The Manchurian Candidate (2004)
Facts
| Directed by | Jonathan Demme |
| Cast | Jeffrey Wright, Pablo Schreiber, Anthony Mackie, Dorian Missick, Jose Pablo Cantillo, Kimberly Elise, Al Franken, Bill Irwin, Liev Schreiber, Meryl Streep, Jon Voight and Denzel Washington |
| Theatrical Release | July 30, 2004 |
| DVD Release | December 21, 2004 |
| Running Time | 129 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 097363368946 |
| Buy this item | $9.98 at Amazon.com As of Jul 22 21:11 EDT (details) 1 DVD, WASHINGTON,DENZEL, Usually ships in 24 hours, Collector's Edition, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 91 new from $1.38, 224 used from $0.01, 2 collectible from $10.00 |
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for The Manchurian Candidate posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| Had Potential |
The movie wasn't horrible, it's just one that I won't watch again or recommmend. June 28, 2008
| A new incarnation that works well |
The new is less dialog-driven, which tends to make it less literate. But this film runs more on mood than on dialog, and Jonathon Demme's just-barely-odd framing and pacing provoke discomfort on a subliminal level. It is not cozy, and is laid out with less detailed explanation. The resulting sense of uncertainty may also be part of why the film is not universally liked.
The remake does solve some of the problems of the first. Gone are the swarthy, vaguely foreign-looking actors standing in for Russians and Chinese agents. Gone are the poorly choreographed ju-jitsu moves that might provoke giggles in a present day audience, used to world-class martial artists on screen, and the multi-racial world commonly reflected on film now, vs the early 1960's.
The new film retains the acting strengths of the original. Every performance is fine. Liev Schrieber's work is worthy of Laurence Harvey's original, a gut kicking performance, though Harvey still holds the edge. Washington's craft is more than a match for Sinatra's unevenly inspired work. (One of the wonders of the first is realizing that Sinatra -could- act, that he did things with rhythm and cadence because those were his only tools, and it worked. He was no method actor, but he very much had something going on.) Streep's scenery chewing is, frankly, perfect. Because unfortunately, really disgusting people actually do exist, and in positions of power. And unlike an actor's performance, criticism of real public figures whose behavior is over-the-top are rarely heard. Seen any Fox commentators recently? Streep's Senator Shaw may well be over-the-top, but the only thing that distinguishes her from the real thing is that she is only playing the role, not embodying it every day of her life.
Make no mistake, both original and remake are thrillers in the paranoid vein, and the overly literal person will likely say of either, "preposterous" -- though the original is a classic. But the literal representation of reality is not what movies are ever about, and such criticisms fail to register with me.
So is this as excellent a film as the original, adjusting for the times in which each was made? No, but it is a good film. It hits in the right places, horrifies us with an incredibly cynical vision of what our nation is becoming, and yet it is offset by the thinnest sliver of a wild, earnest Patriotism. June 16, 2008
| Remake of "Candidate" undone |
| Save Time |
Every single character in this re-make is stiff, wooden and can't act their way out of a paper bag! May 6, 2008
| Nice |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





