The Manchurian Candidate movie review, Jonathan Demme, Denzel Washington, Liev Schreiber, Meryl Streep, Kimberly Elise, Jon Voight, Vera Farmiga, Jeffrey Wright, Ted Levine, Miguel Ferrer, Dean Stockwell, Zeljko Ivanek, Bill Irwin, Bruno Ganz, Charles Napier, Sidney Lumet, Roy Blount Jr., Fab Five Freddy, Al Franken, Roger Corman. Review by Rob Blackwelder ©SPLICEDwire
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A scene from 'The Manchurian Candidate'
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"THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE"
**1/2 stars
130 minutes | Rated: R
WIDE: Friday, July 30, 2004
Directed by Jonathan Demme

Starring Denzel Washington, Liev Schreiber, Meryl Streep, Kimberly Elise, Jon Voight, Vera Farmiga, Jeffrey Wright, Ted Levine, Miguel Ferrer, Dean Stockwell, Zeljko Ivanek, Bill Irwin, Bruno Ganz, Charles Napier



 INTERVIEW LINK
Read our interview with Liev Schreiber Liev Schreiber (2002)


 COUCH CRITIQUE
   SMALL SCREEN SHRINKAGE: 5%
   WIDESCREEN: RECOMMENDED

This film is almost more realistic on the small screen, where it seems even more like the real-life events we've been seeing on the news.

   VIDEO RELEASE: 12.21.2004
 DVD SPOTLIGHT
On this disc Paramount commits the cardinal sin of DVD: Forcing you to watch 8 minutes of trailers before you can access the menus. No matter how good the DVD is, this is an automatic loss of one star rating. What's worse, it doesn't even have a trailer for this movie!

Fortunately once you get past that crap, the disc holds a pretty good package of extras. The making-of gives much credit to the 1962 original, addressing most of the changes and why Demme and the writers made the choices they did, and provides quite a bit of insight into the creative stylistic choices too. Another featurette addresses the casting of the film's bounty of talents (and does so without sounding sycophantic).

Demme and co-writer Daniel Pyne provide a commentary track that makes an insightful listen for fans of the source book, the first film, and paranoid political thrillers in general, addressing how hard they resisted letting the film go in a conventional direction and never letting the hero become a Hollywood hero. They also address how spooky it was for their story to be reflected in reality (civilian military contractors coming to light, Halliburton in the news, etc.) as they honed the script and shot the film.

OTHER NOTABLE BONUS MATERIAL
Outtakes and deleted scenes (w/ commentary), including full versions of interview segments featured in the film (Al Franken, etc.), and Liev Schreiber's screen test, which really does show how he nailed his character from day one.

SOUND & PICTURE
Both are top notch.


  BUY IT HERE
SPECS
RATIO: 1.85:1 (16x9 enhanced)
SOUND: 5.1 Surround
DUBS: French
SUBS: English, Spanish

DVD RATING: **
(would have been *** w/o the forced previews)



 OTHER REVIEWS/COMING SOON
 
  • Political conspiracies
  • Jonathan Demme
  • Denzel Washington
  • Liev Schreiber
  • Meryl Streep
  • Kimberly Elise
  • Jon Voight
  • Jeffrey Wright
  • Ted Levine
  • Miguel Ferrer
  • Dean Stockwell
  • Zeljko Ivanek
  • Charles Napier


  •  LINKS for this film
    Official site
    at movies.yahoo.com
    at Rotten Tomatoes
    at Internet Movie Database
    'Candidate' remake effectively brings modern atmosphere to paranoid thriller, but saddles it with B-movie contrivances

    By Rob Blackwelder

    Director Jonathan Demme's remake of "The Manchurian Candidate" is eerily effective in bringing the 1962 masterpiece of chilling dark satire and dangerous political corruption up to date for a world in which corporations seemingly pocket candidates, terrorists threaten freedom and fear-mongering has virtually become a campaign platform.

    In this new film, the original's stiff, communist-brainwashed war hero and would-be presidential assassin Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey) has become an unstable war-hero vice-presidential candidate (Liev Schreiber) made very susceptible to suggestion by a defense-contracting conglomerate (modeled on the Carlyle Group and Halliburton). And his controlling, calculating, daunting and devious behind-the-scenes mother (the brilliantly ominous Angela Lansbury in '62) has become a bulldozing, hawkish senior senator in her own right (played slightly more shrill by Meryl Streep).

    An obligatory girlfriend role filled by Janet Leigh 42 years ago is refashioned into someone altogether more pivotal to the plot (a seeming good Samaritan played by Kimberly Elise). And Maj. Bennett Marco, the nightmare-haunted central character (then Frank Sinatra, now Denzel Washington) who pieces together a startling conspiracy, has become a victim of Gulf War Syndrome and at times hangs onto his own sanity by a very thin thread.

    Unfortunately, Demme gets a little too carried away with other, less inspired revisions, subjecting this "Candidate's" A-list cast to B-movie machinations such as secret labs behind bedroom walls, credibility-stretching sci-fi brain implants, villainous mad scientists with vague accents and Nazi comb-overs, and gimmicky, overly convenient plot devices that defy common sense.

    The film begins with a flashback to an ambush during the 1991 Gulf War, in which Shaw rescues his whole platoon, earning him the Congressional Medal of Honor. But while that's how every man in his unit remembers events, Marco soon discovers that the few of them who haven't curiously died in recent years all share the same recurring dream -- in which they were actually captured, tortured, subjected to mental conditioning and compelled to kill obediently, emotionlessly and without memory.

    With Shaw running for VP, Marco imagines the implications and begins to take his subconscious seriously -- which in turn makes the military and Secret Service take him seriously as a threat when he begins stalking the candidate, trying to meet with him, hoping to disprove the terrifying conjecture running rampant in his head.

    The film is served well by its powerful performances, its bold political allusions (vilifying the military-industrial complex and stage-managed elections just as the original scorned McCarthyism) and its disquietingly possible atmosphere of trepidation in an America where terrorism has become a fact of life (soldiers with M-16s are subtly ever-present in Washington and New York City). But where director John Frankenheimer's cinematically inventive '62 "Manchurian Candidate" felt as if its events had actual political implications, Demme's slick, big-budget, rock-soundtrack-saturated work lacks goosepimpling tension and leans more toward conventional Hollywood conspiracy thrillers like "In the Line of Fire," "Conspiracy Theory," "Shadow Conspiracy" and "Enemy of the State."

    These movies all have their merits but they also have trouble standing up to close scrutiny. While certainly compelling, "The Manchurian Candidate" runs into similar problems in its last act as the FBI and Shaw's security contingent seem to fall down on the job, making it far too easy to bring about the film's otherwise interesting new twist of an ending -- which is then defused by a banal, unwinding epilogue.

    Afraid I might have judged this remake too harshly or held it to too high a standard, I saw it a second time before writing this review, trying to block out comparisons and take the film on its own merits. But I came away bothered by all the same contrivances and plot holes, and wishing Demme, and writers Daniel Pyne and Dean Georgaris, had gone the extra mile to outsmart the script's shortcomings instead of relying on suspense to divert attention from them.






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