home-grown agents. Such theories are almost as far-fetched as the
events depicted in the film itself, and yet...
© James Travers 2010
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Next John Frankenheimer film:
Seven Days in May (1964)
Film Synopsis
During the Korean War, a platoon of American soldiers are captured by
Soviets and flown to Manchuria in Communist China. Several months
later, the same soldiers return to their home country, to receive a
hero's welcome. Sergeant Raymond Shaw is rewarded with the
Congressional Medal of Honor for saving the lives of his men, who swear
unquestioning allegiance to him. One of these men, Captain
Bennett Marco, is appointed to the position of intelligence officer,
but he soon begins to experience disturbing nightmares. He sees
himself and his fellow soldiers being subjected to brainwashing
experiments in which, before a gathering of high-ranking Soviets, Shaw
is conditioned to kill two of the men under his command. When he
learns that another man in his platoon is experiencing the same
nightmares, Marco deduces that he and his fellow soldiers are pawns in
some fantastic Communist plot and immediately begins his own
investigation. He quickly realises that Raymond Shaw has
been programmed as an assassin. But who is to be his intended
target...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.