The Manchurian Candidate (1962 film)
{{short description|1962 American psychological political thriller film}}
{{about|the original 1962 film|the 2004 remake|The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film){{!}}The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Infobox film
| name = The Manchurian Candidate
| image = The Manchurian Candidate (1962 poster).jpg
| alt =
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = John Frankenheimer
| screenplay = George Axelrod
| based_on = {{based on|The Manchurian Candidate
1959 novel|Richard Condon}}
| producer = {{Plainlist|
- George Axelrod
- John Frankenheimer}}
| starring =
{{Plainlist|
}}
| narrator = Paul Frees{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3CrTCAAAQBAJ&q=Paul+Frees+Narrator+for+The+Manchurian+Candidate&pg=PA504 | title=Green Lantern History: An Unauthorised Guide to the DC Comic Book Series Green Lantern | first=Darran | last=Jordan | date=2015 | publisher=Eclectica Press | location=Sydney, Australia | isbn=978-1-326-13987-2 | access-date=April 2, 2017 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170403121335/https://books.google.com/books?id=3CrTCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA504&lpg=PA504&dq=Paul+Frees+Narrator+for+The+Manchurian+Candidate&source=bl&ots=pmuSkKr5pA&sig=yxDnuVFL1tmjxEcDgr1cuOAj9qk&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjYq6KwiYfTAhXF0RQKHQCwAyYQ6AEIOjAF#v=onepage&q=Paul%20Frees%20Narrator%20for%20The%20Manchurian%20Candidate&f=false | archive-date=April 3, 2017 | url-status=live | df=mdy-all }}
| cinematography = Lionel Lindon
| editing = Ferris Webster
| color_process = Black and white
| music = David Amram
| studio = M.C. Productions
| distributor = United Artists
| released = {{film date|1962|10|24}}
| runtime = 126 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget = $2.2{{nbsp}}million
| gross = $3.3{{nbsp}}million (rentals,{{efn|name=rentals}} original release)
$7.7{{nbsp}}million (gross, including re-releases)
}}
File:The Manchurian Candidate (1962) - Trailer.webm
The Manchurian Candidate is a 1962 American neo-noir psychological political thriller film directed and produced by John Frankenheimer. The screenplay is by George Axelrod, based on the 1959 Richard Condon novel The Manchurian Candidate. The film's leading actors are Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, and Janet Leigh, with co-stars Angela Lansbury, Henry Silva, and James Gregory.{{cite book|author1-last=Macek|author1-first=Carl|author2-last=McGarry|author2-first=Eileen|editor1-last=Silver|editor1-first=Alain|editor2-last=Ward|editor2-first=Elizabeth|title=Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style|location=New York City, Woodstock, NY & London|publisher=Overlook Press|year=1996|pages=183–84}}
The plot centers on Korean War veteran Raymond Shaw, part of a prominent political family. Shaw is brainwashed by communists after his Army platoon is captured. He returns to civilian life in the United States, where he becomes an unwitting assassin in an international communist conspiracy. The group, which includes representatives of the People’s Republic of China and the Soviet Union, plans to assassinate the presidential nominee of an American political party, with the death leading to the overthrow of the U.S. government.
The film was released in the United States on October 24, 1962, at the height of U.S.–Soviet hostility during the Cuban Missile Crisis. It was widely acclaimed by Western critics and was nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Supporting Actress (Angela Lansbury) and Best Editing. It was selected in 1994 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".{{Cite news |author= |title=25 Films Added to National Registry |work=The New York Times |department=Movies |date=November 15, 1994 |p=C30 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/11/15/movies/25-films-added-to-national-registry.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=2025-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308143851/https://www.nytimes.com/1994/11/15/movies/25-films-added-to-national-registry.html |archive-date=March 8, 2021 |url-status=live}}{{Cite web|url= https://www.loc.gov/programs/national-film-preservation-board/film-registry/complete-national-film-registry-listing|title=Complete National Film Registry Listing|work=Library of Congress|access-date=November 15, 2022}}
Plot
Soviet and Chinese soldiers capture a U.S. Army platoon during the Korean War, taking them to communist China. Three days later, Sergeant Raymond Shaw and Captain Bennett "Ben" Marco return to UN lines. Upon Marco's recommendation, Shaw is awarded the Medal of Honor for saving his soldiers' lives in combat, though two men were killed. Shaw returns to the U.S., where his mother, Eleanor Iselin, exploits his heroism to further the political career of her husband, Senator John Iselin. When asked to describe Shaw, two soldiers in his unit uniformly respond that he is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful human being they have ever known. In fact, Shaw is a strict, cold, unsympathetic loner hated by his men.
After Marco is promoted to major and assigned to Army Intelligence, he has a recurring nightmare: a hypnotized Shaw blithely murders two soldiers from his platoon before an assembly of communist military leaders to demonstrate their revolutionary brainwashing technique. Marco learns that Allen Melvin, a fellow soldier, has the same nightmare. When Melvin and Marco separately identify identical photos of the two male communist leaders from their dreams, Army Intelligence agrees to investigate.
File:Sinatra and Harvey in Manchurian Candidate NYWTS.jpg when his programming was accidentally triggered]]
During captivity, Shaw was programmed as a sleeper agent, who obeys orders to kill and immediately forgets having done so. His heroism is a false memory implanted during the brainwashing. Agents trigger Shaw by suggesting he play solitaire; the queen of diamonds activates him. Meanwhile, Eleanor is masterminding John's political ascent with his baseless claims that communists work at the Defense Department. To spite his mother and stepfather, Shaw takes a job at a newspaper published by Holborn Gaines, Iselin's harshest critic. Communist agents later have Shaw murder Gaines to confirm that his brainwashing still works.
Chunjin, a North Korean agent who posed as a guide for Shaw's platoon, arrives at Shaw's apartment asking for work. The unsuspecting Shaw hires him as a valet and cook. Marco recognizes Chunjin when he visits Shaw; he violently attacks him and demands to know what happened during the platoon's captivity. After Marco is arrested for assault, Eugenie "Rosie" Cheyney, an attractive young woman he met on the train, posts his bail.
Shaw rekindles a romance with Jocelyn Jordan, the daughter of liberal Senator Thomas Jordan, the Iselins' chief political foe. Eleanor wants to garner Senator Jordan's support for Iselin's vice-presidential bid. Unswayed, Jordan insists he will oppose the nomination. After Jocelyn inadvertently triggers Shaw's programming by wearing a Queen of Diamonds costume at the Iselins' party, they elope. Furious at Senator Jordan's rebuff, Eleanor—who is Shaw's American "operator" (handler)—sends him to kill Senator Jordan at his home. Shaw also kills Jocelyn when she inadvertently happens upon the murder scene. Having no memory of the killing, Shaw is grief-stricken upon learning they are dead.
After discovering the queen of diamonds card's role in Shaw's conditioning, Marco uses a forcing deck to deprogram him, hoping to learn Shaw's next assignment. Eleanor primes Shaw to assassinate their party's presidential nominee during the convention so that Iselin, as the vice-presidential candidate, will become the nominee by default. In the uproar, he will seek emergency powers to establish a strict authoritarian regime. Eleanor tells Shaw that she had requested a programmed assassin, never knowing it would be her own son. When taking power, she vows revenge upon her superiors for choosing him.
Disguised as a priest, Shaw enters Madison Square Garden, taking a sniper's position in a vacant overhead spotlight booth. Marco and his supervisor, Colonel Milt, race to the convention to stop Shaw. At the last moment, Shaw aims away from the presidential nominee and instead kills Senator Iselin and Eleanor. When Marco bursts into the booth, Shaw, wearing the Medal of Honor, says he was the only one who could stop his mother and stepfather, then kills himself. Later that evening with Rosie, Marco mourns Shaw's death.
Cast
{{Cast listing|
- Frank Sinatra as Major Bennett Marco
- Laurence Harvey as Raymond Shaw
- Janet Leigh as Eugenie Rose Cheyney
- Angela Lansbury as Mrs. Eleanor Shaw Iselin
- Henry Silva as Chunjin
- James Gregory as Senator John Yerkes Iselin
- Leslie Parrish as Jocelyn Jordan
- John McGiver as Senator Thomas Jordan
- Khigh Dhiegh as Dr. Yen Lo
- James Edwards as Corporal Allen Melvin
- Douglas Henderson as Colonel Milt
- Albert Paulsen as Zilkov
- Barry Kelley as Secretary of Defense
- Lloyd Corrigan as Holborn Gaines
- Madame Spivy as Female Berezovo
}}
Production
Sinatra suggested Lucille Ball for the role of Eleanor Iselin, but Frankenheimer, who had worked with Lansbury in All Fall Down, insisted that Sinatra watch her performance in that film before a final choice was made. Although Lansbury played Raymond Shaw's mother, she was, in fact, only three years older than Laurence Harvey, who played Shaw. An early scene in which Shaw, recently decorated with the Medal of Honor, argues with his parents, was filmed in Sinatra's own private plane.
Janet Leigh plays Marco's love interest. In a short biography of Leigh broadcast on Turner Classic Movies, her daughter, actress Jamie Lee Curtis, reveals that Leigh had been served divorce papers on behalf of her father, actor Tony Curtis, the morning that the scene where Marco and her character first meet on a train was filmed.{{citation needed|date=April 2024}}
In the scene where Marco attempts to deprogram Shaw in a hotel room opposite the convention, Sinatra is at times slightly out of focus. It was a first take, and Sinatra failed to be as effective in subsequent retakes, a common factor in his film performances.{{cite magazine |first=Glen |last=Lovell |title='Manchurian' revolt: Frankenheimer offers Sinatra revelations on DVD |magazine=Variety |date=May 28, 1998 |url=https://variety.com/1998/scene/vpage/manchurian-revolt-1117471298/ |access-date=April 17, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210417051316/https://variety.com/1998/scene/vpage/manchurian-revolt-1117471298/ |archive-date=April 17, 2021 |url-status=live}} In the end, Frankenheimer elected to use the out-of-focus take. Critics subsequently praised him for showing Marco from Shaw's distorted point of view.
In the novel, Eleanor Iselin's father had sexually abused her as a child. Before the dramatic climax, she uses her son's brainwashing to have sex with him. Concerned with the reaction to even a reference to a taboo topic like incest in a mainstream film at that time, the filmmakers instead had Eleanor kiss Shaw on the lips to imply her incestuous attraction to him.Director John Frankenheimer's audio commentary, available on The Manchurian Candidate DVD
Nearly half the film's $2.2 million production budget went to Sinatra's salary for his performance.{{Cite news |first=Roderick |last=Mann |title=The Return of 'The Manchurian Candidate': Classic Re-Released After Long Disputes |work=Los Angeles Times |date=February 12, 1988 |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1988-02-12-ca-28773-story.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=April 11, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231019160352/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1988-02-12-ca-28773-story.html |archive-date=2023-10-19 |url-status=live}}
It is now commonly rated PG-13.
Cold War
The Manchurian Candidate has been called one of the most "iconic" films of the Cold War period, especially in its discussion of "mind-control."{{Cite journal |last1=Marks |first1=Sarah |last2=Pick |first2=Daniel |date=2017 |title=Lessons on Mind Control from the 1950s |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/45180792 |journal=The World Today |volume=73 |issue=1 |pages=12–17 |jstor=45180792 |access-date=October 29, 2023}} With one of the major plot points being the popular Cold War myth that China was brainwashing US soldiers for communist purposes during the Korean War.{{Cite web |last=Hampton |first=Howard |date=March 15, 2016 |title=The Manchurian Candidate: Dread Center |url=https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/3970-the-manchurian-candidate-dread-center |access-date=October 29, 2023 |website=The Criterion Collection}} Political scientist Michael Rogin further cements the film in this time period by describing it as being "a Kennedy Administration film." Rogin cites Sinatra's character within the film as being a "lonely Kennedy Hero," who works within the army bureaucracy towards reform.{{Cite journal |last=Rogin |first=Michael |date=1984 |title=Kiss Me Deadly: Communism, Motherhood, and Cold War Movies |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2928536 |journal=Representations |issue=6 |pages=1–36 |doi=10.2307/2928536 |issn=0734-6018 |jstor=2928536|url-access=subscription }}
= Depiction of communists =
In the garden scene, pictures of Mao Zedong and Joseph Stalin are hung on the wall with a Soviet star in between them and the head of the Manchurian candidates standing beneath the star. This insinuates a collaboration between China and Russia with the goal to manipulate the US for communist world domination.{{Cite journal |last=Coates |first=Ivan |date=1993 |title=Enforcing the Cold War Consensus: Mccarthyism, Liberalism and the "Manchurian Candidate" |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41053668 |journal=Australasian Journal of American Studies |volume=12 |issue=1 |pages=47–64 |jstor=41053668 |issn=1838-9554}} During their demonstration, the communist leaders refer to Raymond as "the mechanism" and "the weapon", which affirms the idea that communists only see people as gadgets that can be thrown away after their use. The film depicts communists as eager to give up their lives, which are expendable in their eyes anyway, for the cause of universal communism, which is a "less than essential end".
In The Manchurian Candidate, communists are not peers, but instead relate to each other within the hierarchy of communist leaders. For example, there are rows of communist leaders who all look down upon the Manchurian Candidates in the garden scene. In addition, Raymond Shaw’s mother only uses those around her, like her son and husband, as pawns in her communist ploy to gain a powerful position through her husband’s candidacy for Vice President of the US. This is juxtaposed with the loving, trusting, and open relationships like those between Shaw and Jocelyn Jordan, and Marco and Cheyney.
= Conspiracy theories and US mind control =
The Manchurian Candidate uses "science, the conditioned subject, and the moving image" to create a realistic framework for the existence of mind control.{{Cite journal |last=Killen |first=Andreas |date=2011 |title=Homo pavlovius: Cinema, Conditioning, and the Cold War Subject |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41342502 |journal=Grey Room |volume=45 |issue=45 |pages=42–59 |doi=10.1162/GREY_a_00049 |jstor=41342502 |s2cid=57562839 |issn=1526-3819|url-access=subscription }} Specifically, it plays on the idea of a "covert sphere" of communism within the US, mixing real life events with those out of science fiction.{{Cite journal |last=Melley |first=Timothy |date=2008 |title=Brainwashed! Conspiracy Theory and Ideology in the Postwar United States |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27669224 |journal=New German Critique |volume=35 |issue=103 |pages=145–164 |doi=10.1215/0094033X-2007-023 |jstor=27669224 |issn=0094-033X|url-access=subscription }} This theme added to the growing suspicion of the US government, redirecting concerns of possible brainwashing toward the homefront. Janja Lalich, a counter-cult sociologist, notes that the term "brainwashing" used by this counterculture movement was first made popular by The Manchurian Candidate.{{Cite journal |last=Laycock |first=Joseph |date=2013 |title=Where Do They Get These Ideas? Changing Ideas of Cults in the Mirror of Popular Culture |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23357877 |journal=Journal of the American Academy of Religion |volume=81 |issue=1 |pages=80–106 |doi=10.1093/jaarel/lfs091 |jstor=23357877 |issn=0002-7189|url-access=subscription }} The ever growing fear that anyone, even a decorated soldier like Raymond Shaw, could be coerced unwittingly by communists contributed to the United States’ expansion of their own mind control experiments.{{Cite journal |last=Grant |first=Brittanny |date=2015 |title=Was It All Just A Hallucination? The CIA's Secret LSD Experiments |url=https://scholarworks.arcadia.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1013&context=senior_theses |journal=ScholarWorks@Arcadia}} In 1975, a little over ten years after the release of The Manchurian Candidate, the fear of a US-funded mind control scheme would come true with the reveal of Project MKUltra, in which the CIA looked to control human behavior through trauma programming and psychoactive drugs starting in the early 1950s and ending in 1973.{{Cite journal |last=Andriopoulos |first=Stefan |date=2011 |title=The Sleeper Effect: Hypnotism, Mind Control, Terrorism |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41342504 |journal=Grey Room |volume=45 |issue=45 |pages=88–105 |doi=10.1162/GREY_a_00051 |jstor=41342504 |s2cid=57570519 |issn=1526-3819|url-access=subscription }} According to the CIA, "historians have asserted that creating a 'Manchurian Candidate' subject through 'mind control' techniques was a goal of MK-ULTRA and related CIA projects."{{Cite web |last=CIA |date=December 2018 |title=Project MK-ULTRA |url=https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/project%20mk-ultra%5B15545700%5D.pdf |access-date=October 29, 2023 |website=Cia.gov}}
Reception
=Box office=
In the United States and Canada, for its original release, The Manchurian Candidate netted $3.3{{nbsp}}million in distributor rentals,{{efn|name=rentals|Please note these are distributor rentals only, their share of the box office gross after theatres take their cut of gross ticket sales}}{{cite magazine |author= |title=Big Rental Pictures of 1962 |magazine=Variety |date=9 Jan 1963 |page=13 |url=https://archive.org/details/variety-1963-01/page/n69/mode/2up?q=1963 |access-date=2025-03-23 |url-access=limited |via=Internet Archive Book Reader}} against a budget of $2.2{{nbsp}}million.{{cite web |first=Jonathan |last=Llyr |author-link=Jonathan Llyr |title=The Manchurian Candidate Still Shocks After All These Years |work=Space |date=2016-04-11
|url=https://www.space.ca/the-manchurian-candidate-tiff-restored/ |access-date=2025-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190804133438/https://www.space.ca/the-manchurian-candidate-tiff-restored/ |archive-date=2019-08-04 |url-status=dead}} After Sinatra{{snd}}who owned the film rights{{snd}}allowed re-release in 1988, followed by other theatrical re-releases, the film has grossed $7.7{{nbsp}}million.{{Cite The Numbers |id=Manchurian-Candidate-The |access-date=2025-03-22}}
=Critical response=
{{RT data|prose|A classic blend of satire and political thriller that was uncomfortably prescient in its own time, The Manchurian Candidate remains distressingly relevant today.|ref=yes}} {{Metacritic film prose|94|20|ref=yes|access-date=2025-03-22}}
Writing an extensive retrospective analysis in 2003, film critic Roger Ebert addressed the many elements that led him to rate The Manchurian Candidate one of the 'Great Movies'{{snd}}films he gave his maximum 4 stars out of 4; he declared it "inventive and frisky, takes enormous chances with the audience, and plays not like a 'classic', but as a work as alive and smart as when it was first released".{{cite web |title=The Manchurian Candidate |first=Roger |last=Ebert |author-link=Roger Ebert |website=RogerEbert.com |date=December 7, 2003 |url=http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-the-manchurian-candidate-1962 |access-date=April 3, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170427202225/http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-the-manchurian-candidate-1962 |archive-date=April 27, 2017 |url-status=live}}
=Academic response=
Scholars have used The Manchurian Candidate as a window into Cold War paranoia. Professor Catherine Canino claimed that the film fulfilled the prophecies of "the imagined loss of cherished American autonomy and free will".{{Cite journal |last=Kim |first=Swan |date=2010 |title=The Color of Brainwashing: The Manchurian Candidate and the Cultural Logic of Cold War Paranoia |url=https://s-space.snu.ac.kr/handle/10371/88659 |journal=미국학 |language=en |volume=33 |issue=1 |pages=167–195 |doi=10.18078/amstin.2010.33.1.006 |issn=1229-4381|doi-access=free }} Political scientist Michael Rogin concluded that The Manchurian Candidate "aims to reawaken a lethargic nation to a communist menace". Humanities Center director [Timothy Melley] argued that "The Manchurian Candidate{{'}}s deepest worry is neither communism nor anticommunism but embattled human autonomy."
=Awards and honours=
In 1994, The Manchurian Candidate was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[https://www.nytimes.com/1994/11/15/movies/25-films-added-to-national-registry.html The Manchurian Candidate, One of 25 Films Added to National Registry.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180326202726/https://www.nytimes.com/1994/11/15/movies/25-films-added-to-national-registry.html |date=March 26, 2018}} The New York Times. Retrieved August 28, 2012. The film ranked 67th on the "AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies" when that list was first compiled in 1998, but a 2007 revised version excluded it. It was 17th on AFI's "AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills" lists. In April 2007, Lansbury's character was selected by Time as one of the 25 greatest villains in cinema history.{{cite magazine|url=https://entertainment.time.com/2007/04/26/top-25-greatest-villains/slide/angela-lansbury-as-mrs-iselin/|title=Angela Lansbury as Mrs. Iselin|last=Corliss|first=Richard|date=April 25, 2007|magazine=Time|publisher=Time|access-date=May 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180622053715/http://entertainment.time.com/2007/04/26/top-25-greatest-villains/slide/angela-lansbury-as-mrs-iselin/|archive-date=June 22, 2018|url-status=live|df=mdy-all}}
Releases
According to a false rumor, Sinatra removed the film from distribution after John F. Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963. According to Michael Schlesinger, who was responsible for the film's 1988 reissue by MGM/UA, the film was never removed.{{r|schlesinger20080127}} Newspaper display ads indicate that after the assassination, The Manchurian Candidate was rereleased less frequently or widely than other 1962 movies, but it was available. The movie played at a Brooklyn cinema in January 1964, and that same month in White Plains, New York,"Movie Timetable." Tarrytown (NY) Daily News, 16 January 1964. and Jersey City, New Jersey."Movie Time Table [sic]." Summit (NJ) Herald, 16 January 1964. It was televised nationwide on CBS Thursday Night Movie on September 16, 1965.
Sinatra's representatives acquired rights to the film in 1972 after the initial contract with United Artists expired.{{r|schlesinger20080127}} The film was rebroadcast on nationwide television in April 1974 on NBC Saturday Night at the Movies.{{cite web | url=http://www.ultimate70s.com/seventies_history/19740427/television | title=Prime-time network TV listings for Saturday April 27, 1974 | publisher=Ultimate70s.com | access-date=April 2, 2017 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180327084345/http://www.ultimate70s.com/seventies_history/19740427/television | archive-date=March 27, 2018 | url-status=live | df=mdy-all }} After a showing at the New York Film Festival in 1987 increased public interest in the film, the studio reacquired the rights and it became again available for theater and video releases.{{cite news |first=Michael |last=Schlesinger |title=A 'Manchurian' myth |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-jan-27-ca-pulloutletter27-story.html |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=2008-01-27 |access-date=January 28, 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100109200705/http://articles.latimes.com/2008/jan/27/entertainment/ca-pulloutletter27 |archive-date=January 9, 2010 |url-status=live }}{{cite book |title=Sinatra in Hollywood |publisher=Macmillan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0qUJ-JuSPdQC&pg=PA324 |author=Santopietro, Tom |year=2009 |pages=324–326 |isbn=9781429964746 |access-date=March 16, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140706155431/http://books.google.com/books?id=0qUJ-JuSPdQC&pg=PA324&hl=en&sa=X&ei=vDuoUJfYAqrwigLjo4DQDw&ved=0CEIQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&f=false |archive-date=July 6, 2014|url-status=live }}
On March 15, 2016, The Criterion Collection issued a Blu-Ray of the film.{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/The-Manchurian-Candidate-Blu-ray/145354/ |title=The Manchurian Candidate Blu-ray |access-date=2025-04-28 |via=www.blu-ray.com}} In June of 2023, Kino Lorber issued a 4K Ultra HD Blu-Ray of the film.{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/The-Manchurian-Candidate-4K-Blu-ray/311849/ |title=The Manchurian Candidate 4K Blu-ray (4K Ultra HD) |access-date=2025-04-28 |via=www.blu-ray.com}}
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Wikiquote}}
- {{AFI film}}
- {{IMDb title}}
- {{TCMDb title}}
- {{mojo title}}
- [http://www.filmsite.org/manc.html The Manchurian Candidate] at AMC Filmsite. Background, detailed storyline, and key dialogue excerpts.
- [http://www.jacknilan.com/senatorjoe/manchurian.html The Manchurian Candidate] at [http://www.jacknilan.com/senatorjoe/index.html McCarthyism and the Movies]
- [https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/3970-the-manchurian-candidate-dread-center The Manchurian Candidate: Dread Center] an essay by Howard Hampton at the Criterion Collection
{{John Frankenheimer}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Manchurian Candidate}}
Category:1960s psychological thriller films
Category:1960s political thriller films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:American neo-noir films
Category:American political thriller films
Category:1960s English-language films
Category:Fiction about mind control
Category:Films about memory erasure and alteration
Category:Films about assassinations
Category:Films about elections
Category:Films about fictional presidents of the United States
Category:Films about McCarthyism
Category:Films about the United States Army
Category:Films based on American novels
Category:Films based on mystery novels
Category:Films critical of communism
Category:Films directed by John Frankenheimer
Category:Films featuring a Best Supporting Actress Golden Globe–winning performance
Category:Films scored by David Amram
Category:Films set in New York City
Category:Films with screenplays by George Axelrod
Category:Korean War prisoner of war films
Category:Fiction about matricide
Category:Murder–suicide in films
Category:United States National Film Registry films
Category:United States presidential nominating conventions in fiction
Category:Films about uxoricide