The Manchurian Candidate: Difference between revisions
DParkinson1 (talk | contribs) →In popular culture: added that boris johnson called rishi sunak a manchurian candidate according to nadine dorries |
Shaunlilan (talk | contribs) m →Film adaptations: slight reword |
||
(25 intermediate revisions by 20 users not shown) | |||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
| followed_by = |
| followed_by = |
||
}} |
}} |
||
'''''The Manchurian Candidate''''' is a [[novel]] by [[Richard Condon]], first published in 1959. It is a [[political thriller]] about the son of a prominent U.S. [[political family]] who is brainwashed into being an unwitting assassin for a [[ |
'''''The Manchurian Candidate''''' is a [[novel]] by [[Richard Condon]], first published in 1959. It is a [[political thriller]] about the son of a prominent U.S. [[political family]] who is [[Brainwashing|brainwashed]] into being an unwitting assassin for a [[Communist]] conspiracy. The novel has twice been adapted into a feature film with the same title: the first was released [[The Manchurian Candidate (1962 film)|in 1962]] and the second [[The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)|in 2004]]. |
||
The novel has twice been adapted into a feature film with the same title: the first was released [[The Manchurian Candidate (1962 film)|in 1962]] and the second [[The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)|in 2004]]. |
|||
==Plot summary== |
==Plot summary== |
||
Line 37: | Line 35: | ||
Years after the war, Marco, now back in the United States working as an [[intelligence officer]], begins suffering a recurring nightmare in which the seated platoon members are surrounded by a group of sweet little old ladies who had been a part of their brainwashing. One of the ladies tells Sergeant Shaw to murder two of his platoon comrades. The backdrop with the old ladies changes back and forth between them and Chinese/Soviet intelligence officials. When Marco learns that another of the platoon's soldiers has been suffering the exact same nightmare, he starts looking into why this is happening. |
Years after the war, Marco, now back in the United States working as an [[intelligence officer]], begins suffering a recurring nightmare in which the seated platoon members are surrounded by a group of sweet little old ladies who had been a part of their brainwashing. One of the ladies tells Sergeant Shaw to murder two of his platoon comrades. The backdrop with the old ladies changes back and forth between them and Chinese/Soviet intelligence officials. When Marco learns that another of the platoon's soldiers has been suffering the exact same nightmare, he starts looking into why this is happening. |
||
Major Marco looks up Sergeant Raymond Shaw and discovers that Shaw's new manservant is someone he recognizes from Korea. Marco and the manservant start fighting in Shaw's house and both are bloodied significantly. Marco is arrested, and when Shaw sees that it is his old major they rekindle their old friendship. Both find love interests: for Marco, it is Rose Cheyney, whom he meets on a train; and for |
Major Marco looks up Sergeant Raymond Shaw and discovers that Shaw's new manservant is someone he recognizes from Korea. Marco and the manservant start fighting in Shaw's house and both are bloodied significantly. Marco is arrested, and when Shaw sees that it is his old major they rekindle their old friendship. Both find love interests: for Marco, it is Rose Cheyney, whom he meets on a train; and for Shaw, it is Jocelyn Jordan, the daughter of Senator Thomas Jordan, a neighbor of Shaw's. Senator Jordan and Shaw's mother do not like each other, but Shaw continues to see Jocelyn. |
||
It is revealed that the Communists have been using Shaw as a [[sleeper agent]] who, activated by a post-hypnotic trigger, immediately forgets the assignments he carries out and therefore can never betray the operation either purposely or inadvertently. In Shaw's case, the suggestion that he play [[Patience (game)|solitaire]] is the trigger. Seeing the queen of diamonds playing card transforms him into an assassin who will kill anyone at whom he is directed. Shaw's [[KGB]] handler is his domineering mother, Eleanor. Married to [[Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy]]-esque Senator Johnny Iselin, Eleanor has convinced the Communist powers to help install her husband as president and allow them to control the American government through him. |
It is revealed that the Communists have been using Shaw as a [[sleeper agent]] who, activated by a post-hypnotic trigger, immediately forgets the assignments he carries out and therefore can never betray the operation either purposely or inadvertently. In Shaw's case, the suggestion that he play [[Patience (game)|solitaire]] is the trigger. Seeing the queen of diamonds playing card transforms him into an assassin who will kill anyone at whom he is directed. Shaw's [[KGB]] handler is his domineering mother, Eleanor. Married to [[Joseph McCarthy|McCarthy]]-esque Senator Johnny Iselin, Eleanor has convinced the Communist powers to help install her husband as president and allow them to control the American government through him. |
||
Line 44: | Line 42: | ||
==Alleged plagiarism== |
==Alleged plagiarism== |
||
In 1998, software developer C. J. Silverio noted that several long passages of the novel seemed to be adapted from [[Robert Graves]]'s 1934 novel ''[[I, Claudius]]''. [[Forensic linguist]] John Olsson judged |
In 1998, software developer C. J. Silverio noted that several long passages of the novel seemed to be adapted from [[Robert Graves]]'s 1934 novel ''[[I, Claudius]]''. [[Forensic linguist]] John Olsson judged: "There can be no disputing that Richard Condon plagiarized from Robert Graves." Olsson went on to state: "As plagiarists go, Condon is quite creative, he does not confine himself to one source and is prepared to throw other ingredients into the pot."<ref name=chronicle_plagiarism>{{cite news|last=Lara|first=Adair|title=Has a local software engineer unmasked 'The Manchurian Candidate'? Menlo Park woman says author Richard Condon plagiarized.|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2003/10/04/DD13399.DTL|access-date=July 19, 2013|newspaper=San Francisco Chronicle|date=October 4, 2003|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070220020557/http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=%2Fc%2Fa%2F2003%2F10%2F04%2FDD13399.DTL|archive-date=February 20, 2007|url-status=live}}</ref> [[Jonathan Lethem]], in his influential essay "The Ecstasy of Influence: A Plagiarism", included Condon's novels as "texts that become troubling to their admirers after the discovery of their 'plagiarized' elements".<ref>{{cite magazine|first=Jonathan|last=Lethem|title=The Ecstasy of Influence|magazine=Harper's|date=February 2007|volume=February 2007|pages=59–71|url=http://harpers.org/archive/2007/02/the-ecstasy-of-influence/|access-date=January 19, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170113094331/http://harpers.org/archive/2007/02/the-ecstasy-of-influence/|archive-date=January 13, 2017|url-status=live}}</ref> |
||
==Film adaptations== |
==Film adaptations== |
||
The book has twice been adapted into a feature film of the same title. [[The Manchurian Candidate (1962 film)| |
The book has twice been adapted into a feature film of the same title. [[The Manchurian Candidate (1962 film)|The 1962 adaptation]], considered a classic of the political thriller genre, was directed by [[John Frankenheimer]], and starred [[Laurence Harvey]] as Shaw, [[Frank Sinatra]] as Marco, and [[Angela Lansbury]] as Eleanor in an [[Academy Award]]-nominated performance.<ref>{{cite magazine|url= https://entertainment.time.com/2012/09/05/the-15-best-political-films-of-all-time-the-votes-are-in/slide/the-manchurian-candidate/|title='The Manchurian Candidate' (1962)|last=Cosgrove|first=Ben|date=August 22, 2012|magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |access-date=August 27, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130801021807/http://entertainment.time.com/2012/09/05/the-15-best-political-films-of-all-time-the-votes-are-in/slide/the-manchurian-candidate/|archive-date=August 1, 2013|url-status=live}}</ref> [[The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)|The 2004 adaptation]] was directed by [[Jonathan Demme]], and starred [[Liev Schreiber]] as Shaw, [[Denzel Washington]] as Marco, and [[Meryl Streep]] as Eleanor. It was generally well received by critics, and moderately successful at the box office. The film updated the conflict and setting the [[Persian Gulf War]] in 1991, had a U.S. corporation (called "Manchurian Global") as the perpetrator of the brainwashing and conspiracy instead of foreign Communist groups, and dropped the Johnny Iselin character in favor of making both Shaw and his mother elected politicians. |
||
⚫ | Both adaptations discard several elements of the book. The book spends more time describing the brainwashers and the facility in Manchuria where the Americans were held. The head of the project grants Shaw a "gift"; after his brainwashing, he becomes quite sexually active, in contrast to his reserved nature beforehand where he had not even kissed his love interest, Jocelyn Jordan. In the novel, Mrs. Iselin and her son travel abroad, where she uses him to kill various political figures and possibly Jocelyn Jordan's first husband. Rosie, Marco's love interest, is the ex-fiancée of one of his associates handling the Shaw case for Army Intelligence, making things between the couple tense. The movie adaptations also all but omit the novel's portrayal of incest between Shaw and his mother, only hinting at it with a mouth-to-mouth kiss. |
||
[[The Manchurian Candidate (2004 film)|''The Manchurian Candidate'' (2004)]] was directed by [[Jonathan Demme]], and starred [[Liev Schreiber]] as Shaw, [[Denzel Washington]] as Marco, and [[Meryl Streep]] as Eleanor. It was generally well received by critics, and moderately successful at the box office. The film updated the conflict (and brainwashing) to the [[Persian Gulf War]] in 1991, had a U.S. corporation (called "Manchurian Global") as the perpetrator of the brainwashing and conspiracy instead of foreign Communist groups, and dropped the Johnny Iselin character in favor of making both Shaw and his mother elected politicians. |
|||
⚫ | As a child, Mrs. Iselin was sexually abused by her father, but fell in love with him and idolized him after his early death. Towards the end of the book, as Shaw is hypnotized by the Queen of Diamonds, he reminds her of her father and they sleep together. The 1962 version does not state outright the political affiliation of Senators Iselin and Jordan (implied to be Republicans), although in the 2004 film the equivalent characters are [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrats]]. According to David Willis McCullough, Senator Iselin is modeled on Republican senator [[Joseph McCarthy]] and, according to Condon, Shaw's mother is based on McCarthy's counsel [[Roy Cohn]].<ref>{{cite book | first = David Willis | last = McCullough| contribution = Introduction |page=x |title=The Manchurian Candidate |year= 1988|publisher= Mysterious Press}}</ref> |
||
Both adaptations discard several elements of the book. The book spends more time describing the brainwashers and the facility in Manchuria where the Americans were held. The head of the project grants Raymond a "gift"; after his brainwashing, he becomes quite sexually active, in contrast to his reserved nature beforehand where he had not even kissed his love interest, Jocelyn Jordan. |
|||
⚫ | In the novel, Mrs. Iselin and her son travel abroad, where she uses him to kill various political figures and possibly Jocelyn Jordan's first husband. Rosie, Marco's love interest, is the ex-fiancée of one of his associates handling the Shaw case for Army Intelligence, making things between the couple tense. The movie adaptations also all but omit the novel's portrayal of incest between |
||
As a child, Mrs. Iselin was sexually abused by her father, but fell in love with him and idolized him after his early death. Towards the end of the book, as Raymond is hypnotized by the Queen of Diamonds, he reminds her of her father and they sleep together. |
|||
⚫ | The 1962 version does not state outright the political affiliation of Senators Iselin and Jordan (implied to be Republicans), although in the 2004 film the equivalent characters are [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrats]]. According to David Willis McCullough, Senator Iselin is modeled on Republican senator [[Joseph McCarthy]] and, according to Condon, Shaw's mother is based on McCarthy's counsel [[Roy Cohn]].<ref>{{cite book | first = David Willis | last = McCullough| contribution = Introduction |page=x |title=The Manchurian Candidate |year= 1988|publisher= Mysterious Press}}</ref> |
||
==Other adaptations== |
==Other adaptations== |
||
A stage adaptation by [[John Lahr]] opened in London in 1991, and has since played in the United States.<ref name="Shuttleworth">{{cite web |last1=Shuttleworth |first1=Ian |title=Review of The Manchurian Candidate, for ''City Limits'' magazine |url=http://www.cix.co.uk/~shutters/reviews/91081.htm |website=[[Ian Shuttleworth]]'s archive of his theater reviews, at CIX |access-date=February 6, 2022}}</ref><ref name="BW-2009">{{cite news |last1=Sierra |first1=Gabrielle |title=THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE Plays At The Chandler Studio 3/27 |url=https://www.broadwayworld.com/los-angeles/article/THE-MANCHURIAN-CANDIDATE-Plays-At-The-Chandler-Studio-327-20090324 |access-date=February 6, 2022 |work=BroadwayWorld.com |date=March 24, 2009 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Variety-1994">{{cite news |last1=Evans |first1=Greg |title=The Manchurian Candidate (review) |url=https://variety.com/1994/legit/reviews/the-manchurian-candidate-3-1200437936/ |access-date=February 6, 2022 |work=Variety |date=July 18, 1994}}</ref> |
A stage adaptation by [[John Lahr]] opened in London in 1991, and has since played in the United States.<ref name="Shuttleworth">{{cite web |last1=Shuttleworth |first1=Ian |title=Review of The Manchurian Candidate, for ''City Limits'' magazine |url=http://www.cix.co.uk/~shutters/reviews/91081.htm |website=[[Ian Shuttleworth]]'s archive of his theater reviews, at CIX |access-date=February 6, 2022}}</ref><ref name="BW-2009">{{cite news |last1=Sierra |first1=Gabrielle |title=THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE Plays At The Chandler Studio 3/27 |url=https://www.broadwayworld.com/los-angeles/article/THE-MANCHURIAN-CANDIDATE-Plays-At-The-Chandler-Studio-327-20090324 |access-date=February 6, 2022 |work=BroadwayWorld.com |date=March 24, 2009 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Variety-1994">{{cite news |last1=Evans |first1=Greg |title=The Manchurian Candidate (review) |url=https://variety.com/1994/legit/reviews/the-manchurian-candidate-3-1200437936/ |access-date=February 6, 2022 |work=Variety |date=July 18, 1994}}</ref> [[Kevin Puts]] has adapted the work into an opera. His opera ''The Manchurian Candidate'' premiered in March 2015 at the [[Minnesota Opera]]. It has been performed by the [[Austin Opera]] and at the [[Seagle Festival]] in the [[Adirondacks]] of New York.<ref name="PA-2015">{{cite web |last1=Alexander |first1=Peter |title=Puts's Manchurian Candidate wins the audience on opening night |url=https://sharpsandflatirons.com/2015/03/08/putss-manchurian-candidate-wins-the-audience-on-opening-night/ |website=Sharps & Flatirons |language=en |date=March 8, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Scena-2016">{{cite web |last1=Robinson |first1=Paul |title=Austin Opera Scores Big Time with Puts/Campbell "Manchurian Candidate" |url=https://myscena.org/paul-robinson/austin-opera-scores-big-time-putscampbell-manchurian-candidate/ |website=my/maSCENA |access-date=February 6, 2022 |date=September 28, 2016}}</ref><ref name="Seagle">{{cite web |last1=Moss |first1=Jorie |title=2019 Production Highlights: The Manchurian Candidate and News from ACNWD - Seagle Festival % % |url=https://seaglefestival.org/2019-seagle-music-colony-new-works-projects-performances/ |website=Seagle Festival |access-date=February 6, 2022 |date=May 21, 2019}}</ref> |
||
[[Kevin Puts]] has adapted the work into an opera. His opera ''The Manchurian Candidate'' premiered in March 2015 at the [[Minnesota Opera]]. It has been performed by the [[Austin Opera]] and at the [[Seagle Festival]] in the [[Adirondacks]] of New York.<ref name="PA-2015">{{cite web |last1=Alexander |first1=Peter |title=Puts's Manchurian Candidate wins the audience on opening night |url=https://sharpsandflatirons.com/2015/03/08/putss-manchurian-candidate-wins-the-audience-on-opening-night/ |website=Sharps & Flatirons |language=en |date=March 8, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Scena-2016">{{cite web |last1=Robinson |first1=Paul |title=Austin Opera Scores Big Time with Puts/Campbell "Manchurian Candidate" |url=https://myscena.org/paul-robinson/austin-opera-scores-big-time-putscampbell-manchurian-candidate/ |website=my/maSCENA |access-date=February 6, 2022 |date=September 28, 2016}}</ref><ref name="Seagle">{{cite web |last1=Moss |first1=Jorie |title=2019 Production Highlights: The Manchurian Candidate and News from ACNWD - Seagle Festival % % |url=https://seaglefestival.org/2019-seagle-music-colony-new-works-projects-performances/ |website=Seagle Festival |access-date=February 6, 2022 |date=May 21, 2019}}</ref> |
|||
==In popular culture== |
==In popular culture== |
||
A copy of ''The Manchurian Candidate'' is a major plot point in the 1999 novel ''[[False Memory (novel)|False Memory]]'' by [[Dean Koontz]]. |
A copy of ''The Manchurian Candidate'' is a major plot point in the 1999 novel ''[[False Memory (novel)|False Memory]]'' by [[Dean Koontz]]. The novel's title is referenced in many TV shows: |
||
* ''[[Gravity Falls]]'' episode "The Stanchurian Candidate", aired as part of the series' [[Gravity Falls season 2|second season]]. |
|||
* ''[[Rick and Morty]]''{{'}}s season 3 episode "[[The Rickchurian Mortydate]]". |
|||
The novel's title is referenced in many TV shows: |
|||
* ''[[ |
* ''[[Family Guy]]''{{'}}s season 21 episode "The Munchurian Candidate". |
||
* ''[[ |
* ''[[Bob's Burgers]]''{{'}} season 5 episode "[[The Millie-churian Candidate]]". |
||
* ''[[ |
* ''[[All Hail King Julien]]''{{'}}s season 4 episode "The Panchurian Candidate" |
||
* ''[[Salvation (TV series)|Salvation]]''{{'}}s season 2 episode "The Manchurian Candidate" |
|||
In the season 4 episode "Chuck versus Phase Three" of the TV series ''[[Chuck (TV series)|Chuck]]'', the protagonist compares his experience of remembering dreams to ''The Manchurian Candidate''. |
|||
In season 2 episode 3 of [[The Eric Andre Show]], during a segment with [[Downtown Julie Brown]], Eric Andre reveals that he programmed [[Hannibal Buress]] to be his "Manchurian Candidate" before using his trigger phrase to force Hannibal into shooting a backstage crew member. |
|||
In the season 4 episode "Chuck versus Phase Three" of the TV series ''[[Chuck (TV series)|Chuck]]'', the protagonist compares his experience of remembering dreams to ''The Manchurian Candidate''. In season 2 episode 3 of ''[[The Eric Andre Show]]'', during a segment with [[Downtown Julie Brown]], Eric Andre reveals that he programmed [[Hannibal Buress]] to be his "Manchurian Candidate" before using his trigger phrase to force Hannibal into shooting a backstage crew member. In the 2016 MCU movie, "Captain America: Civil War," Tony Stark references the novel, nicknaming the Winter Soldier, Bucky Barnes, "Manchurian Candidate". According to [[Nadine Dorries]] in 2023, former UK Prime Minister [[Boris Johnson]] viewed then-current UK Prime Minister [[Rishi Sunak]] as being "like a Manchurian Candidate" installed by [[Dominic Cummings]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Davies |first=Caroline |date=2023-11-09 |title=Sunak is 'stooge' put in place by Cummings, claims Johnson in Nadine Dorries book |language=en-GB |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/nov/09/sunak-stooge-put-in-place-by-cummings-claims-johnson-nadine-dorries-book |access-date=2023-11-16 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> |
|||
In the 2016 MCU movie, "Captain America: Civil War," Tony Stark references the novel, nicknaming the Winter Soldier, Bucky Barnes, "Manchurian Candidate". |
|||
Science Fiction [[Poul Anderson]] took up the basic plot element of ''The Manchurian Candidate'' in the novel ''Game of Empire''{{snd}}one of Anderson's far-future spy thriller series, where the dashing [[Dominic Flandry]], secret agent of the star-spanning Terran Empire, confronts the agents of the rival Merseian Empire. Among other exploits, Flandry foils an audacious Merseian plot to place a Merseian agent on the Terran Imperial throne itself. |
|||
According to [[Nadine Dorries]], former UK Prime Minister [[Boris Johnson]] views current UK PM [[Rishi Sunak]] as being "like a Manchurian Candidate" installed by [[Dominic Cummings]].<ref>{{Cite journal |date=2020 |title=The Manchurian Candidate |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781682661369 |journal=The Manchurian Candidate |doi=10.5040/9781682661369}}</ref> |
|||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
Line 103: | Line 90: | ||
|title=The Manchurian Candidate |
|title=The Manchurian Candidate |
||
|url=https://archive.org/details/manchuriancandid00cond/ |
|url=https://archive.org/details/manchuriancandid00cond/ |
||
|publisher= |
|publisher=[[Signet Books]] |
||
|oclc=213832188 |
|oclc=213832188 |
||
|url-access=limited}} |
|url-access=limited}} |
||
Line 122: | Line 109: | ||
[[Category:American political novels]] |
[[Category:American political novels]] |
||
[[Category:Novels involved in plagiarism controversies]] |
[[Category:Novels involved in plagiarism controversies]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Fiction about matricide]] |
Latest revision as of 09:16, 23 November 2024
Author | Richard Condon |
---|---|
Cover artist | Bernard Krigstein |
Language | English |
Genre | Thriller novel |
Publisher | McGraw-Hill |
Publication date | April 27, 1959[1] |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardback) |
Pages | 311 |
OCLC | 52409655 |
813/.54 21 | |
LC Class | PS3553.O487 M36 2003 |
The Manchurian Candidate is a novel by Richard Condon, first published in 1959. It is a political thriller about the son of a prominent U.S. political family who is brainwashed into being an unwitting assassin for a Communist conspiracy. The novel has twice been adapted into a feature film with the same title: the first was released in 1962 and the second in 2004.
Plot summary
[edit]Major Bennett Marco, Sergeant Raymond Shaw, and the rest of their infantry platoon are captured by an elite Soviet commando unit during the Korean War in 1952. They are taken to Manchuria, and brainwashed into believing Shaw saved their lives in combat – for which Shaw is subsequently awarded the Medal of Honor.
Years after the war, Marco, now back in the United States working as an intelligence officer, begins suffering a recurring nightmare in which the seated platoon members are surrounded by a group of sweet little old ladies who had been a part of their brainwashing. One of the ladies tells Sergeant Shaw to murder two of his platoon comrades. The backdrop with the old ladies changes back and forth between them and Chinese/Soviet intelligence officials. When Marco learns that another of the platoon's soldiers has been suffering the exact same nightmare, he starts looking into why this is happening.
Major Marco looks up Sergeant Raymond Shaw and discovers that Shaw's new manservant is someone he recognizes from Korea. Marco and the manservant start fighting in Shaw's house and both are bloodied significantly. Marco is arrested, and when Shaw sees that it is his old major they rekindle their old friendship. Both find love interests: for Marco, it is Rose Cheyney, whom he meets on a train; and for Shaw, it is Jocelyn Jordan, the daughter of Senator Thomas Jordan, a neighbor of Shaw's. Senator Jordan and Shaw's mother do not like each other, but Shaw continues to see Jocelyn.
It is revealed that the Communists have been using Shaw as a sleeper agent who, activated by a post-hypnotic trigger, immediately forgets the assignments he carries out and therefore can never betray the operation either purposely or inadvertently. In Shaw's case, the suggestion that he play solitaire is the trigger. Seeing the queen of diamonds playing card transforms him into an assassin who will kill anyone at whom he is directed. Shaw's KGB handler is his domineering mother, Eleanor. Married to McCarthy-esque Senator Johnny Iselin, Eleanor has convinced the Communist powers to help install her husband as president and allow them to control the American government through him.
By observing Shaw, Marco discovers the trigger shortly before the national convention of Iselin's political party. He uses the queen of diamonds card to draw out Eleanor's plan: after she obtains the vice presidential nomination for Iselin, Shaw is to shoot the presidential candidate so that Iselin can succeed him. Blaming the killing on the Communists will enable Iselin to assume dictatorial powers. Marco reprograms Shaw, although it is unclear until the final pages whether this is successful. At the convention, Shaw instead shoots and kills his mother and Senator Iselin. Marco is the first person to reach Shaw's sniper nest, getting there just before Shaw kills himself with the gun.[2]
Alleged plagiarism
[edit]In 1998, software developer C. J. Silverio noted that several long passages of the novel seemed to be adapted from Robert Graves's 1934 novel I, Claudius. Forensic linguist John Olsson judged: "There can be no disputing that Richard Condon plagiarized from Robert Graves." Olsson went on to state: "As plagiarists go, Condon is quite creative, he does not confine himself to one source and is prepared to throw other ingredients into the pot."[3] Jonathan Lethem, in his influential essay "The Ecstasy of Influence: A Plagiarism", included Condon's novels as "texts that become troubling to their admirers after the discovery of their 'plagiarized' elements".[4]
Film adaptations
[edit]The book has twice been adapted into a feature film of the same title. The 1962 adaptation, considered a classic of the political thriller genre, was directed by John Frankenheimer, and starred Laurence Harvey as Shaw, Frank Sinatra as Marco, and Angela Lansbury as Eleanor in an Academy Award-nominated performance.[5] The 2004 adaptation was directed by Jonathan Demme, and starred Liev Schreiber as Shaw, Denzel Washington as Marco, and Meryl Streep as Eleanor. It was generally well received by critics, and moderately successful at the box office. The film updated the conflict and setting the Persian Gulf War in 1991, had a U.S. corporation (called "Manchurian Global") as the perpetrator of the brainwashing and conspiracy instead of foreign Communist groups, and dropped the Johnny Iselin character in favor of making both Shaw and his mother elected politicians.
Both adaptations discard several elements of the book. The book spends more time describing the brainwashers and the facility in Manchuria where the Americans were held. The head of the project grants Shaw a "gift"; after his brainwashing, he becomes quite sexually active, in contrast to his reserved nature beforehand where he had not even kissed his love interest, Jocelyn Jordan. In the novel, Mrs. Iselin and her son travel abroad, where she uses him to kill various political figures and possibly Jocelyn Jordan's first husband. Rosie, Marco's love interest, is the ex-fiancée of one of his associates handling the Shaw case for Army Intelligence, making things between the couple tense. The movie adaptations also all but omit the novel's portrayal of incest between Shaw and his mother, only hinting at it with a mouth-to-mouth kiss.
As a child, Mrs. Iselin was sexually abused by her father, but fell in love with him and idolized him after his early death. Towards the end of the book, as Shaw is hypnotized by the Queen of Diamonds, he reminds her of her father and they sleep together. The 1962 version does not state outright the political affiliation of Senators Iselin and Jordan (implied to be Republicans), although in the 2004 film the equivalent characters are Democrats. According to David Willis McCullough, Senator Iselin is modeled on Republican senator Joseph McCarthy and, according to Condon, Shaw's mother is based on McCarthy's counsel Roy Cohn.[6]
Other adaptations
[edit]A stage adaptation by John Lahr opened in London in 1991, and has since played in the United States.[7][8][9] Kevin Puts has adapted the work into an opera. His opera The Manchurian Candidate premiered in March 2015 at the Minnesota Opera. It has been performed by the Austin Opera and at the Seagle Festival in the Adirondacks of New York.[10][11][12]
In popular culture
[edit]A copy of The Manchurian Candidate is a major plot point in the 1999 novel False Memory by Dean Koontz. The novel's title is referenced in many TV shows:
- Gravity Falls episode "The Stanchurian Candidate", aired as part of the series' second season.
- Rick and Morty's season 3 episode "The Rickchurian Mortydate".
- Family Guy's season 21 episode "The Munchurian Candidate".
- Bob's Burgers' season 5 episode "The Millie-churian Candidate".
- All Hail King Julien's season 4 episode "The Panchurian Candidate"
- Salvation's season 2 episode "The Manchurian Candidate"
In the season 4 episode "Chuck versus Phase Three" of the TV series Chuck, the protagonist compares his experience of remembering dreams to The Manchurian Candidate. In season 2 episode 3 of The Eric Andre Show, during a segment with Downtown Julie Brown, Eric Andre reveals that he programmed Hannibal Buress to be his "Manchurian Candidate" before using his trigger phrase to force Hannibal into shooting a backstage crew member. In the 2016 MCU movie, "Captain America: Civil War," Tony Stark references the novel, nicknaming the Winter Soldier, Bucky Barnes, "Manchurian Candidate". According to Nadine Dorries in 2023, former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson viewed then-current UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak as being "like a Manchurian Candidate" installed by Dominic Cummings.[13]
Science Fiction Poul Anderson took up the basic plot element of The Manchurian Candidate in the novel Game of Empire – one of Anderson's far-future spy thriller series, where the dashing Dominic Flandry, secret agent of the star-spanning Terran Empire, confronts the agents of the rival Merseian Empire. Among other exploits, Flandry foils an audacious Merseian plot to place a Merseian agent on the Terran Imperial throne itself.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ "Books Today". The New York Times: 25. April 27, 1959.
- ^ final page of The Manchurian Candidate
- ^ Lara, Adair (October 4, 2003). "Has a local software engineer unmasked 'The Manchurian Candidate'? Menlo Park woman says author Richard Condon plagiarized". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on February 20, 2007. Retrieved July 19, 2013.
- ^ Lethem, Jonathan (February 2007). "The Ecstasy of Influence". Harper's. Vol. February 2007. pp. 59–71. Archived from the original on January 13, 2017. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
- ^ Cosgrove, Ben (August 22, 2012). "'The Manchurian Candidate' (1962)". Time. Archived from the original on August 1, 2013. Retrieved August 27, 2013.
- ^ McCullough, David Willis (1988). "Introduction". The Manchurian Candidate. Mysterious Press. p. x.
- ^ Shuttleworth, Ian. "Review of The Manchurian Candidate, for City Limits magazine". Ian Shuttleworth's archive of his theater reviews, at CIX. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
- ^ Sierra, Gabrielle (March 24, 2009). "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE Plays At The Chandler Studio 3/27". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
- ^ Evans, Greg (July 18, 1994). "The Manchurian Candidate (review)". Variety. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
- ^ Alexander, Peter (March 8, 2015). "Puts's Manchurian Candidate wins the audience on opening night". Sharps & Flatirons.
- ^ Robinson, Paul (September 28, 2016). "Austin Opera Scores Big Time with Puts/Campbell "Manchurian Candidate"". my/maSCENA. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
- ^ Moss, Jorie (May 21, 2019). "2019 Production Highlights: The Manchurian Candidate and News from ACNWD - Seagle Festival % %". Seagle Festival. Retrieved February 6, 2022.
- ^ Davies, Caroline (November 9, 2023). "Sunak is 'stooge' put in place by Cummings, claims Johnson in Nadine Dorries book". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved November 16, 2023.
References
[edit]- Condon, Richard, December 28, 1963. "'Manchurian Candidate' in Dallas", The Nation.
- Loken, John (2000). Oswald's Trigger Films: The Manchurian Candidate, We Were Strangers, Suddenly?, pp. 16, 36.
- Tuck, Donald H. (1974). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Chicago: Advent. p. 110. ISBN 0-911682-20-1.
External links
[edit]- Condon, Richard (1959). The Manchurian Candidate. Signet Books. OCLC 213832188.
- Photos of the first edition of The Manchurian Candidate
- Review: The Manchurian Candidate
- The Manchurian Candidate at complete review
- ‘Manchurian Candidate’ in Dallas December 28, 1963, article by Richard Condon in The Nation about the JFK assassination and The Manchurian Candidate