The Manchurian Candidate
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jonathan Demme
Denzel Washington
Liev Schreiber
Jeffrey Wright
Meryl Streep
Jon Voight
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
U.S. Army Major Bennett Marco can't sleep at night--and he doesn't want to. Marco spends his days giving inspiring speeches about his platoon's ambush in the Kuwaiti desert and the heroics of Sergeant Raymond Shaw, who won the Medal of Honor for saving Marco's crew. But at night, Marco's dreamlike memories of the desert turn sinister and terrifying. And Marco privately wonders whether the two soldiers who died in the firefight might have met darker fates than officially recorded--and whether Shaw might not be the glorious hero that everyone thinks he is. When Shaw takes the national stage as a surefire candidate for vice president--under the thumb of his controversial mother, Senator Eleanor Prentiss Shaw--Marco is forced to act on his growing suspicions. With military officials questioning his sanity, and the net of security tightening around Shaw, Marco races to probe deeper into the unimaginable, shocking truth before the White House is won.
Director
Jonathan Demme
Cast
Denzel Washington
Liev Schreiber
Jeffrey Wright
Meryl Streep
Jon Voight
Vera Farmiga
Dean Stockwell
Julie Adamy
Beau Sia
Ted Levine
Ann Dowd
Kenneth Utt
Josephine Demme
Robyn Hitchcock
Aaron Scoenfeld
Stacey Newsome Santiago
Roger Corman
Joey Perillo
Jane Denoble
Al Franken
Gayle King
Danny Darst
Joaquin Perez Campbell
Tom Stechschulte
Pablo Schreiber
Stephen Richardson
Andre B Blake
John Bedford Lloyd
Stephanie Mcbride
Ed Crane
Gordon Brummer
Leona E Sondreal
James Mccauley
Antoine Taylor
Michael Shehata
Anthony Mackie
Jerry Duplessis
Joshua Elrod
Craig Branam
Teddy Dunn
Adam Lefevre
Enrique Correa
William Meisle
Sakina Jaffrey
Brad Holbrook
Dave Weinman
Bill Irwin
Robert Castle
Ukee Washington
Jonathan Borst
Sidney Lumet
Fab Five Freddy
Simon Mcburney
David Keeley
Ray Anthony Thomas
David Neumann
Denzel Dellahoussaye
Alyson Renaldo
Anna Deavere Smith
Lilly Mcdowell
Roy Blount
Tim Artz
Lewis Walker
Prue Lewarne
Lauren Roselli
Darrell Larson
Cassius Wilkinson
Michael C Pierce
Duana Butler
Charles Napier
Edwidge Danticat
Walter Mosley
James B Howard
Dorian Missick
Jude Ciccolella
Obba Babatundé
John Aprea
Christopher Russo
Bebe Winans
Harry Northup
Geovonne Long
Marie Runyon
Forrest Sawyer
Tracey Walter
Victoria Haynes
Kristen Shaughnessy
Zeljko Ivanek
Tymberly Canale Harris
Kate Valk
Marin Ireland
Roma Torre
Molly Hickok
Jim Roche
Reno
Gabriela Fung
Tom Chapin
Eliza Simpson
Big Jim Wheeler
Miguel Ferrer
Paul Lazar
Kimberly Elise
Paul Johnson
Dan Olmstead
Glen Hartell
Neda Armian
Joseph Alessi
Bruno Ganz
Buzz Kilman
Malcolm Simpson
Jose Pablo Cantillo
Crew
Joe Abbatecola
Robert Henry Adams
Babatunde Adebimpe
Danny Aiello Iii
Brian Keith Allen
Dave Allen
Nancy Allen
Betsy Alton
Bill Anagnos
Arthur Anderson
Roy T Anderson
Tara Anderson
Jeff Atmajian
Joann Atwood
Scott Aversano
George Axelrod
Cheryl Bainum
Heather Baker
Robert Baldwin
Randall Balsmeyer
Randall Balsmeyer
Chris Barnes
Monica Barraza
Matthew Frederic Barrick
Peter M Bauer
Jonathan Beck
William A Beekman
Bruce Benson
Jon Bergholz
Peter Betulia
Michael Betzag
Jello Biafra
Robert D Blair
Barbara Blaisdell
Barbara Blaisdell
Bob Bornstein
Jay Boryea
David Boulton
Ernest Leif Boyd
Wayne Brackett
Robert Braun
Joel Bravo
Louis Bravos
Dawn Bridgewater
Conrad F Brink
Calvin Brown
Susie Brubaker
Susie Brubaker
Manley Buchanan
Manley Buchanan
Tim Buchanan
Paul Bucossi
Ashley Van Buren
Mike Burke
Hugo Burnham
Eva Z. Cabrera
Travis Call
Anthony Calypso
John Campbell
Paul Candrilli
John Carbonara
Brian Carmichael
Teresa Carriker-thayer
Andrew Casey
Francis Catalano
Korey J. Cauchon
Ted Cella
Vicky Cervantes
Victor Chan
Maria K. Chavez
Temese Chavis
Bob Chefalas
Rick Chefalas
Larry M. Cherry
Gary Chester
Andrew Cheung
Kathleen Chopin
William R Claxton
Toni Colandreo
Cheri Coleman
Doug Coleman
Jeff Collette
Bob Colletti
Leslie Collins
Shakera Collins
Chris Colombo
George Colucci
Richard Condon
Marius Constant
Marko Constanzo
J. John Corbett
J. John Corbett
Kathleen Corgan
Chris Cozens
Larry W Crenshaw
Daisy Curbeon
Benjamin Curtis
Brandon Curtis
Dominic Daigle
Peter Damien
Avi Das
Ray Davies
Darrell Craig Davis
Angel Deangelis Haiko
Paul Deason
Eric Dehaven
Alley Deheza
Claudia Deheza
Joseph M Deluca
Cecil B Demeals
Jonathan Demme
Peter Demme
David Depalo
Pascal Devoyan
Chris Dibble
Cherrie Dietz
Naomi Donne
Christopher Donohue
John K Donohue
Antoine L. Douaihy
Antoine L. Douaihy
Norman Douglass
Lois Drabkin
Edward Drohan
P Drucker
Jerry Duplessis
Andy Duppin
Marjorie Durand
Kate Eales
Rochelle Edelson
Nicole Edwards
Jules Eggli
Jeffrey A. Eplett
Peter Epstein
Alejandro Escovedo
Alejandro Escovedo
Tim Everitt
Edward Fanning
James Fanning
Gabriel Faure
Carolyn Feldschuh
Ryan Ferguson
Stanley Fernandez Jr.
Deak Ferrand
Jim Ferris
Amanda Finkelberg
Tom Fleischman
Cliff Fleming
Cory Fleming
Klaus Flouride
Ray Flynn
Sean Fogel
John Fogerty
Erika Forster
Reba Frankel
Abdul Franklin
Alex Fratar
Donavan Freberg
Donavan Freberg
Betsy Friedman
Mark Frost
Kate O Fujimoto
Tak Fujimoto
Carl Fullerton
Charles Furey
Tim Gallin
Kirstin Gallo
Josh Garza
Heather Gauntt
Dean Georgaris
Gary Giffune
Andy Gill
Raphaella Giugliano
Lewis Goldstein
Amy R Gorin
Patricia Grand
Christopher F Graneto
Ann Gray
Dennis Green
Rhonney Greene
Robert Griffon
Joe C. Guest
Theresa Rose Gusmorino
Al Guthery
Craig Haagensen
Paul Halligan
Mitch Harbeson
Richard Harfst
Gregg Harris
James E Harris
Jeff Hayman
Angela Heald
J. Roy Helland
Barbara Heller
Anthony Hemingway
Darren Henley
Brad Herman
Ilona Herzberg
Don J Hewitt
Don Hewitt
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Manchurian Candidate 2004
Based on message boards, websites, and Angela Lansbury quotes online, it seems people have been having this same dream. Remaking classic films for modern audiences feels like a nightmarish act. "I'm so unhappy," Lansbury said. "I'm so sorry they had to mess with something that was so perfect." Film buffs are irate. There is no reason to mess with perfection and try to improve upon the original film version of The Manchurian Candidate. Some cinephiles are asking for the heads of Jonathan Demme, Scott Rudin, and Tina Sinatra on a silver platter for committing such a blasphemous cinematic act.
Yet most of the reviews say that the new movie works on its own right and should not be compared to the original. It's more of a straightforward thriller, whereas the original was an intense psychological melodrama with elements of black comedy. Tina Sinatra released the rights to the film for a remake because she says, "(my father) believed, as we do, that premises can be brought into the future."
Jonathan Demme's take on The Manchurian Candidate really works on a new level by bringing the paranoid internal conflict of the Bennett Marco (Denzel Washington) character to the forefront and making it the foundation on which the entire film is built. Jonathan Demme creates a claustrophobic world where parental pressure, societal expectations of normalcy, media bombardment, corporate puppetmasters, and bad science impact the characters. Even people in the film who do not have brain implants inside them seem to show subtle signs of brainwashing. Take for instance the opening scene at the Boy Scout meeting where everyone says all the right things and asks all the right questions of Bennett Marco, a man who served his country in Desert Storm. Or look at the Democratic Convention and celebration party where revelers are frothing at the mouth like Pavlovian dogs willing to believe everything they see. It is all staged much like current TV -- an invasive presence that runs throughout the film. Even the visual style supports this internal paranoia with a dearth of tight close-ups and actors talking directly into the camera. Director of Photography Tak Fujimoto explains, "(Jonathan Demme) wanted to give audiences a visual connection between Melvin's room and Marco's mind. In that way, the cinematography is almost documentary-like, with the camera sort of poking around, probing to find something in the center of the frame that's not there."
On an emotional level, The Manchurian Candidate succeeds, but the film fails when it gets caught up in typical thriller trappings. All good thrillers have mad scientists, and there is no lack of them in this one. My personal favorite is the crazy monkey doctor, an Albanian refugee (played by German actor Bruno Ganz) that has some unexplained relationship to Bennett Marco, who knows everything about implanted chips in people and delivers shock therapy as needed. Unfortunately, the emotional tautness of the film goes slack when it focuses on plot rather than the characters' inner turmoil. All of this creates severe credibility problems when men being tracked by the FBI can walk into a political rally, be detected on camera, be followed the ENTIRE movie around every corner of New York City, and then be left alone to commit an assassination. The original version of Candidate works much better on this level, building to a much more disturbing climax.
To say that Jonathan Demme's 2004 version of The Manchurian Candidate lacks merit, however, would be unjust. It's just frustrating to see a potentially great and disturbing political satire sacrificing compelling character development in favor of convoluted plot twists.
Now I am starting to have more nightmares. These garden party attendees are discussing a remake of another classic thriller, North by Northwest. Wait, this is just a bad dream. Hollywood would never do something that horrifying.
by Tom Cappello
The Manchurian Candidate 2004
George Axelrod, 1922-2003
Born June 9, 1922, in New York City to the son of the silent film actress Betty Carpenter, he had an eventful childhood in New York where, despite little formal education, he became an avaricious reader who hung around Broadway theaters. During World War II he served in the Army Signal Corps, then returned to New York, where in the late 40's and early 50's he wrote for radio and television and published a critically praised novel, Beggar's Choice.
He scored big on Broadway in 1952 with The Seven Year Itch. The comedy, about a frustrated, middle-aged man who takes advantage of his family's absence over a sweltering New York summer to have an affair with a sexy neighbor, won a Tony Award for its star, Tom Ewell, and was considered daring for its time as it teased current sexual mores and conventions. The play was adapted into a movie in 1955 by Billy Wilder, as a vehicle for Marilyn Monroe, with Ewell reprising his role. Unfortunately, the censors and studio executives would not allow the hero to actually consummate the affair; instead, Ewell was seen merely daydreaming a few romantic scenes, a situation that left the playwright far from happy.
Nevertheless, the success of The Seven Year Itch, opened the door for Axelrod as a screenwriter. He did a fine adaptation of William Inge's play Bus Stop (1956) again starring Marilyn Monroe, and did a splendid job transferring Truman Capote's lovely Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961). Although his relationship with the director Blake Edwards was rancorous at best, it did earn Axelrod his only Academy Award nomination.
So frustrated with his work being so heavily revised by Hollywood, that Axelrod decided to move from New York to Los Angeles, where he could more closely monitor the treatment of his scripts. It was around this period that Axelrod developed some his best work since he began producing as well as writing: the incisive, scorchingly subversive cold war thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962), based on Richard Condon's novel about an American POW (Laurence Harvey) who returns home and is brainwashed to kill a powerful politician; the urbane comedy Paris When it Sizzles (1964) that showed off its stars William Holden and Audrey Hepburn at their sophisticated best; his directorial debut with the remarkable (if somewhat undisciplined) satire Lord Love a Duck (1966) that skewers many sacred institutions of American culture (marriage, school, wealth, stardom) and has since become a cult favorite for midnight movie lovers; and finally (his only other directorial effort) a gentle comedy of wish fulfillment The Secret Life of an American Wife (1968) that gave Walter Matthau one of his most sympathetic roles.
By the '70s, Axelrod retired quietly in Los Angeles. He returned to write one fine screenplay, John Mackenzie's slick political thriller The Fourth Protocol (1987) starring Michael Caine. He is survived by his sons Peter, Steven, and Jonathan; a daughter Nina; seven grandchildren; and a sister, Connie Burdick.
by Michael T. Toole
George Axelrod, 1922-2003
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States on Video December 21, 2004
Released in United States September 2004
Shown at Venice International Film Festival September 1-11, 2004.
Remake of "The Manchurian Candidate" (USA/1962), directed by John Frankenheimer.
Julianne Moore previously attached.
Project was previously in development at Warner Bros.
Author Richard Condon died April 9, 1996.
Julianne Moore and Glenn Close had both expressed interest in the project.
Released in United States Summer July 30, 2004
Released in United States on Video December 21, 2004
Released in United States September 2004 (Shown at Venice International Film Festival September 1-11, 2004.)
Released in United States Summer July 30, 2004