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Due to my research in the UFO arena
in the 80s and early 90s, I became embroiled in the adjunct Mind
Control conspiracy field. I was sent tons of documents from people
claiming to be implanted and spied on by a rogue segment of our
government. I got X-rays showing their brain implants. I got calls
pleading for my help. This is all due to the fact that the now infamous
Jose M. R. Delgado, M.D. wrote a book called “Physical Control
of the Mind: Toward a Psychocivilized Society” in 1969. I
understand that most politicians have heard from these tormented
people. Politicians call them “wavies.”
I wrote an article titled “What Would Freud
Say?” about the people who claim to be implanted by either
evil aliens or a shadow government.
I vaguely remember seeing on TV the 1962 THE MANCHURIAN
CANDIDATE directed by John Frankenheimer. I vividly remember Raymond
Shaw (Laurence Harvey) as a man on the verge of a psychotic breakdown:
Reed thin, sweating, and looking crazy, Frankenheimer dwelled on
Harvey’s feline frailty. Harvey’s Shaw looked like he
could easily be caught under his mother’s spell and manipulated
by her seductive charm. There was a weird sexual halo stalking their
relationship. Frank Sinatra played Bennett Marco, the man who recalls
the strange brainwashing experiments he and Shaw underwent. Physically,
Marco was Shaw’s alter-ego. They were matched opposites.
Now in this updated re-make we have “golden
son” and heir-apparent to a political dynasty Raymond Shaw
played by Liev Schreiber and Denzel Washington as Army Major Bennett
Marco. Shaw is an aristocrat. Bennett is the Everyman with a messy
apartment and no friends. The other pivotal role, that of Shaw’s
powerful mother, Eleanor Shaw, originally played brilliantly by
Angela Landsbury, is now in the hands of Meryl Streep.
Director Jonathan Demme has fleshed out the story.
Everything is laid out neatly. Where there once was ambiguity and
dark areas, now there is blunt clarification.
In 1991, Squad Sergeant Shaw, under the command
of Bennett during Desert Storm, saves the platoon while under enemy
fire and is awarded the Medal of Honor.
It is over a decade later and Bennett, after giving
a talk to Boy Scouts, encounters another member of the platoon.
He (Jeffrey Wright) tells Bennett he is having severe nightmares
about Shaw. He is very troubled. Bennett encourages him to get psychological
help but the problem is he has been suffering from nightmares as
well. He comes to believe that the entire platoon was electronically
brainwashed. There was no heroic battle during Desert Storm. They
were implanted with the false memory that Shaw was a war hero. And
now Shaw, with political pressure from his mother, has just secured
the Vice-Presidential nomination of their party.
The problem here is that Schreiber plays Shaw as
a really good man who would actually make a great candidate on his
own merits. People like what he has to say. His two-terms as a Congressman
have been impeccable. Yet, privately he comes off as arrogant (“Don’t
touch me,” he twice tells Bennett), aloof, and unemotional.
He treats his mother like an aide. Streep attempts to overcome their
lack of chemistry by being overly demonstrative. Schreiber is stoically
remote. Shaw really doesn’t need his mother’s guidance.
She is an annoyance, not an emotional crutch. And there is no sexual
guilt that would bind Shaw so devotedly to his mother. Even though
Shaw has dialogue explaining their relationship, I didn’t
see it.
As far as Schreiber is concerned, he met Streep
when she walked on the set.
I wonder if the lack of emotional connection between
Schreiber and Streep was noticed. Why would Demme place Streep kneeling
at Schreiber’s feet while he is apparently undressed in a
bathroom (or sauna)? And the 1962 full-on-mouth kiss? Only suggested
here.
With Washington starring as Bennett, the focus is
on his discovery of the truth. He is at first suspicious when a
woman, Rose (Kimberly Elise), approaches him on the train to New
York City. Conveniently, she has a cousin’s empty apartment
in the city and Bennett needs to take a shower. Rose tells him she
works at the supermarket where he shops. He believes her. He confides
in her.
As
an updated remake THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE stands on its own. While
it will not become the classic the 1962 film was, it is in color
and has extreme close-ups. (I recently spent a few minutes watching
THE MALTESE FALCON on TV. It’s like watching a stage play
from the last row of the balcony.) Washington’s appeal is
strong. His voice is filled with sincerity and he is able to convey
a line of dialogue with emotion. While I think Schreiber was the
wrong casting choice, THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE is still a haunting,
serviceable thriller.
The
Manachurian Candidate
Paramount Pictures release
Credits:
Jonathan
Demme- Director
George
Axelrod- Screenwriter
Richard
Condon- Source Writer
Daniel
Pyne- Screenwriter
Dean
Georgaris- Screenwriter
Scott
Aversano- Executive Producer
Scott
Rudin- Producer
Jonathan
Demme- Producer
Ilona Herzberg- Producer
Tina Sinatra- Producer
Cast:
Denzel Washington .... Ben Marco
Meryl Streep .... Eleanor Shaw
Liev Schreiber .... Raymond Shaw
Kimberly Elise .... Rosie
Vera Farmiga .... Jocelyn Jordan
Jon Voight .... Senator Thomas Jordan
David Keeley .... Anderson
Jeffrey Wright .... Al Melvin
Sakina Jaffrey .... Mysterious Arabic Woman
Simon McBurney .... Noyle
Paul Lazar .... Gillespie
Alyson Renaldo .... Mirella Freeman
Adam LeFevre .... Congressman Healy
Robyn Hitchcock .... Laurent Tokar
Pablo Schreiber .... Eddie Ingram
MPAA
Rating R
by
Victoria Alexander - FilmsInReview.com
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