During the late 1940s and the early 1950s, the thought of communism instilled fear within many Americans because it was portrayed in such a way that confined diversity and corroded political culture while the United States was supposed to be the land of the free. This fear of communism was nicknamed the “Red Scare” and was fed by Joseph McCarthy’s accusations of hidden communist in the country. The Manchurian Candidate was a black-and-white American film released in 1962 that depicted the Cold War and the affects of that paranoia had on the nation. It was released at the peak of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the spread of communism. This film was about Raymond Shaw, the son of a right-wing political family, who was brainwashed to act as an assassin …show more content…
During a scene towards the end of the movie, Ben Macro gets a call from Shaw while he is in the hotel room. Raymond is grieving over the death of his wife, Jocelyn Jordan, whom he killed although he did not know. Marco decides to pay him a visit and walks into the hotel room while noticing the disheveled state that Raymond is in and asks him to pass the time by playing a game of solitaire. It is at this moment that the angle is framed where the camera is above the subject, looking down. As Shaw takes the cards, his hands are shaking vigorously. This shows his lack of control as he is still in grief about his diseased wife. The first card he flips down is a Queen of Diamonds. From this angle, the viewers can still that his shaking stops immediately. His eyebrows tighten and he slowly raises his head to look at Marco. Shaw’s straight face and monotone voice is the complete opposite as to how he was feeling before he entered this blank computer-like state of mind. The high angle frame of this scene is important in depicting Shaw’s lack of human agency because it shows his immediate change in persona. This change in the way he was previously acting is a pivotal point as to why Americans feared communist brainwashing: you become emotionless. As explained by Bennett in his article about Cold War Paranoia, …show more content…
Although Americans were concerned with being brainwashed unwillingly and unknowingly due to communism, the thought of remembering while not in control of ones own mind poses a greater horror. While Shaw describes what happened when he and the other soldiers were captured, the camera cuts to close up frame of his face. The camera is up close and personal with Raymond and he can be seen to be sweating non-stop, almost as if he were nervous about something. However, his eyes remain steady which disproves the previous statement. The direct, straightforward close up camera angle of Shaw’s face places an important role of showing the readers the emotions that cross his face. His nervousness of his past actions makes it seem like there is more sweat on his face and this is beginning to show his lack of control but also a state of enlightenment. Even though it seems like he is becoming aware of what is happening and he is concerned of his previous actions, there is still no hesitation when he follows Marco’s orders. This camera frame clearly shows the lack of human agency in Raymond Shaw at this point because as he is explaining his actions, he is clearly disturbed and shocked at what he did but he cannot control the movement of his hands or the information he is giving out. In the same article
The Red Scare in the 1950’s was actually America’s second red scare. The 1920’s red scare was what helped start suspicion over Communists, but was put off during World War 2. It was no coincidence that what many people called the second red scare ignited after World War 2, during the Cold War, in the 1950’s. The 1920’s red scare started because Americans were paranoid over the fact that Russia may seek revenge after they had overthrown a royal Russian family in 1917. What started Communist ideas in the U.S at the time was the fact that since the war was over many of people were out of jobs which
The First and Second Red Scare of the United States paved the way for a long standing fear of communism and proved to be one of America’s largest periods of mass hysteria. Throughout the years authors and analysts have studied and formed expository albeit argumentative books and articles in an attempt to further understand this period of time; the mindset held during this period however is shown to be completely different compared to now.
SS General Reinhard Heydrich was in charge of the “Reich security” and appointed to lead the infamous Wannsee Conference. This conference featured many established leaders in the Nazi Party, SS, and German government and gets its name from the location of the meeting, a wealthy German suburb. The purpose of this conference was to inform the slightly lower ranking German leaders of the “Final Solution” to the ‘Jewish question.’ The movie Conspiracy focuses on the Wannsee Conference and shows the influence on many of the aforementioned leaders. Kenneth Branagh, the actor that portrays Heydrich, is able to successfully imitate his commanding presence throughout the film with his use of body language and tone. From the opening scene of the
In the 1950’s, Senator Joseph McCarthy turned Americans against each other by installing fear in the people regarding toward Communism. During this time, in fact, people were getting blacklisted even if they weren't communist. In an incident at the Republican Women’s Club of Wheeling, McCarthy delivered a speech. The situation involving the Senator escalated when he stated that the State Department is infested with Communist. In this point in time, due to the false allegations, people went on a decade long period of witch hunts. Sam Roberts, the author of “A Decade of Fear” stated that in fact, “...thousands of alleged Communists in the U.S. were arrested and deported during what became known as the Red Scare.”
Everybody made a good attempt as they could to not appear like communists, but rather even famous people and government officials who were not communists were blamed for being Russian spies. Blacklists were created by movie executives to expose more communists due to pressure from the negative publicity aimed at their studios. This got people to lose their jobs. A few individuals who were blamed for being called a communist were fired from their occupations, captured and researched by the police, and assaulted by people. The Red Scare was a major part of the Cold War because of the vital events that occurred and heightened it. During the Cold War the Soviets and America had great tension between each other and since some Americans were terrified of the spread of communism, many other Americans, and even government officials gave the public attention to the
What is The Red Scare? The Red Scare is fear resulting from communists wanting to control citizens. From 1919 to 1921, The First Red Scare occurred in which Americans feared the Soviet Union’s idea of communism spreading to The United States. After this panic was resolved, there was another epidemic of fear called The Second Red Scare. This lasted from 1947 to 1957 and was driven by the panic of communism growing and spreading in The United States. The Second Red Scare was perpetuated by international events and dismay such as the Korean War and fear of the Soviet Union’s nuclear weapon capabilities. From this, the House Un-American Activities Committee was formed. The committee’s purpose was to investigate alleged communists and infiltrators within the government, subcommittees, and Hollywood. “Americans also felt the effects of the Red
The Red Scare, also known as McCarthyism, took place during the 1950’s when Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy was elected during a time of fear as the Cold War’s lasting effects wore on the people of America. McCarthy could twist the anger and fear of the American citizens to produce a new social phenomenon, Communism invading our politics. McCarthy was elected as the Senator in 1946 and became a household name four years later in 1950 when he claimed 205 communists infiltrated the State Department. McCarthy’s vigorous investigation for communists in the political society made him an incredibly influential political figure. Two years later in 1952, he obtained the chairmanship for the Government Operations Party while also being reelected. McCarthy began questioning
In the 20th century a period known as the Cold War occurred, involving an ideological battle between the United States and Russia that was fought on the front of countries, such as Korea, China, and Vietnam. The people of America grew fearful of communism, believing it would undermine their values and take away democracy, and capitalism. Because communist values appealed to many people, Americans feared communist influence believing it would destroy democracy and freedom like it had in Korea, China, Vietnam, and other countries. In America, senator Joseph McCarthy began accusing old communist party sympathizers, who at some time had supported communism were now under suspicion from the government and general public. This support may have cost them their jobs, friends, and even family as fear of communism spread like a wildfire. What was happening in America was essentially a witch-hunt. Government officials faced a series of tests to prove their loyalty, and Hollywood actors were blacklisted if they refused to rat out any communist employees. This period in time is known as the Red Scare. In 1953, Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible in response to the Red Scare to compare current events at the time to the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. Miller uses his allegorical tale to reveal the truths behind McCarthyism, presenting a serious warning to the Americans of the history of false accusations, crowd hysteria, abuse of power, and the repercussions that soon follow them.
Beginning in the early 1950s, Senator Joseph McCarthy released a monumental rampage across the United States. For fear of governmental infiltration by Communists, an outbreak of accusations swept the nation as a result of the Wisconsin senator, and helped create what is known as the second Red Scare (“McCarthyism”)
During the late 1940s and the early 1950s, the thought of communism instilled fear within many Americans because it was portrayed in such a way that confined diversity and corroded political culture. This fear of communism was nicknamed the “Red Scare” and was fed by Joseph McCarthy’s accusations of hidden communist in the country. The Manchurian Candidate was a black-and-white American film released in 1962 that depicted the Cold War and the effects that paranoia had on the nation. It was released at the peak of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the spread of communism. This film was about Raymond Shaw, the son of a right-wing political family, who was brainwashed to act as an assassin for his mother in a communist conspiracy theory. Major Bennet (Ben) Marco was another main character that played an important role in discovering the truth of Shaw’s brainwashing. Raymond Shaw faced the conflict of acting upon his free will while still being subconsciously manipulated by someone else. Throughout the film, Shaw was shown committing actions that he does not recall whatsoever later due to his programming which was triggered by the Queen of Diamonds playing card. Through the use of film techniques, The Manchurian Candidate creates a scenario which resembles the manifestation of America’s “Red Scare” paranoia in that the film portrays Raymond Shaw as an individual who lacks human agency due to his brainwashing because of a communist conspiracy.
A "Red Scare" is the promotion of fear of a potential rise of communism or radical leftism. In the United States, the First Red Scare was about worker revolution and political radicalism. The Second Red Scare was focused on national and foreign communists influencing society, infiltrating the federal government, or both. As World War II was ending, a fear-driven movement known as the “Second Red Scare” began to spread across the United States. Americans feared that the Soviet Union hoped to spread communism all over the world, overthrowing both democratic and capitalist institutions as it went. This “Scare” as caused by fears of subversion by communists in the United States after the Russian Revolution. (The Red Scare was Anti-Communist.) The postwar Red Scare is often called “McCarthyism,” a name derived from one of the era's most notorious anti-Communists, Senator Joseph McCarthy. Yet the anti-Communist crusade of the late 1940s and 1950s both in
The Second Red Scare was a period of heightened fears of the Soviet Union and the political ideology of Communism. The paranoia and hysteria inherent to this period led to discrimination of Communists. Joseph McCarthy was a main player in this Red Scare, which was sometimes called the “Witch-Hunts in Washington.” He was a Wisconsin senator who made claims against those whom he suspected of being Communists or Communist sympathizers.
In an effort to capture the effects of paranoia of the Red Scare in 1950s America, The Manchurian Candidate is filmed with the intentional techniques of character-following shots, plays on lighting, and mise-en-scene. These film techniques are utilized to make the argument that paranoia can be used to control others with the use of force as one tries to make sense of the chaos around themselves. Throughout the film, audiences fall into a sort of confusion when trying to determine the characters on the side of good or evil. Just as the audience gets trapped in the confusion of the film, the American people fell into pandemonium during the Cold War and were forced upon by the government to be on the side of freedom and democracy or be forced
Just as the Civil War lead to sentimental domesticity, the Cold War brought to light the idea of Momism. The Manchurian Candidate was released in 1962. The film offered an exaggerated alternate reality in which soldiers were brainwashed in order to infiltrate the American Government. Directed by John Frankenheimer, the film introduced the idea of Momism through the relation established by Raymond Shaw and his mother. By employing body language, dialogue and alluding historical figures one is able to understand the development of Momism and the effects it can have on an individual.
When people hear the word “Manchurian Candidate” they think of a movie from the 60s that caused a conspiracy or a word used in modern politics. The 1962 movie sparked controversy for its time; the story showed what happens to people in post war America with the fear of communism creeping in. The film is about American troops in the Korean War that got captured and brainwashed by communists, but one of the men in the troop by the name of Raymond Shaw got brainwashed to kill higher ups in the American government for the communist. The film is a psychological thriller with a science fiction element that showed the audience a suspenseful realism of the government and what they could do. In the movie there are many hints of control, confusion, and conspiracy that plays with the audience and the characters' minds.