ESSAY: MARX, MATRICIDE AND MIND CONTROL
The 1950s and early 1960s saw the rise of the Cold War between the USSR and the USA. During this period, aggressive military action by the Soviet Union in Europe, coupled with several high-profile cases of espionage in America itself, led to a deep and fearful anti-communist sentiment throughout the US. In 1962 came the Cuban Missile Crisis; on October 22 of that year, President John F. Kennedy addressed a fearful nation regarding the stand-off between the two nuclear superpowers. Two days later came the release of a film which did little to ease these fears: The Manchurian Candidate, directed by John Frankenheimer (1930-2002).
The film’s plot revolves around Staff Sergeant Raymond Shaw (played by Laurence Harvey), a misanthropic and unlovable American soldier who is kidnapped along with his platoon by Russians during the Korean War, and subsequently brainwashed by a Chinese scientist to be an unwitting assassin for communists inside the US. But it turns out that Shaw’s American handler is none other than his own mother Eleanor Iselin (Angela Lansbury) — a powerful political operator who dominates her son as much as she reigns over her dim-witted and populist husband, Senator John Yerkes Iselin. Her plan is to use Shaw to kill various political figures and propel the right-wing Senator Iselin into power by “rallying a nation of television viewers into hysteria, to sweep us up into the White House with powers that will make martial law seem like anarchy.” The only person capable of foiling these plans is Major Bennett Marco (Frank Sinatra), who along with Shaw was brainwashed to forget the three days in Manchuria during which their platoon was experimented upon, but whose recurring nightmares about the event have enabled him to realise that a nefarious plot is afoot.
Accidentally discovering that the suggestion to play a game of solitaire followed by the displaying of the Queen of Diamonds is the trigger which makes Shaw primed for programming, Marco tries to unravel the plot and reprogram Shaw to resist his instructions to kill a prominent politician whose death would give the Iselins the power that they seek. Convinced that he has failed in this task when Shaw does not contact him at an appointed time, Marco rushes to intercept him at the political convention where the murder is to be carried out, only to witness Shaw assassinate his mother and Senator Iselin instead, before turning the gun upon himself.
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The Manchurian Candidate is closely based upon the eponymous 1959 novel by Richard Condon. It satirises American politics much as the source novel did, notably in the character of Senator Iselin, a close rendition of Senator Joseph McCarthy, whose name is inextricably linked with the anti-communist ‘witch hunts’ of the 1950s.
But the film’s treatment of communists is less mocking. Apart from a scene in which the Chinese scientist Yen Lo (Khigh Dhiegh) chastises a Russian agent for displaying capitalistic tendencies — shortly before going to a department store to shop for his wife — Iselin’s fantasies of communist conspiracy are shown to be serious and well-founded. Indeed, communist subversion as depicted in the film is even more insidious than that shown in the US Department of Defence’s own training film Red Nightmare, which was shown on American television in the same year.
Since the onset of the Korean War there had circulated numerous scare stories about American prisoners of war being brainwashed by communists using some new diabolical method, but there was certainly enough literature at the time debunking such myths. Examples of such material include Lawrence E. Hinkle, Jr. and Harold G. Wolff’s “The Methods of Interrogation and Indoctrination Used by the Communist State Police” (Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, September 1957) and Robert Jay Lifton’s book Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of ‘Brainwashing’ in China (W. W. Norton & Co., 1961; reprinted with a new introduction by University of North Carolina Press, 1989). The extensive research by the authors of such works established that Russian and Chinese interrogation methods did not involve new technologies capable of turning a man into an automaton, but were merely adaptations of techniques used since mediaeval times.
Other films of the period which discussed (usually obliquely) communist interrogation techniques and their consequences similarly tended to do so in more sober terms: The Prisoner (Peter Glenville, 1955), The Rack (Arnold Laven, 1956), Toward the Unknown (Mervyn LeRoy, 1956), and The Fearmakers (Jacques Tourneur, 1958), to name a few.