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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Special Edition / Pan & Scan | $9.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled | $18.39 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled | $18.39 |
Closed Caption; co-writer Daniel Pyne; "The Enemy Within: Inside The Manchurian Candidate"; "The Cast of the Manchurian Candidate"; Five deleted/extended scenes with optional commentary: Marco and Raymond Talk on Patrol, Marco's Worried Neighbor, Raymond Meets Executives While Senator Jordan Confronts Ellie at Fundraiser, Campaign Trail Montage, Marco and Raymond Interrupted at Campaign HQ; Outtakes with optional commentary: Ellie's Interview With Stacey Newsome-Santiago, Ellie's Interview With Al Franken; Liev Schreiber screen test; Political Pundits with optional director commentary
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Kuwait, 1991
2. "I Have These Dreams"
3. Raymond Prentiss Shaw
4. Vice Presidential Nominee
5. "Don't Touch Me"
6. Completely Normal
7. Rosie
8. The Implant
9. Relieved of Duty
10. Getting Clarity
11. Invasive Procedures
12. The Jordans
13. Manchurian Global
14. "I Am the Enemy"
15. Assassination
16. Get to the Water
Updating a Cold War thriller to reflect 21st-century geopolitics is tricky business, but director Jonathan Demme reworks Richard Condon’s pulpy page-turner rather neatly, owing to particularly deft scripting and some noteworthy performances. Top-billed Denzel Washington brings feverish intensity to his characterization of Major Ben Marco, a career officer haunted by dreams of his days as a captive during the Gulf War. Everybody knows that Marco was rescued by one of his sergeants, Raymond Shaw (Liev Schreiber), who parlayed his heroism into a distinguished political career that’s earned him his party’s nomination for vice president. Yes, everybody knows -- but is that what really happened? Did Shaw really save his commanding officer, or was he just a pawn in a larger game? Tackling the role played by Frank Sinatra in John Frankenheimer’s 1962 version, Washington makes Marco a borderline paranoiac who risks his career and even his life in an obsessive quest for the truth, and the actor conveys that zeal so convincingly that he’ll give you goose bumps. Schreiber, a sensational actor who seems to have a particular affinity for tightly wound characters, brings maturity and affability to Shaw while at the same time suggesting the inner conflict that threatens to unhinge him. But the real acting honors go to Meryl Streep, whose bravura characterization of Raymond’s mother -- herself a ruthless U.S. senator inflamed with the desire to see her son installed in the White House -- is unlike anything she’s ever done on film. Her scenes crackle with near-demonic energy, and she constantly drags Momma Shaw right to the precipice of believability, only to pull back before going over the edge. Without Communists to pick on, Demme and his screenwriters assign the primary villainy to monstrously large multinational Manchurian Global, and one can easily draw correlations to the current administration's ties to the corporate world. Ultimately, the story may be preposterous, but Demme keeps the tension ratcheted so that you won't notice such things until after the credits roll. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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