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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
The Manchurian Candidate

Wikipedia

 
The Manchurian Candidate is a 1959 novel by Richard Condon. It has twice been made into film|movies of the same name; a celebrated 1962 film directed by John Frankenheimer, and a 2004 film directed by Jonathan Demme.



Image:The_Manchurian_Candidate_1962_movie.jpg|right|175px|Movie poster for The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

spoiler
The premise of the film was that, in the 1950s, the Soviet Union|Soviets had developed a technique based on "brainwashing" and akin to hypnosis, whereby a person could be snapped into and out of a trance, ordered to do things with full compliance, and have no memory of such actions afterwards. United States soldiers fighting in the Korean War were thus captured, taken to the People's Republic of China to be brainwashed, then covertly released back to the American forces. To cover their tracks, the Communists would implant false memories in the American soldiers' heads and provide a subconscious trigger whereby the soldier could be snapped into and out of hypnosis. Even after full reintegration with American society, they would have no knowledge of their having been brainwashed or the triggers which set them off.

The movie stars Frank Sinatra (as Major Bennet Marco) and Laurence Harvey (as Sergeant Raymond Shaw) as army officers who are captured and brainwashed. Their squadron is made to believe Raymond Shaw saved their lives in combat, for which he receives the Medal of Honor when they return to America. In fact, the Communists intend to use Raymond as a test sleeper agent abroad and, using the Queen of Diamonds in a deck of playing cards as a subconscious trigger, compel him to commit heinous crimes, including murder. It is learned late in the movie that Raymond was, in fact, controlled by his mother (played by Angela Lansbury), who seeks to advance the fortunes of her husband and Raymond's step-father, Joseph Iselin (played by James Gregory (actor)|James Gregory), a Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy-like senatorial demagogue and believed to have been a caricature of Vice-President Richard Nixon. She uses Raymond to assassinate the main opponent to her husband being nominated as a vice-presidential candidate and then plans to also have him assassinate the presidential nominee as well.

After the war is over, Marco begins to have a recurring nightmare in which Raymond kills two of his fellow Army mates. When he finds out that another Army member has been having the same dream, he sets out to uncover the mystery. Janet Leigh plays Bennet's love interest. The nature of her character has been heavily discussed, with a bizarre conversation on a train between her character and Marco viewed by some as implying that Leigh's character, Eugenie Rose Cheney, was actually working for the Communists to attempt to control Marco.



The film won acclaim for its political themes and the exploration of the connection between the far left and far right in cold war America.

The film is consistently in the top 100 on the Internet Movie Database's list of top 250 films; was #67 on the American Film Institute's 100 Years, 100 Movies, and #17 on its 100 Years, 100 Thrills; and has been deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.




Hollywood legend holds that Sinatra removed the film from distribution after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, although there is no evidence to support this. In fact, it appeared as part of the Thursday Night Movies series on CBS in September of 1965 and again later in that television season. It also was shown twice on NBC, once in the spring of 1974 and again in the summer of 1975. Sinatra didn't acquire distribution rights to the Manchurian Candidate until the late 1970's, and was involved in a theatrical re-release of the film in 1988.




Sinatra permanently damaged the little finger on his right hand when he punched through a coffee table during his fight scene with Henry Silva. The table was not supposed to figure into the fight, so a break-away prop was not used--Sinatra accidentally put his hand through a real coffee table. The effect was so dramatic that the shot made it into the final version of the film.



See The Manchurian Candidate (2004 movie)



The term "Manchurian candidate," spawned by the book and later films, refers to an individual who has undergone brainwashing and / or mind control with the intent of creating a "sleeper" personality within that individual.



  • Conspiracy thriller

  • The Bourne Identity

  • Seven Days in May

  • The Simultaneous Man

  • Telefon

  • Sleeper agent




  • imdb title|id=0056218|title=The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

  • http://www.buzzflash.com/farrell/04/05/far04017.html Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and the Manchurian Candidate

  • http://www.filmsite.org/manc.html Storyline and key dialogue excerpts


Category:1959 books|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category:1962 films|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category:AFI 100 Movies|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category:AFI 100 Thrills|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category:Thriller films|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category:Films noir|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category: Cold War films|Manchurian Candidate, The
Category:Best Supporting Actress Oscar Nominee (film)|Manchurian Candidate, The <!-- Angela Lansbury; 1962 film -->

he:השליח ממנצ'וריה
Category:United States National Film Registry|Manchurian Candidate, The

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Manchurian Candidate".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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