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Wikipedia

John Frankenheimer

John Michael Frankenheimer (February 19, 1930 – July 6, 2002)[1] was an American film and television director known for social dramas and action/suspense films. Among his credits were Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Seven Days in May (1964), The Train (1964), Seconds (1966), Grand Prix (1966), French Connection II (1975), Black Sunday (1977), The Island of Dr. Moreau (1996), and Ronin (1998).

John Frankenheimer
Born
John Michael Frankenheimer

(1930-02-19)February 19, 1930
Queens, New York City, U.S.
DiedJuly 6, 2002(2002-07-06) (aged 72)
Los Angeles, California
Alma materWilliams College
OccupationFilm director
Years active1948–2002
Spouses
  • Joanne Frankenheimer (divorced)
Carolyn Miller
(m. 1954; div. 1962)
(m. 1963)
Children2

He won four Emmy Awards – three consecutive – in the 1990s for directing the television movies Against the Wall, The Burning Season, Andersonville, and George Wallace, the last of which also received a Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Television Film.

Frankenheimer's 30 feature films and over 50 plays for television were notable for their influence on contemporary thought. He became a pioneer of the "modern-day political thriller", having begun his career at the height of the Cold War.[2]

He was technically highly accomplished from his days in live television; many of his films were noted for creating "psychological dilemmas" for his male protagonists along with having a strong "sense of environment",[2] similar in style to films by director Sidney Lumet, for whom he had earlier worked as assistant director. He developed a "tremendous propensity for exploring political situations" which would ensnare his characters.[2]

Movie critic Leonard Maltin writes that "in his time [1960s] ... Frankenheimer worked with the top writers, producers and actors in a series of films that dealt with issues that were just on top of the moment – things that were facing us all."[3]

Childhood and schooling edit

I was always a very introverted child, and as far back as seven years old, I recall finding great escape in films ... in all seriousness, I have always been terribly interested in films and it was not something that happened to me later in life. I look back and realize it was the medium I liked most. – John Frankenheimer, quoted in The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1968)[4]

Frankenheimer was born in Queens, New York City, the son of Helen Mary (née Sheedy) and Walter Martin Frankenheimer, a stockbroker.[3][5] His father was of German Jewish descent, his mother was Irish Catholic, and Frankenheimer was raised in his mother's religion.[6][7] As a youth Frankenheimer, the eldest of three siblings, struggled to assert himself with his domineering father.[8]

Growing up in New York City he became fascinated with cinema at an early age, and recalls avidly attending movies every weekend. Frankenheimer reports that in 1938, at the age of age of seven or eight, he attended a 25-episode, 7 12 hour marathon of The Lone Ranger accompanied by his aunt.[4]

In 1947, he graduated from La Salle Military Academy in Oakdale, Long Island, New York, and in 1951 he earned a baccalaureate in English from Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. As captain of the tennis team at Williams, Frankenheimer briefly considered a professional career in tennis, but reconsidered:[9]

I gave that up when I really started acting at eighteen or nineteen, because there wasn't any time to do both ... my interest was more toward acting in those days and an actor is what I wanted to be. I did act at college and summer stock for a year. But I was really not a very good actor. I was quite shy and quite stiff...[10]

Air Force Film Squadron: 1951-1953 edit

After graduating Williams College, Frankenheimer was drafted into the Air Force and assigned to the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC), serving in the Pentagon mailroom at Washington, D. C. He quickly applied for and was transferred, without any formal qualifications,[11] to an Air Force film squadron in Burbank, California. It was there that Lieutenant Frankenheimer "really started to think seriously about directing."[12]

Frankenheimer recollects his early apprenticeship with the Air Force photography unit as one of almost unlimited freedom. As a junior officer, Frankenheimer superiors "couldn't have cared less" what he did in terms of utilizing the filmmaking equipment. Frankenheimer reports that he was free to set up the lighting, operate the camera and perform the editing on projects he personally conceived. His first film was a documentary about an asphalt manufacturing plant in Sherman Oaks, California.[13] Lieutenant Frankenheimer recalls moonlighting, at $40-a-week, as writer, producer and cameraman making television infomercials for a local cattle breeder in Northridge, California, in which livestock were presented on the interior stage sets. The FCC terminated the programming after 15 weeks. In addition to mastering the basic elements of filmmaking, Frankenheimer began reading widely on film technique, including the writings of Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein.[14] Frankenheimer was discharged from the military in 1953.[15]

Television's "Golden Age": 1953-1960 edit

 
Frankenheimer at Columbia Broadcasting Studios (CBS), 1952

During his years in military service, Frankenheimer strenuously sought a film career in Southern California. Failing this, at age 23, he returned to New York upon his military discharge to seek work in the emerging television industry. His earnestness impressed Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) television executives, landing him a job in the summer of 1953 to serve as a director of photography on The Garry Moore Show.[16] Frankenheimer recalls his apprenticeship at CBS:

When I stop and look back on [The Garry Moore Show] ... I was particularly well-suited for that job ... what you would do is prepare a shot for the director. He would tell you what he wanted and you would get it from the cameraman ... You'd also be responsible for the timing of the show. But I think – well, I know – I was born with a good eye for the camera and so the job really was playing right into what I would call my own strength.[17]

Television scripts [of the 1950s] exploring problems at the societal level were systematically ignored (i.e. racial discrimination, structural poverty, and other social ills). Instead, critics complain, too many "golden age" dramas were little more than simplistic morality tales focusing on the everyday problems and conflicts of weak individuals confronted by personal shortcomings such as alcoholism, greed, impotence, and divorce, for example.... [I]t is important to note that the "golden age" coincided with the Cold War era and McCarthyism and that cold-war references, such as avoiding communism and loving America, were frequently incorporated in teleplays of the mid to late 1950s. – Anna Everett in "Golden Age" Museum of Broadcast Communications[18]

Frankenheimer was picked up as assistant to director Sidney Lumet's for CBS's historical dramatization series You Are There, and further on Charles Russell's Danger and Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person. In late 1954 Frankenheimer replaced Lumet as director on You Are There and Danger under a 5-year contract (with a studio standard option to terminate a director with a two-week notice). Frankenheimer's directorial début was The Plot Against King Solomon (1954), a critical success.[19]

Throughout the 1950s he directed over 140 episodes of shows like Playhouse 90 and Climax! under the auspices of CBS executive Hubbell Robinson and producer Martin Manulis.[20] These included outstanding adaptations of works by Shakespeare, Eugene O'Neill, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and Arthur Miller. Leading actors and actresses from stage and film starred in these live productions, among them Ingrid Bergman, John Gielgud, Mickey Rooney, Geraldine Page and Jack Lemmon. Frankenheimer is widely considered a preeminent figure in the so-called "Golden Age of Television".[21][22]

Film historian Stephen Bowie offers this appraisal of Frankenheimer's legacy from the "Golden Age" of television:

Along with Sidney Lumet, John Frankenheimer was the major director to emerge from and be influenced by the aesthetics of live television drama, which flourished briefly in the US ... Frankenheimer's later fame, and his oft-repeated nostalgia for live television, have designated him as the quintessential exponent of the form: this is a crucial misconception. The aesthetics of live television were defined by their temporal and spatial limitations: all that could be shown was what could be physically created within an hour or half-hour and photographed within the confines of a small space [emphasizing] cramped blue-collar settings ("kitchen drama") because these were the most easily staged for live broadcast ... [though] perfectly suited to this world of emotional intimacy and physical claustrophobia, Frankenheimer reacted instinctively against it. He sought material and visual strategies that expanded the boundaries of what could be done in live television ... As the live TV director who took the medium in an explicitly cinematic direction, Frankenheimer was actually the least typical.[23]

Film career edit

Frankenheimer's earliest films addressed contemporary issues such as "juvenile delinquency, criminality and the social environment" and are represented by The Young Stranger (1957), The Young Savages (1961) and All Fall Down (1962).[24]

The Young Stranger (1957) edit

Frankenheimer's first foray into filmmaking occurred while he was still under contract to CBS television. The head of CBS in California, William Dozier, became the CEO of RKO movie studios. Frankenheimer was assigned to direct a film version of his television Climax! production entitled "Deal a Blow", written by William Dozier's son, Robert. The 1956 movie version, The Young Stranger stars James MacArthur as the rebellious teenage son of a powerful Hollywood movie producer (James Daly). Frankenheimer recalled that he found his first film experience unsatisfactory:[25]

I have a very high regard for my [television] crews, because I hand pick them; on The Young Stranger I was given a crew, and I thought they were terrible and treated me very badly. It made me very bitter about the whole experience ... I felt very confined, constricted and a bad director ... There were so many things I thought I could have done but didn't do ... As a result of this experience I was fed up with films and went back to television.[26]

Frankenheimer adds that in the late 1950s, television was transitioning from live productions to taped shows: "... a live television director was like being a village blacksmith after the advent of the automobile ... I knew I had to get out..." In 1961 Frankenheimer abandoned television and returned to filmmaking after a four-year hiatus, continuing his examination of the social themes that informed his 1957 The Young Stranger.[27] Film historian Gordon Gow distinguishes Frankenheimer's handling of themes addressing individualism and "misfits" during the Fifties' obsession with disaffected teenagers:

There was an especially true feeling to the problem of the 16-year-old boy who became "The Young Stranger" ... This film, in 1957, at the height of the problem-teen vogue, sounded a quiet note of contrast. In part, its genuine quality might be put down to the fact [both director and writer] were in their mid-twenties – much nearer to the age of their central character [James MacArthur], about twenty himself at the time (but looking younger) ... What made it especially distinctive amid the general sensationalism was the triviality of the boy's misdemeanor: a minor bit of roughhouse in a neighborhood cinema ... The difference between The Young Stranger, which attained a happy ending plausibly, and the general run of delinquent-problem movies was its moderation...[28]

The Young Savages (1961) edit

Frankenheimer's second cinematic effort is based on novelist Evan Hunter's A Matter of Conviction (1959). United Artists publicity executives changed the box-office title to the vaguely lurid The Young Savages, to which Frankenheimer objected.[29] The story involves the attempted political exploitation of a brazen murder involving Puerto Rican and Italian youth gangs set in New York City's Spanish Harlem.[30] District Attorney, Dan Cole (Edward Andrews), who is seeking the state governorship, sends assistant D. A. Hank Bell (Burt Lancaster) to gather evidence to secure a conviction. Bell, who grew up in the tenement district, has escaped from his impoverished origins to achieve social and economic success. He initially adopts a cynical hostility towards the youths he investigates, which serves his own career aims. The narrative explores the human and legal complexities of the case and Bell's struggle to confront his personal and social prejudices and commitments.[31] The film's arresting opening sequence depicting a killing, which is key to the plot, reveals Frankenheimer's origins in television. The action, "brilliantly filmed and edited", occurs preliminary to the credits, and is accompanied by an impelling soundtrack by composer David Amram, serving to quickly rivet audience interest.[32]

The Young Savages, though focusing on juvenile delinquency, is cinematically a significant advance over Frankenheimer's similarly themed first film effort The Young Stranger (1957).[33] Film historian Gerald Pratley attributes this to Frankenheimer's insistence on hand-picking his leading technical support for the project, including set designer Bert Smidt, cinematographer Lionel Lindon and scenarist JP Miller.[34] Pratley observed:

"The Young Savages is far more alive and real than [The Young Stranger]...the youths might well be some of those we met in the first film, but now further along their delinquent ways. The acting throughout is authoritative, with vivid portrayals by the Italian and Puerto Rican players...the entire film is photographically alive with a strong, visual sense which was to characterize all of Frankenheimer's future work…"[33]

Though "contrived and familiar in its social concerns" Frankenheimer and leading man Burt Lancaster, both Liberals in their political outlook, dramatize the "poverty, violence and despair of city life" with a restraint such that "the events and characters seem consistently believable."[35] Frankenheimer recalled "I shot The Young Savages mainly to show people that I could make a movie, and while it was not completely successful, my point was proved...The film was made on a relatively cheap budget and shooting on location in New York for a Hollywood company is very expensive. Those were the days before Mayor Lindsay when you had to pay off every other cop on the beat…"[36]

All Fall Down (1962) edit

The coming of age film All Fall Down was both filmed and released while Frankenheimer's Birdman of Alcatraz (1962) was in post-production and his The Manchurian Candidate (1962) was in pre-production.[37][38]

The picture was scripted by William Inge, who also wrote Splendor in the Grass (1961) and concerns character Berry-Berry (Warren Beatty), an emotionally irresponsible hustler, and his adoring younger brother Clinton (Brandon deWilde), to whom Berry-Berry appears as a romantic Byronesque figure. The older brother's cruel treatment of Echo O'Brien (Eva Marie Saint), his lover who becomes pregnant, disabuses the naive Clinton of Berry-Berry's perfection. His anguished insight permits Clinton to achieve emotional maturity and independence.[39][40][41] Film critic David Walsh comments:

"All Fall Down is vaguely moralistic and conformist, and the scenes of the Beatty character's comeuppance contrived in the extreme. All Fall Down is saved by the portrayals of Eva Marie Saint, quiet and gracious, as the unfortunate Echo, and Angela Lansbury, extravagant and outlandish, as Berry-Berry's mother, within whom incestuous fires appear to blaze. Critics have noted that Annabell Willart (Lansbury) was the first of three desperately controlling mothers in Frankenheimer's films of 1962: the other two played by Thelma Ritter in Birdman of Alcatraz (1962) and Lansbury again in The Manchurian Candidate (1961). In all three films, the father is either weak or absent."[42]

Birdman of Alcatraz (1962) edit

“I can't really think of a scene in Birdman of Alcatraz I liked. I like the total effect of the film, but I don't think there was any scene that stands out for me as being extraordinary in any way.”  – John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969)[43]

Based on a biography by Thomas E. Gaddis, Birdman of Alcatraz (1962) is a documentary-like dramatization of the life of Robert Stroud, sentenced to life imprisonment in solitary confinement for killing a prison guard.[44] While serving his sentence, Stroud (Burt Lancaster) becomes a respected expert in avian diseases though the study of canaries. Frankenheimer traces Stroud's emergence from his anti-social misanthropy towards a humane maturity, despite the brutal conditions of his incarceration.[45]

In 1962, the production and filming of Birdman of Alcatraz was already underway when United Artists enlisted Frankenheimer to replace British director Charles Crichton.[46][47] As such, key production decisions had already been made, and Frankenheimer regarded himself as a “hired director” with little direct control over the production.[48] Producer Harold Hecht and screenwriter Guy Trosper insisted on an exhaustive adaption of the Gaddis biography. The filmed rough cut that emerged was over four hours in length. When simply editing the work was ruled out as impracticable, the script was rewritten and the film largely re-shot, producing a final cut of 2 ½ hours.[49] According to Frankenheimer, he had an option in the 1950s to make a television adaption of the Stroud story, but CBS was warned off by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, and the project was dropped.[50][51]

The Manchurian Candidate (1962) edit

Frankenheimer's 1962 political thriller The Manchurian Candidate is widely regarded as his most remarkable cinematic work.[52] Biographer Gerald Prately observes that “the impact of this film was enormous. With it, John Frankenheimer became a force to be reckoned with in contemporary cinema; it established him as the most artistic, realistic and vital filmmaker at work in America or elsewhere.”[53]

Frankenheimer and producer George Axelrod bought Richard Condon's 1959 novel after it had already been turned down by many Hollywood studios. After Frank Sinatra committed to the film, they secured backing from United Artists.[54] The plot centers on Korean War veteran Raymond Shaw, part of a prominent political family. Shaw is brainwashed by Chinese and Russian captors after his Army platoon are imprisoned. He returns to civilian life in the United States, where he becomes an unwitting “sleeper” assassin in an international communist conspiracy to subvert and overthrow the U.S. government.[55]

The film co-starred Laurence Harvey (as Sergeant Raymond Shaw), Janet Leigh, James Gregory and John McGiver. Angela Lansbury, as the mother and controller to her “sleeper” assassin son, garnered an Academy Award nomination for a “riveting” performance” in “the greatest screen role of her career.”[56] Frank Sinatra, as Major Bennett Marco, who reverses Shaw's mind control mechanisms and exposes the conspiracy, delivers perhaps his most satisfactory film performance.[57] Frankenheimer declared that both technically and conceptually, he had “complete control” over the production.[58]

The technical “fluency” exhibited in The Manchurian Candidate reveals Frankenheimer's struggle to convey this Cold War narrative. Film historian Andrew Sarris remarked that the director was “obviously sweating over his technique...instead of building sequences, Frankenheimer explodes them prematurely, preventing his films from coming together coherently.”[59] The Manchurian Candidate, nonetheless, conveys the “paranoia and delirium of the Cold War years”[60] through its documentary-style mise-en-scène. A demonstration of Frankenheimer's bravura direction and “visual inventiveness” appears in the notable brainwashing sequence, presenting the sinister proceedings from the perspective of both the perpetrator and victim.[61][62] The complexity of the sequence and its antecedents in television are described by film critic Stephen Bowie:

“The famous brainwashing sequence in which Frankenheimer moves seamlessly between an objective perspective (captured soldiers in a communist seminar) and a subjective one (the soldiers attending an innocuous meeting of the Ladies’ Garden Society). This tour de force was a pure distillation of Frankenheimer's television technique, opening with a self-conscious 360-degree pan that utilised the ‘wild’ sets which allowed TV cameras to move into seemingly impossible positions.”[63]

In 1968, Frankenheimer acknowledged that the methods he used on television were “the same kind of style I used on The Manchurian Candidate. It was the first time I had the assurance and self-confidence to go back to what I had been really good at in television.”[64] Compositionally, Frankenheimer concentrates his actors into “long lens” menage, in which dramatic interactions occur at close-up, mid-shot and long-shot, a configuration that he repeated “obsessively.” Film critic Stepen Bowie observes that “this style meant that Frankenheimer's early output became a cinema of exactitude rather than spontaneity.”[65]

“More and more I think that our society is being manipulated and controlled...the most important aspect is that [in 1962] this country was just recovering from the McCarthy era and nothing had ever been filmed about it. I wanted to do a picture that showed how ludicrous the whole McCarthy far-Right syndrome was and how dangerous the far-Left syndrome is...The Manchurian Candidate dealt with the McCarthy era, the whole idea of fanaticism, the far-Right and the far-Left being really the same thing, and the idiocy of it. I wanted to show that and I think we did.”- John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969)[66]

The Manchurian Candidate was released in the post-Red Scare period of the early 1960s, when anti-Communist political ideology still prevailed.[67] Just one month after the film's release, the John F. Kennedy administration was in the midst of Cuban Missile Crisis and nuclear brinkmanship with the Soviet Union.[68]

That Frankenheimer and screenwriter Axelrod persisted in the production is a measure of their political liberalism, in a historical period when, according to biographer Gerald Pratley “ it was clearly dangerous to speak of politics in the out-spoken, satiric vein that characterized this picture.”[69] Film critic David Walsh adds that “the level of conviction and urgency” that informs The Manchurian Candidate, reflects “the relative confidence and optimism American liberals felt in the early 1960s.”[70] Frankenheimer's “terrifying parable” of the American political milieu was sufficiently well-received to avoid its summary rejection by distributors.[71]

The Manchurian Candidate, due its subject matter and its proximity to the Kennedy assassination is inextricably linked to that event.[72] Frankenheimer acknowledged as much when, in 1968, he described The Manchurian Candidate as “a horribly prophetic film. It's frightening what's happened in our country since that film was made.”[73]

After completing The Manchurian Candidate, Frankenheimer recalls that he was determined to continue filmmaking: “I wanted to initiate the project, I wanted to have full control, I never wanted to go back to be hired as a director again.”[74] He was offered a contract to direct a biopic about French singer Edith Piaf, with Natalie Wood in the starring role. He emphatically rejected the offer when he learned that Piaf's songs would be sung in English, rather than in the original French.[75]

In 1963, Frankenheimer and screenwriter George Axelrod were introduced to the producer Edward Lewis, considering a TV production concerning the American Civil Liberties Union. When the project was deemed too expensive for television, Frankenheimer was approached by an associate of Lewis, actor and producer Kirk Douglas, to purchase and adapt to film the novel Seven Days in May by Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II.[76]

Seven Days in May (1964) edit

“Television screens, glimpsed throughout Seven Days in May, are one of the most recognisable Frankenheimer trademarks...Frankenheimer became the first filmmaker to acknowledge television's roles in modern society as an intrusion upon privacy and as a tool by which the powerful manipulate others.”—Film critic Stephen Bowie in John Frankenheimer Senses of Cinema (2006)[23]

Seven Days in May (1964), based closely on Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II's best-selling novel and a screenplay by Rod Serling, dramatizes an attempted military coup d’état in the United States, set in 1974.[77] The perpetrators are led by General James M. Scott (Burt Lancaster), chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) a virulently anti-Communist authoritarian. When US President Jordan Lyman (Fredric March) negotiates a nuclear disarmament treaty with the Soviet Union—an act that Scott considers treasonable—Scott mobilizes his military cabal. Operating at a remote base in West Texas, they prepare to commandeer the nation's communication networks and seize control of Congress. When Scott's JCS aide Colonel Martin “Jiggs” Casey (Kirk Douglas) discovers the planned coup he is appalled, and convinces President Lyman as to the gravity of the threat. Lyman mobilizes his own governmental loyalists, and a clash over Constitutional principles between Lyman and Scott plays out in the Oval Office, with the President denouncing the General as a traitor to the US Constitution. When Scott is exposed publicly, his military supporters abandon him, and the conspiracy collapses.[78] Frankenheimer points to the topical continuity of his political thrillers:[79]

“Seven Days in May was as important to me as The Manchurian Candidate. I felt that the voice of the military was much too strong...the General MacArthur syndrome was very much in evidence...Seven Days in May was the opportunity to illustrate what a tremendous force the military-industrial complex is...we did not ask the Pentagon for co-operation because we knew we wouldn't get it.”[80]

The character of General Scott has been identified by film historians as a composite of two leading military and political figures: Curtis LeMay and Edwin Walker.[81] The film places great emphasis on the sanctity of US Constitutional norms as a bulwark against encroachments by anti-democratic elements in the United States.[82] Biographer Gerald Pratley writes:

“An aspect to admire is Frankenheimer's use of speeches given by President Lyman. Scoffed by some critics as [reflecting] ‘respectable, liberal lines’, they are delivered by March with complete naturalism at times where they are logically called for, and with great honesty and conviction. They restate familiar [Constitutional] principles...Frankenheimer handles them pointedly but never in a propagandistic way…”[83]

Film critic Joanne Laurier adds that “screenwriter Rod Serling and Frankenheimer's major theme is the need for the military to be subordinated to elected civilian rule.” As visual emphasis “the opening credits of Seven Days in May roll over an image of the original 1787 draft of the Constitution of the United States.[84]

Seven Days in May has been widely praised for the high caliber of the performances by the cast.[85] Biographer Charles Higham writes that “the film is played with extraordinary skill, proving that Frankenheimer's intensity communicated itself successfully to his actors.”[86]

Frankenheimer, a former Air Force officer who worked briefly in the Pentagon,[87] anticipated hostility from the military establishment to the premise of Seven Days in May.[88] Indeed, internal memos circulated in the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) registering alarm that Seven Days in May could potentially damage the bureau's reputation.[89] Film critics Joanne Laurier and David Walsh report that “The military and FBI took a very definite note of Seven Days in May, revealing their intense sensitivity to such criticism. A memo uncovered in Ronald Reagan's FBI file reveals that the bureau was concerned the film would be used as Communist propaganda and was therefore ‘harmful to our Armed Forces and Nation.’”[90] President Kennedy personally expressed approval for the film adaption, and his Press Secretary Pierre Salinger permitted Frankenheimer to view the Oval Office so as to sketch its interior.[91][84]

Seven Days in May, filmed in the summer of 1963, was scheduled for release in December that year, but was delayed due to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in November. The release of director Stanley Kubrick's satire Dr. Strangelove (1964) was similarly postponed.[92] Frankenheimer recognized the “prophetic” aspects of his The Manchurian Candidate (1962), a film that examines conspiratorial political assassinations.[73] The historical context in which Seven Days in May appeared inevitably links it to the 1963 Kennedy assassination.[93] Film critic David Walsh makes the connection explicit: “By the time Seven Days in May reached movie theaters, Kennedy had been assassinated, in an operation widely believed to have been organized by those with CIA or military connections.”[94]

Seven Days in May was well received by critics and movie-goers.[95]

The Train (1964) edit

In early 1964, Frankenheimer was reluctant to embark upon another film project due to fatigue: “The Train is a film I had no intention of ever doing [and was] not a subject that I cared that much about...I'd just finished Seven Days in May (1964). I was quite tired.” [96]

Adapted from the novel Le Front de l’Art: Le front de l’art: Défense des collections françaises, 1939-1945 by Rose Valland, the documentary-styled picture examines the desperate struggle by the French Resistance to intercept a train loaded with priceless art treasures and sabotage it before Wehrmacht officers could escape with it to Nazi Germany. The film dramatizes a contest of wills between French railway inspector Labiche (Burt Lancaster) and German art connoisseur Colonel von Waldheim (Paul Scofield), tasked with seizing the art work.[97] Shooting for The Train had commenced in France when filmmaker Arthur Penn, originally enlisted to direct the adaption, was dismissed by actor-producer Lancaster, allegedly over personal incompatibility and irreconcilable interpretive differences.[98]

Frankenheimer, who had successfully directed Lancaster on three previous films, consented to replace Penn, but with grave reservations, considering the screenplay “almost appalling” and noting that “the damn train didn't leave the station until p. 140.”[99] Frankenheimer postponed production of Seconds (1966) to accommodate Lancaster's production.[100]

Filming for The Train was temporarily shut down and the existing footage discarded. Frankenheimer, in collaboration with screenwriters Nedrick Young (uncredited), Franklin Coen, Frank Davis and Walter Bernstein framed an entirely new script that combined suspense, intrigue and action, reflecting Lancaster's prerequisites.[101]

“The point I wanted to make [in The Train] was that no work of art is worth a human life. That's what the film is about. I feel that very deeply. But to say that the film is a statement of a theme like that is really being unfair to the film...the lives of people, what they do and how they think, feel and behave, is in itself important...Honesty and reality are reflected in people's attitudes-without individuals having to perform great deeds or being great heroes or villains proclaiming great messages about life...The Train is this kind of movie.”—John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969).[102]

Frankenheimer inserts an ethical question into the narrative: Is it justified to sacrifice a human life to save a work of art? His controversial answer was emphatically, no.[103] Film critic Stephen Bowie observes ““Frankenheimer's thesis—that human life has more value than art—may seem simplistic, but it adds an essential moral component to what would otherwise be just an expensive live-action version of an electric train set.”[104] The Train is lauded for its documentary-like realism and Frankenheimer's masterful integration of the human narrative with its tour-de-force action scenes.[105]

"Smashing up trains was easy to do. It's every boy's childhood fantasy. There isn't a child who ever owned an electric train, who didn't want to do a wreck with it, putting a car across the track and sending an engine into it. Well of course, we did just that.”—John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969).[106]

Biographer Gerald Pratley offers this appraisal of Frankenheimer's handling of the complex series of train sequences, discerning the influence of Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein:

“Frankenheimer's expert sense of narrative carries the events along with ever mounting drama and excitement, and at times overwhelming tragedy as men are shot and killed...he can wreck trains and stage air raids, and yet he sustains his characters on a high level of interest...Frankenheimer's insistence on using natural backgrounds gives a tremendous feeling of reality to the film. The stark, dramatic outlines of the camouflaged armored locomotive emerging from the sheds is worthy of Eisenstien; the chase into the tunnel showing the locomotive stopping inches from the opening, and the engineer pulling on the whistle chain, is masterly.”[107]

Film critic Tim Palen elaborates on Frankenheimer's technical expertise in The Train: “The director makes excellent use of wide angle lenses, long tracking shots, and extreme close-ups whilst maintaining depth of field...deliberately ensures that elaborate camera movement and cutting was planned so that ‘logistically you knew where each train was,’ in relation to the action.”[108] The Train exemplifies the centrality of technical applications that began to characterize Frankenheimer's approach to film in the late 1960s “brandishing style for its own sake.”[109]

The Train’s original screenplay received an Academy Award nomination.[110][111] It had cost $6.7 million.[112] and was one of the 13 most popular films in the UK in 1965.[113]

Seconds (1966) edit

Seconds presents a surreal and disturbing tale of a disillusioned corporate executive, Arthur Hamilton (John Randolph). In an effort to escape his empty existence, he submits to a traumatic surgical procedure that transforms his body into that of a younger man, Tony Wilson (Rock Hudson). Randolph's effort to erase his former self in a new persona proves futile and leads to his horrific demise.[114][115] Biographer Gerald Pratley describes Seconds as “a cold, grey, frightening picture of a dehumanized world...based on the age-old search for eternal youth...an amalgam of mystery, horror and science fiction…”[116]

Based on a novel by David Ely and a screenplay by Lewis John Carlino, Frankenheimer explained his thematic objectives:

“An individual is what he is, and he has to live with his life. He cannot change anything, and all of today's literature and films about escapism are just rubbish because you cannot and should not ever escape from what you are. Your experience is what makes you the person that you are...That's really what the film is about. It's also about this nonsense in society that you must always be young, this accent on youth in advertising...I wanted to make a matter-of-fact yet horrifying portrait of big business that will do anything for anybody providing you are willing to pay for it [and] the belief that all you need to do in life is to be financially successful.”[117][118]

Frankenheimer acknowledged his difficulty in casting for the elderly and demoralized Arthur Hamilton, which required the director to convincingly show his metamorphosis, both surgically and physiologically, into the youthful and artistic Tony Wilson. A dual role played by a single actor was considered, with Frankenheimer advocating for British actor Laurence Olivier. Paramount rejected this in favor of two players, in which one actor (Randolph) undergoes a radical transformation to emerge with the appearance and identity of the other (Hudson). Rock Hudson's portrayal of Wilson introduced a troubling plausibility issue that Frankenheimer fully recognized: “We knew we were going to have a terrible time getting audiences to believe that the man who went into the operating room (Randolph) could emerge as Rock Hudson, citing the physical disparity between the actors as problematic.[119][118] Film historian Gerald Pratley concurs: “the weakness [in Seconds] is trying to convince audiences that the actor playing Hamilton could emerge, after plastic surgery, as Wilson in the form of Rock Hudson. This is where the star system has worked against Frankeheimer.”[120]

Frankenheimer identified the source of the film's weakness less on the physical disparities in his actors, and more on his difficulties conveying the themes required to explain Wilson's inability to adjust socially to his new life: “We thought we had shown why [Wilson] failed, but after the film was finished I realized we had not.” [121][118]

Frankenheimer's technical prowess is on display in Seconds, where the director and his cameraman James Wong Howe experimented with various lenses, including the 9.5 mm fisheye lens to achieve the “distortion and exaggeration” that would dramatize Hamilton's struggle to “break free of his emotional straightjacket.”[122]

Howe and Frankenheimer's use of visual distortions are central to revealing his character's hallucinatory mental states, and according to Frankenheimer “almost psychedelic”. In one scene, a total of four Arriflexes are brought to bear to emphasis Hamilton's sexual impotency with his estranged wife.[123] Film historian Peter Wilshire considers Frankenheimer's choice of James Wong Howe as cameraman for the project was his “most important directional decision.” Howe was nominated at the Academy Awards in Best Cinematography for his efforts.[124]

At Frankenheimer's urging, Paramount executives agreed to enter Seconds at the 1966 Cannes Film Festival, hoping the film might confer prestige on the studio and enhance box office returns. On the contrary, Seconds was savaged by European critics at the film competition, regarding it as misanthropic and “cruel”. Frankenheimer recalled “it was a disaster” and declined to attend the festival's post-preview press conference. In the aftermath of this fiasco, Paramount withdraw promotional resources and Seconds failed at the box office.[125] As consolation for its critical and commercial failures, Seconds was ultimately rewarded with a cult following among cineastes.[126][127]

Critical appraisal of the film has varied widely. Gerald Pratley, in 1968, declares that Seconds, despite its poor reception in 1966, will one day be recognized as “a masterpiece.”[128] Film critic Peter Wilshire offers qualified praise: “In spite of its obvious weaknesses, Seconds is an extremely complex, innovative, and ambitious film.”[118] Brian Baxter disparages Seconds as “embarrassing...unconvincing, even as science fiction.”[129] and critic David Walsh considers Seconds “particularly wrongheaded, strained and foolish.”[24] Biographer Charles Higham writes:

Seconds, superbly shot by James Wong Howe...fails to achieve the political portrait of the California rich which would have made it a triumph. The important central passages at Malibu have all the softness of a dream-come-true. By conspiring with his own target, Frankenheimer shows that corruption has crept up on him. Not even a powerful climax—the hero preferring death in New York to ‘life’ in Malibu, returning to be killed in a horrifying operating room scene—alters the fact that the film has been compromised.”[130][131]

Grand Prix (1966) edit

 
Frankenheimer on the set of Grand Prix

By the mid-sixties, Frankenheimer had emerged as one of Hollywood's leading directors.[132] As such, M-G-M provided lavish financing for Grand Prix (1966), Frankenheimer's first color film and shot in 70mm Cinerama.[133] A former amateur race car driver himself, he approached the project with genuine enthusiasm.[134]

The screenplay by Robert Alan Aurthur and an uncredited Frankenheimer, concerns the professional and personal fortunes of Formula One racer Pete Aron (James Garner) during an entire season of competitive racing. The action climaxes at Monza, where Aron, Scott Stoddard (Brian Bedford), Jean Pierre Sarti (Yves Montand) and Nino Barlini (Antonio Sabàto Sr.) compete for the championship, with tragic results.[135][136]

Wishing to craft a highly realistic rendering of racing and its milieu, he assembled a panoply of innovative film techniques with ingenious apparatus and special effects.[137] Working closely with cinematographer Lionel Lindon, Frankenheimer mounted cameras directly onto the race cars, eliminating process shots and providing audiences with a driver's-eye view of the action.[138][139]

Frankenheimer incorporated split-screens to juxtapose documentary-like interviews of the racers with high-speed action shots on the track.[140] Frankenheimer explains his use of the “hydrogen cannon”:[141]

“The special effects, the accidents, were very hard to do. I had an excellent special effects man, Milton Rice, who devised a hydrogen cannon which worked on the principle of a pea shooter. The car was attached to a shaft and when the hydrogen exploded the car was literally propelled through the air like a projectile at about 125 to 135 miles an hour and you could aim it anywhere you wanted it to go. And all the wrecks were done that way. They were real cars. No models at all. Everything was very real. And that's why it was good…”[142]

“I'm not saying its my best film. But it is certainly one of the most satisfactory film I’ve made...to be able to indulge your fantasies with ten-and-a-half million dollars is, I think, marvelous.”—John Frankenheimer on Grand Prix in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer(1969)[143]

Characterized largely by Frankenheimer's bravura application of his striking cinematic style, Grand Prix has been termed “largely a technical exercise” by film critic David Walsh and “brandishing style for its own sake” according to The Film Encyclopedia.[144][145] Film historian Andrew Sarris observed that Frankenheimer's style had “degenerated into an all-embracing academicism, a veritable glossary of film techniques.”[146]

A commercial success, Grand Prix garnered three Oscars at the Academy Awards for Best Sound Effects (by Gordon Daniel), Best Editing (Henry Berman, Stu Linder and Frank Santillo), and for Best Sound Recording (Franklin Milton and Roy Charman)[147]

The Extraordinary Seaman (1969) edit

Frankenheimer's first foray into “light comedy” represents a major departure from his often dystopian and dramatic work addressing social issues and his big budget action films.[148] The Extraordinary Seaman presents a menagerie of misfit characters set in the final days of World War II in the Pacific theatre. British Lt. Commander Finchhaven, R. N. (David Niven), a ghost, is condemned to a Flying Dutchman-like existence, roaming the seas in his ship Curmudgeon in search of redemption for his shameful ineptitude during a World War I combat mission. During World War II, the Curmudgeon is chartered, then beached on a remote Pacific Island by party goers. Four castaway American sailors stumble upon the unseaworthy vessel: Lt. Morton Krim (Alan Alda), Cook 3/C W.W. J. Oglethorpe (Mickey Rooney), Gunner's Mate Orville Toole (Jack Carter) and Seaman 1/C Lightfoot Star (Manu Tupou). Jennifer Winslow (Faye Dunaway), the proprietor of a jungle garage, provides supplies to repair the derelict Curmudgeon for passage off the island. Commander Finchaven enlists the largely incompetent crew to seek out and sink a Japanese battleship and thus vindicate his family honor. The 79-minute picture depicts the crew's subsequent “hazards and misadventures.”[149][150]The Extraordinary Seaman, based on a screenplay and story by Phillip Rock, is a spoof of war-time conventions and clichés which integrates newsreel clips from the period for comic effect.[151][152]

“I don't think you can make an anti-war film by killing a lot of people and by showing ‘how horrible war is’ in the last five minutes after you’ve had two hours of fun with machine guns and bombs...I mean, one of the most atrocious war films ever made is The Green Berets (1968). I'm against violence like this...I think it's totally wrong that at the end of it they try to justify all this violence by some pretentious statement. I will not make a film like that. I don't believe in it.”—John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969)[153]

Frankenheimer engages in a mock-heroic burlesque, titling the film's episodes “Grand Alliance”, “The Gathering Storm”, “Their Finest Hour”, The Hinge of Fate” and “Triumph and Tragedy”, borrowed from Winston Churchill's post-war memoirs.[154]

Filmed during the Vietnam War, film historian Gerald Pratley discerns “a strong thematic relationship” between Frankenheimer's opposition to US invasion of Indo-China and The Extraordinary Seaman. Frankenheimer recalls that he and screenwriter Phillip Rock “decided we could really use this premise [of a ghostly naval officer] to make an anti-war statement. I think we did, and it terrified MGM."[155][156]

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer delayed the release of the film for two years, reportedly due its poor response among critics and “dismal screenings”, though Frankenheimer attributes the delay to legalities obtaining release of historic newsreel footage.[157][158] The studio made only perfunctory efforts to promote and exhibit the film after The Extraordinary Seaman’s poor critical reviews and weak box-office response.[159]

The Fixer (1968) edit

Frankenheimer approached his film adaption of Bernard Malamud's The Fixer with alacrity, obtaining the galleys for the 1966 novel in advance of its publication.[160] The Fixer is based on the 1913 persecution and trial of the Jewish peasant Menahem Mendel Beilis, accused of Blood Libel during the reign of Czar Nicholas II[161][162]

The Fixer was widely praised by movie critics for Frankenheimer's success in eliciting outstanding performances from Alan Bates as the brutalized Yakov Shepsovitch Bok, Dirk Bogarde as Boris Bibikov, his humane court appointed defense attorney, and David Warner as Count Odoevsky. Minister of Justice.[163] Bates received his only Academy Award nomination for Best Actor in this role.[164] Renata Adler of the New York Times observed “the direction, by John Frankenheimer, is powerful and discreet. It averts its eyes at the easy, ugly consummations of violence...and gives you credit for imagining the result.”[165] This, despite Frankenheimer's admission that “there is a very violent scene in The Fixer”:

“You have to show what this man [Bok] went through in five years of prison, and what his captors did to him. The executives at Metro were worried about this one scene. They said ‘with the climate of today it is dangerous to show this.’ I said ‘it has to be in there.’ This is the scene where the Russians come and beat him for refusing to be converted to Christianity...it is not a scene of violence just put there for its own sake. I hope the audience feels this...I don't believe in violence for the sake of exploitation.”[166]

The Fixer investigates the fact that the victory Yakov Bok won was being brought to trial...the Minister of Justice, Count Odoevsky, offers Bok a pardon. And Bok says ‘no’...That, I think, is probably the best scene in the film...The Fixer is about the dignity of a human being who never knew he had this strength in him, and suddenly finds it within him...Bok is not a [literary] man. He's a peasant and you see this great strength developed within him. That's what the film is about. It has nothing to do with the fact that he is a Jew. It could be any man, any time, anywhere...I think this is a very good story to tell.”—John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969)[167]

Whereas Frankenheimer was deeply gratified with his cinematic handling of Malamud's Pulitzer Prize winning work, declaring “I feel better about The Fixer than anything I’ve ever done in my life”,[168] a number of movie critics registered severe critiques. Film critic Roger Ebert wrote:

“Frankenheimer's task was to make a film that, in itself, would make a moral statement. He has failed. The film has little reality of its own; instead, it draws its power and emotion from the raw material of its subject matter...The temptation is to praise the film because we agree with its message. This is the same critical fallacy that led to praise of Judgment at Nuremberg (1961)—a corrupt, commercial film—because we disapproved of Nazi war crimes, A movie doesn't become good simply by taking the correct ideological position.”[169]

Ebert adds “What were needed were fewer self-conscious humanistic speeches... Frankenheimer should have shown us his hero's suffering, and the Kafkaesque legal tortures of the state, without commenting on them.”[169]

Film critic Renata Adler singles out screenwriter and blacklist victim Dalton Trumbo for disparagement:

“The triviality of the script by Dalton Trumbo, the old sentimental Hollywood formula (a few moments of mild happiness, an hour and a half of reversals and misery, with violins, a blitz happy ending with drums) applies, almost intact, to dog stories, horse stories, sports stories, love stories.”[165]

Adler concludes “it is not enough to put [Bok-Bates] in a few cliché predicaments...[the dialogue] becomes demeaning and vulgar when drawn out with hack-plot fiction approximations of eloquence.”[170] Biographer Charles Higham dismisses the film, writing that “since the commercial failure of Seconds (1966), Frankenheimer's films have been mediocre, ranging from The Fixer (1968) to The Horsemen (1971).”[171]

Frankenheimer became a close friend of Senator Robert F. Kennedy during the making of The Manchurian Candidate in 1962. In 1968, Kennedy asked Frankenheimer to make some commercials for use in the presidential campaign, at which he hoped to become the Democratic candidate. On the night he was assassinated in June 1968, it was Frankenheimer who had driven Kennedy from Los Angeles Airport to the Ambassador Hotel for his acceptance speech.[6][172]

The Gypsy Moths was a romantic drama about a troupe of barnstorming skydivers and their impact on a small midwestern town. The celebration of Americana starred Frankenheimer regular Lancaster, reuniting him with From Here to Eternity co-star Deborah Kerr, and it also featured Gene Hackman. The film failed to find an audience, but Frankenheimer claimed it was one of his favorites.[173]

1970s edit

Frankenheimer followed this with I Walk the Line in 1970. The film, starring Gregory Peck and Tuesday Weld, about a Tennessee sheriff who falls in love with a moonshiner's daughter, was set to songs by Johnny Cash. Frankenheimer's next project took him to Afghanistan. The Horseman focused on the relationship between a father and son, played by Jack Palance and Omar Sharif. Sharif's character, an expert horseman, played the Afghan national sport of buzkashi.

Impossible Object, also known as Story of a Love Story, suffered distribution difficulties and was not widely released. Next came a four-hour film of O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh, in 1973, starring Lee Marvin, and the decidedly offbeat 99 and 44/100% Dead, a crime black comedy starring Richard Harris.

With his fluent French and knowledge of French culture, Frankenheimer was asked to direct French Connection II, set entirely in Marseille. With Hackman reprising his role as New York cop Popeye Doyle, the film was a success and got Frankenheimer his next job. Black Sunday, based on author Thomas Harris's only non-Hannibal Lecter novel, involves an Israeli Mossad agent (Robert Shaw) chasing a pro-Palestinian terrorist (Marthe Keller) and a PTSD-afflicted Vietnam vet (Bruce Dern), who plan a spectacular mass-murder involving the Goodyear Blimp which flies over the Super Bowl. It was shot on location at the actual Super Bowl X in January 1976 in Miami, with the use of a real Goodyear Blimp.[172] The film tested very highly, and Paramount and Frankenheimer had high expectations for it, but it was not a hit (with Paramount blaming the failure on the special effects work in the climax, and Universal Studios releasing the similarly themed thriller Two-Minute Warning only six months prior).

In 1977, Carter DeHaven hired Frankenheimer to direct William Sackheim and Michael Kozoll's screenplay for First Blood. After considering Michael Douglas, Powers Boothe, and Nick Nolte for the role of John Rambo Frankenheimer cast Brad Davis. He also cast George C. Scott as Colonel Trautman. However, the production was abandoned after Orion Pictures acquired its distributor Filmways, and Sackheim and Kozoll's script would be rewritten by Sylvester Stallone as the basis for Ted Kotcheff's 1982 film.[174][175]

Frankenheimer is quoted in Champlin's biography as saying that his alcohol problem caused him to do work that was below his own standards on Prophecy (1979), an ecological monster movie about a mutant grizzly bear terrorizing a forest in Maine.

1980s edit

In 1981, Frankenheimer travelled to Japan to shoot the cult martial-arts action film The Challenge, with Scott Glenn and Japanese actor Toshiro Mifune. He told Champlin that his drinking became so severe while shooting in Japan that he actually drank on set, which he had never done before, and as a result he entered rehab on returning to America. The film was released in 1982, along with his HBO television adaptation of the acclaimed play The Rainmaker.

In 1985, Frankenheimer directed an adaptation of the Robert Ludlum bestseller The Holcroft Covenant, starring Michael Caine. That was followed the next year with another adaptation, 52 Pick-Up, from the novel by Elmore Leonard. Dead Bang (1989) followed Don Johnson as he infiltrated a group of white supremacists. In 1990, he returned to the Cold War political thriller genre with The Fourth War with Roy Scheider (with whom Frankenheimer had worked previously on 52 Pick-Up) as a loose cannon Army colonel drawn into a dangerous personal war with a Soviet officer. It was not a commercial success.

1990s edit

 
Frankenheimer on the set of the television film Andersonville in 1994

Most of his 1980s films were less than successful, both critically and financially, but Frankenheimer was able to make a comeback in the 1990s by returning to his roots in television. He directed two films for HBO in 1994: Against the Wall and The Burning Season that won him several awards and renewed acclaim. The director also helmed two films for Turner Network Television, Andersonville (1996) and George Wallace (1997), that were highly praised.

Frankenheimer's 1996 film The Island of Doctor Moreau, which he took over after the firing of original director Richard Stanley, was the cause of countless stories of production woes and personality clashes and received scathing reviews. Frankenheimer was said to be unable to stand Val Kilmer, the young co-star of the film and whose disruption had reportedly led to the removal of Stanley half a week into production.[176][177] When Kilmer's last scene was completed, Frankenheimer reportedly said, "Now get that bastard off my set." He also stated, "There are two things I will never ever do in my whole life: I will never climb Mt. Everest and I will never work with Val Kilmer ever again." The veteran director also professed that "Will Rogers never met Val Kilmer". In an interview, Frankenheimer refused to discuss the film, saying only that he had a miserable time making it.

However, his next film, 1998's Ronin, starring Robert De Niro, was a return to form, featuring Frankenheimer's now trademark elaborate car chases woven into a labyrinthine espionage plot. Co-starring an international cast including Jean Reno and Jonathan Pryce, it was a critical and box-office success. As the 1990s drew to a close, he even had a rare acting role, appearing in a cameo as a U.S. general in The General's Daughter (1999). He earlier had an uncredited cameo as a TV director in his 1977 film Black Sunday.

Last years and death edit

Frankenheimer's last theatrical film, 2000's Reindeer Games, starring Ben Affleck, underperformed. In 2001, he worked on the BMW action short-film Ambush for the promotional series The Hire, starring Clive Owen. Frankenheimer's final film, Path to War (2002) for HBO was nominated for numerous awards. A look back at the Vietnam War, it starred Michael Gambon as President Lyndon Johnson along with Alec Baldwin and Donald Sutherland.

Frankenheimer was scheduled to direct Exorcist: The Beginning, but it was announced before filming started that he was withdrawing, citing health concerns. Paul Schrader replaced him. About a month later he died suddenly in Los Angeles, California, from a stroke due to complications following spinal surgery at the age of 72.

Politics edit

Frankenheimer was born into a politically conservative family and attended a Catholic military academy. He served as a junior officer in the US Air Force during the Korean War. In his youth, he briefly considered entering the priesthood.[178]

He came of age during the height of the Red Scare and the Anti-Communist House Un-American Activities Committee investigations during the early 1950s, a period that saw the blacklisting of left-wing filmmakers and screenwriters by the Hollywood studios. Frankenheimer's early liberal political sensibilities first manifested themselves in disputes with his conservative father, a stockbroker:

When I was in high school, I started disagreeing a lot with my father on politics, because he was really very conservative. He really wanted the status quo, and I didn't want the status quo. The whole racial question really, really bothered me. I came from New York, and one of my first girlfriends was an African-American dancer. And this caused a furor of sorts within my family.[179]

Frankenheimer's “liberal sensibility” emerged professionally when he began his apprenticeship in the early TV industry:[180]

When I got into live television [in 1952], there was the whole business of McCarthy—you can't imagine how terrible that was. That really galvanized me into a political arena. And of course in live television it was very hard to do political stuff because there was the blacklist. You could do anything psychological, but nothing sociological.[181]

Film critic David Walsh notes that “any medium which emerged as the profit-driven property of large American corporations and under the close scrutiny of the US authorities in the midst of the Cold War, with its anticommunism, conformism and generally stagnant intellectual climate, would inevitably be deformed by those processes...Frankenheimer worked and apparently thrived within this overall artistic and ideological framework.”[24]

Political relationships with the Kennedys edit

In a 1998 interview with film critic Alex Simon, Frankenheimer recalled that his first contact with Kennedy family politics occurred during the 1960 presidential campaigns:

I was probably the best-known television director around. And I was approached to do some work for John Kennedy. And I don't know...I was 30 years old. I was going through a divorce [with wife Carolyn Miller], and I just didn't want to deal with it, so I said no.[181]

In light of Kennedy's assassination in November 1963, Frankenheimer lamented, "Then he was killed, and I'd always felt guilty about not having done that work for him early on."[181]

During his filming of The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Frankenheimer reports that he and producer/screenwriter George Axelrod were anxious that the Kennedy administration might object to the plot, which graphically depicts an assassination attempt on a liberal presidential candidate by a right-wing conspiracy. When cast member Frank Sinatra, a personal friend of Kennedy, was sent to sound out his reaction to the film, Kennedy (who had read the Richard Condon novel) responded enthusiastically: "I love The Manchurian Candidate. Who's going to play the mother?"[182][183]

“...There is no such thing as an unpolitical man. You have to take a stand in life. I was very impressed with and devoted to Senator Robert Kennedy. I believe in what he stood for...I arranged, supervised and directed all his television film appearances. I dedicated myself to that in full...his death was an irreplaceable loss...I think he represented everything that was good in this country. And there's been a terrible void since he was killed.” - John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley's The Cinema of John Frankenheimer (1969)[184]

When Frankenheimer began pre-production on his political thriller Seven Days in May (1964) in the summer of 1963, he approached Kennedy's press secretary, Pierre Salinger, to arrange to film a segment on location in vicinity of the White House. The story concerns a political coup organized by a fascistic Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (played by Burt Lancaster) to depose the liberal president (played by Fredric March) and install a military dictatorship. Kennedy approved the picture and accommodated Frankenheimer by withdrawing to his home in Hyannisport for the weekend during the White House shoot.[185][186]

As to whether Frankenheimer ever met Kennedy, the director offered contradictory versions. To biographer Gerald Pratley in 1968, Frankenheimer said, "I never had the pleasure of meeting [JFK] personally" but noted that Kennedy had fully supported the production of Seven Days in May. In 1998, during an interview with film critic Alex Simon, Frankenheimer recalled that Kennedy purportedly said to Salinger, "if it's John Frankenheimer [directing Seven Days in May] I want to meet him." Frankenheimer adds, “So I met him, went to a press conference with him. He was wonderful to me.”[187][188]

Frankenheimer regarded Kennedy's assassination as a profound calamity for America: “I think we lost our innocence as a country with John F. Kennedy's death.”[189]

Film critics Joanne Laurier and David Walsh observe that “The Kennedy assassination marked a historical turning point. One of its aims, in which it ultimately succeeded, was to shift US government policies to the right and intimidate political opposition.”[90]

Frankenheimer's most significant bond with the Kennedys was his political and personal relationship with Senator Robert F. Kennedy, to whom he quickly committed his services during the 1968 presidential campaign: “When [Robert Kennedy] declared his candidacy in '68, I immediately called [campaign manager] Pierre Salinger and said ‘Pierre, I want to be part of this.’"[190][191]

Frankenheimer reports that he filmed Robert Kennedy's campaign appearances and coached the senator on improving his political persona, providing this support for Kennedy over three months in the spring of 1968.[192]

Frankenheimer was devastated by RFK's assassination in June 1968, due in part to his proximity to the event. Kennedy spent the height before the California primary in Frankenheimer’s Malibu home. He had first been scheduled to accompany Kennedy through the Ambassador Hotel after the candidate's victory speech in the California primaries. Early news reports listed Frankenheimer as one of the wounded in Kennedy's entourage. Frankenheimer and spouse Evans Evans were waiting at a side entrance of the Ambassador Hotel to pick up Kennedy when he emerged from the press conference and drive him to their home. According to Frankenheimer, they witnessed police removing Sirhan Sirhan, later convicted of the shooting, from the premises, then discovered Kennedy had been mortally wounded.[193]

Traumatized by the event, Frankenheimer withdrew from politics, and after completing The Gypsy Moths (1969) moved to France to study the culinary arts. He recalled in 1998: “Yeah. I managed to finish one film, The Gypsy Moths, but I just felt like 'What's the point? What does any of this really matter?' I mean, when you're a part of something like that and then all of the sudden it's taken away with just one bullet [snaps fingers]. It really makes you take stock in what's important...That's when I went to France, and that's when I went to Le Cordon Bleu, because I just had to do something else with my life, and I really couldn't go near politics for a long time after that.”[194] Walsh comments:

Frankenheimer's social concerns largely disappeared from his work for the next two decades. He became identified more and more as an "action director" with competent and uninspired works such as French Connection II (1975) and Black Sunday (1977). The first is memorable principally for the strain of violence, indeed sadistic violence, which appears in Frankenheimer's work. This reached something of a height in the grisly and pointless 52 Pick-Up (1986) and endured in Frankenheimer's work through his final feature films, including Ronin (1998) and Reindeer Games (2000).[195]

Archive edit

The moving image collection of John Frankenheimer is held at the Academy Film Archive.[196]

Filmography edit

Film edit

Year Title Notes
1957 The Young Stranger
1961 The Young Savages
1962 All Fall Down Nominated- Palme d'Or
Birdman of Alcatraz Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Feature Film
The Manchurian Candidate Also producer
Nominated- Golden Globe Award for Best Director
Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Feature Film
1964 Seven Days in May Nominated- Golden Globe Award for Best Director
The Train Replaced Arthur Penn
1966 Seconds Nominated- Palme d'Or
Grand Prix Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Feature Film
1968 The Fixer
1969 The Extraordinary Seaman
The Gypsy Moths
1970 I Walk the Line
1971 The Horsemen
1973 The Iceman Cometh
Impossible Object
1974 99 and 44/100% Dead
1975 French Connection II
1977 Black Sunday
1979 Prophecy
1982 The Challenge
1985 The Holcroft Covenant
1986 52 Pick-Up
1989 Dead Bang
1990 The Fourth War
1991 Year of the Gun Nominated- Deauville Critics Award for Best Feature Film
1996 The Island of Dr. Moreau Replaced Richard Stanley
1998 Ronin
2000 Reindeer Games
2001 Ambush Short film

Television edit

TV series

Year Title Notes
1954 You Are There Episode: "The Plot Against King Solomon"
1954-55 Danger 6 episodes
1955-56 Climax! 26 episodes
1956-60 Playhouse 90 27 episodes
1958 Studio One in Hollywood Episode: "The Last Summer"
1959 DuPont Show of the Month Episode: "The Browning Vision"
Startime Episode: "The Turn of the Screw"
1959-60 NBC Sunday Showcase 2 episodes
1960 Buick-Electra Playhouse 3 episodes
1992 Tales from the Crypt Episode: "Maniac at Large"

TV movies

Year Title Notes
1956 The Ninth Day
1960 The Snows of Kilimanjaro
The Fifth Column
1982 The Rainmaker Nominated- CableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or Miniseries
1994 Against the Wall Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie
Nominated- CableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or Miniseries
Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Miniseries or TV Film
The Burning Season Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie
CableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or Miniseries
Nominated- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie
Nominated- CableACE Award for Best Movie or Miniseries
1996 Andersonville Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie
Nominated- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie
Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Miniseries or TV Film
1997 George Wallace Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie
CableACE Award for Best Miniseries
CableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or Miniseries
Nominated- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie
Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Miniseries or TV Film
2002 Path to War Nominated- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie
Nominated- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie
Nominated- DGA Award for Outstanding Directing – Miniseries or TV Film

Awards and nominations edit

British Academy Film Awards

  • 1964 Train nominated for Best Film - Any Source
  • 1962 Manchurian Candidate nominated for Best Film - Both Any Source and British

Cannes Film Festival

  • 1966 Seconds nominated for Competing Film
  • 1962 All Fall Down nominated for Competing Film

New York Film Critics Circle Award

  • 1968 Fixer nominated for Best Direction
  • 1968 Fixer nominated for Best Film

Venice Film Festival

  • 1962 Birdman of Alcatraz nominated for Competing Film
  • 1962 Birdman of Alcatraz won for San Giorgio Prize

Frankenheimer is also a member of the Television Hall of Fame, and was inducted in 2002.[197]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Barson, Michael. "John Frankenheimer – American director". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Yoram Allon, Yoram; Cullen, Hannah Patterson. Contemporary North American Film Directors, Wallflower Press (2000), pp. 181-83
  3. ^ a b "Hollywood director John Frankenheimer dies at 72". abc.net.au. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  4. ^ a b Pratley, 1968 p. 16
  5. ^ Moritz, Charles (1964). Current biography yearbook. H.W. Wilson Company. p. 135.
  6. ^ a b Thurber, Jon; King, Susan (July 7, 2002). "John Frankenheimer, 72; Director Was Master of the Political Thriller". Los Angeles Times.
  7. ^ Walsh, David. "Issues raised by the career of US filmmaker John Frankenheimer".
  8. ^ Bowie, 2006: "Frankenheimer felt overshadowed by a strong father..."
    Pratley, 1968 p. 17: Frankenheimer: "...I have a brother four years younger and a sister six years younger..."
  9. ^ Baxter, 2002: "...he had a fitness and determination that allowed him to contemplate a tennis career...he abandoned both tennis and his religion [i.e. Catholicism]."
  10. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 18. And p. 17: See brief comment on a father-son contretemps over Frankenheimer's pursuit of an acting career rather than tennis.
  11. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 18: Frankenheimer's coursework at American University included speech and TV producing, which the USAF accepted as "qualifications."
  12. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 18: Frankenheimer's remarks in quotations. And p. 21: Years in the Air Force, 1951-1953.
    Barson, 2021: "After making training films for the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War, Frankenheimer decided to become a director."
  13. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 18: Frankenheimer states repeatedly that "nobody cared [or could care less]" what he did. He took the equipment home on the weekends to "shoot all manner of stuff."
  14. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 19-20: FCC objection was the excessive commercial content, not sanitary issues related to cows.
    Baxter, 2002: "joined the US air force in the early 1950s. Put in charge of a film unit, he immersed himself in amateur movies, training documentaries and local television work [and read] classic texts on cinema theory and practice.
  15. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 21
  16. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 21-24: See here of Frankenheimer's efforts to secure directorial position.
    Walsh, 2002: "In 1953 he obtained a position with CBS television in New York as an assistant director and within 18 months of his discharge from the military he was co-directing a weekly dramatic series."
  17. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 24
  18. ^ Walsh, 2002: Anna Everett essay, "Golden Age" quoted here. See article http://www.americancentury.or ing/ag_tenthman.pdf
  19. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 25-26, p. 28.
  20. ^ Pratley, 1968 p. 29-30
  21. ^ Baxter, 2002: "It initiated a brilliant period of more than 100 productions, notably Playhouse 90 dramas..."
    Walsh, 2002: "Between 1954 and 1960 Frankenheimer directed 152 live television dramas, including 42 episodes of the Playhouse 90 series. He is considered one of the leading figures of American television's so-called "Golden Age."
    Barson, 2021: "one of the most important and creatively gifted directors of the 1950s and '60s."
  22. ^ "John Frankenheimer: A Master Craftsman". Rogerebert.com. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  23. ^ a b Bowie, 2006
  24. ^ a b c Walsh, 2002 WSWS
  25. ^ Baxter, 2002: "The experience was unhappy - Frankenheimer had grown used to controlling his technicians..."
  26. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 41-42: Pratley quoting Frankenheimer
  27. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 43: Re: "village blacksmith", Pratley quoting Frankenheimer. And p. 47-48: Prately notes his return to "ideas, events, places and themes" he addressed in The Young Stranger.
  28. ^ Gow, 1971 pp. 113-114. See also section 5: "Individuals or Misfits" pp 104--116
  29. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 44, p. 47: the director "disliked" the new title, Gow refers to its "cheaply made second feature" impression.
  30. ^ Stafford, 2005 TCM
  31. ^ Stafford, 2005 TCM: "Bell uncovers the true murderer while making an important decision involving his own career."
    Barson, 2021: "The Young Savages...an overheated but often potent courtroom drama that starred Burt Lancaster—in the first of five movies he made with the director..."
  32. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 45
  33. ^ a b Pratley, 1969 p. 48-49
  34. ^ Stafford, 2005 TCM
    Pratley, 1969 p. 48
  35. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 47-48
    Stafford, 2005 TCM: The film script "appealed to the liberal Democrat in Frankenheimer and Lancaster..."
    Baxter, 2002: "It launched a movie career that allowed the director, a liberal, who wrote and directed all of Robert F Kennedy's television appearances, to buck the system, and make several landmark social and political works."
  36. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 55
  37. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 80: Frankenheimer explains the chronology here.
    Stafford, 2003 TCM: "John Houseman and Frankenheimer eagerly agreed to do it in-between post-production on Birdman of Alcatraz and preparation for The Manchurian Candidate."
  38. ^ Baxter, 2002: "Birdman of Alcatraz was delayed when the first section had to be shortened and reshot, and, in the interim, Frankenheimer made the hothouse All Fall Down."
  39. ^ Higham, 1973 p. 294-295: "...a beautifully made film about adolescence…the boy reaches manhood by way of anguish…concerned with the theme of the outsider."
    Barson, 2021: All Fall Down "starred Warren Beatty as a callous womanizer whose adoring younger brother (Brandon deWilde) gradually comes to despise him."
  40. ^ Baxter, 2002: "Frankenheimer made the hothouse All Fall Down, with Warren Beatty as an archetypal, Frankenheimer anti-hero drifter."
  41. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS: " "All Fall Down is a fairly silly work...Warren Beatty plays the impossibly named Berry-Berry Willart, a ne'er-do-well son of a quarrelsome middle class Cleveland couple...His abuse of a family friend, Echo O'Brien (Eva Marie Saint), leads to her death and the disillusionment of Berry-Berry's younger brother."
  42. ^ Walsh, 2002. WSWS
  43. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 227
  44. ^ Baxter, 2002: Frankenheimer's “documentary style, produced an intense story of injustice and endurance.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 58: “This film is almost pure documentary.”
  45. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “...Stroud's transformation from a sullen misanthrope into a humane and thoughtful individual.”
    Stafford, 2003 TCM: Stroud's Stroud's“life-altering experience...establishing himself as one of the world's leading authorities on canaries.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 59-60: Frankenheimer offers a narrative in which Stroud's “character changes completely...becomes a slow, quiet, thoughtful man.”
  46. ^ Honan, William H. (September 16, 1999). "Charles Crichton, Film Director, Dies at 89". NY Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
  47. ^ Stafford, 2003 TCM: Remarks on Crichton dismissal.
  48. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 64-65, p. 66: “hired director”
  49. ^ Strafford, 2003 TCM: The rough cut “ran four and a half hours [requiring a] re-write of the script. ‘That's what we did. Then we went back and re-shot the whole first part of the movie.’” Stafford is quoting from a Charles Champlin interview with the director.
    Pratley, 1969 p. 66
  50. ^ Prately, 1969 p. 64: Frankenheimer recalls that the Bureau threatened to withhold any future cooperation with CBS if they sponsored the story. He also cites anticipated difficulties handling small birds in a live TV drama.
  51. ^ Stafford, 2003 TCM: Stafford or Frankenheimer may be confusing USBP interference regarding film vs. TV
  52. ^ Nixon, 2006 TCM: “...Frankenheimer became a major cinematic force with The Manchurian Candidate…its power and influence have not been diminished.”
    Barson, 2021 Britannica: “The Manchurian Candidate is arguably Frankenheimer's most-respected film.”
    Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “The Manchurian Candidate is a peculiar film, perhaps Frankenheimer's most important, but certainly not entirely coherent or convincing.”
  53. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 82 And p. 224: Frankenheimer: “...the film that people say is my best, The Manchurian Candidate...”
    Bowie, 2006: “The Manchurian Candidate (1962)...is an achievement so elephantine that it tends to dwarf the others in critical assessments of its director's work.”
  54. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 97: See Frankenheimer autobiographical remarks in Pratley.
  55. ^ Barson, 2021 Britannica: “A chilling adaption of the Richard Condon novel, it starred Frank Sinatra and Laurence Harvey as American soldiers who are brainwashed during the Korean War in a scheme to have a communist elected U.S. president.”
    Walsh, 2002 WSWS: brief film summary
    Pratley, 1969 p. 81-82: See Synopsis
  56. ^ Baxter, 2002: “greatest screen role…”
    Nixon, 2006 TCM: “Angela Lansbury's Oscar-nominated performance is usually what is remembered most about the film.”
    Barson, 2021. Britannica: “Angela Lansbury, who was nominated for best supporting actress.”
    Walsh, 2004 WSWS: “Angela Lansbury is riveting as the sleeper assassin's mother...”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 85: “Angela Lansbury is carried over from All Fall Down (1962), again a splendidly possessive mother…”
  57. ^ Nixon, 2006 TCM: “...a creative atmosphere that allowed Frank Sinatra to give what many feel is his best performance.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 87: “...both Frank Sinatra and Laurence Harvey give superlative, restrained performances…”
  58. ^ Prately, 1969 p. 97: Frankenheimer: “The Manchurian Candidate is the first film I really instigated and had complete control...” And p. 98: “...I had complete control…” over the production.
  59. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS: Sarris quoted by Walsh.
  60. ^ Bowie, 2006: “...documentary-styled mise en scène...”
    Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “...paranoia and delirium...”
    Baxter, 2002: The Manchurian Candidate “is dominated by Frankenheimer's technical fluency…”
  61. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 85-87: Frankenheimer's “continual visual inventiveness”
  62. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 85-87: “...the script contains no directions for the filming of the masterly ‘brainwashing’, an extremely complicated piece of filming which he devised.”And p. 87: More on shot sequence.
  63. ^ Bowie, 2006:
  64. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 98:
  65. ^ Bowie, 2002
  66. ^ Prately, 1969 p. 100-101
  67. ^ Nixon, 2006 TCM: “The nation's shameful anti-Communist era was essentially over, but its effects lingered, and the idea of presenting a McCarthy-type movement as a sinister Communist plot was outrageous.”
  68. ^ Walsh, 2004 WSWS: “Frankenheimer's The Manchurian Candidate appeared in cinemas in the US at an extraordinary moment, October 24, 1962, in the middle of the ‘Fourteen Days’ of the Cuban Missile Crisis (October 15–28), when the Cold War came as close as it ever did to becoming a nuclear catastrophe.”
    Nixon, 2006 TCM: “...both Frankenheimer and Sinatra were close friends of the Kennedy family...”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 81: Pratley reports that the film was released on 27 September 1962.
  69. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 82
    Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “one assumes Frankenheimer and Axelrod are making the ultimate liberal statement about ‘extremism.’”
  70. ^ Walsh, 2004 WSWS
  71. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 84: “The Manchurian Candidate provoked its share of rage and anguish...but the film was too great an achievement, both in artistic and commercial terms, to go down before it.”
    Nixon, 2006 TCM: “...a volatile and terrifying parable of American political life.”
    Baxter, 2002: “Box office receipts...were modest...the film went from ‘failure to cult classic without even being a success’”
  72. ^ Bowie, 2006: “It occupies a place in the popular memory as an eerie prediction of the Kennedy assassination a year later...”
  73. ^ a b Pratley, 1969 p. 98
  74. ^ Pratley, p. 108: Frankenheimer, quoted in Pratley
  75. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 109: Frankenheimer comments on this topic.
  76. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 103, p. 110-111
    Safford, 2007 TCM: The literary property was “purchased for the screen through the joint efforts of Frankenheimer and Kirk Douglas, who agreed to produce and star in the film...”
  77. ^ Safford, 2007 TCM: “political conspiracy thriller...based on the popular novel by Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II.”
  78. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 104
    Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “To a certain and important extent, the encounter between Lyman and Scott does concretize and concentrate artistically a pivotal social collision, an obligation of enduring drama.”
  79. ^ Higham, 1973 p. 295: In The Manchurian Candidate “the inspiration for the revolt lay in Russia; in Seven Days in May, the seeds of destruction are seen to lie in the American military system itself.”
  80. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 113
  81. ^ Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “Scott is generally taken to be a fictional version or composite of...Curtis LeMay, appointed by Kennedy to be Air Force Chief of Staff, and Edwin Walker…”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 108: “The war-like pronouncements of many American military men place this film right on the line between fantasy and fact; it would take only the slightest push to move it over into truth.”
    Higham, 1973 p. 295: “...expertly tackles a political theme...Once again Frankenheimer deals with an attempt to obtain supreme power by a fascist clique.”
    Safford, 2007 TCM: “...a chilling scenario of the dangers of misplaced power in the military-industrial complex... it remains a hot topic today.”
  82. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 108: “...it plausibly and intelligently projects a warning that this could happen in the near future, and we should be on our guard.”
  83. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 107-108
  84. ^ a b Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS
  85. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 107: “There are splendid performances from the entire cast...”
  86. ^ Higham, 1973 p. 295:
    Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “Douglas, Lancaster and March clearly threw themselves into the production. They are thoroughly believable as these human beings.”
  87. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 18, p. 114: Frankenheimer: “...it gave me a sense of satisfaction to make a picture about a place I worked as a mail boy.”
  88. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 114: Frankenheimer: “...I'm sure the Pentagon weren't happy when they heard we were going to make it…”
    Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “...Seven Days in May angered the Pentagon, the FBI and the extreme right.”
    Safford, 2007 TCM: “the filmmakers knew it was futile to ask any Pentagon officials if they could shoot any sequences at their headquarters.”
  89. ^ Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “A March 20, 1964 memo details communications between retired Admiral Arleigh Burke and Assistant Director William Sullivan of the FBI in regard to the film and its potential damage.
  90. ^ a b Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS:
  91. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 114: “President Kennedy indirectly...said he very much wanted the film made.”
  92. ^ Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “...theatrical release scheduled for December. That release was held up by the murder of Kennedy in Dallas on November 22. (The appearance of Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove in theaters was delayed for the same reason.)”
  93. ^ Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: The painful irony is that the real-life models for the fanatical right-wing elements in the military and intelligence apparatus fictionalized...in Frankenheimer's film were no doubt linked to the cabal that carried out the [Kennedy] assassination.”
  94. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS:
  95. ^ Safford, 2007 TCM: “When Seven Days in May opened theatrically, it fared well with critics and audiences alike…”
    Laurier and Walsh, 2020 WSWS: “Received warmly by both critics and audiences...On the whole, Seven Days in May stands up, 56 years later.”
    Higham, 1973 p. 295: “Frankenheimer's great virtues - his sense of realism, attack, pacing, and electrifying creative energy” were evident in Seven Days in May.
  96. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 123-125, p. 139: Composite quote.
  97. ^ Baxter, 2002: The film is “dominated by Lancaster's athleticism and Paul Scofield's steely performance as his German adversary.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 115-116
    Wood, 2004: “World War II action film tinged with a Cold War sensibility.”
  98. ^ p. 47 Penn, Arthur Arthur Penn: Interviews, University Press of Mississippi, 2008
    Pratley, 1969 p. 123: Frankenheimer: “...a conflict of personalities, a conflict over the type of film being made…”
    Barson, 2021: “Lancaster and Frankenheimer combined forces for the fourth time on The Train (1965)—although not by original design; Arthur Penn had begun the picture but was fired soon after filming began.”
    Wood, 2004 TCM: “Lancaster was concerned that Penn was neglecting the story's potential for action and suspense, and remedied the situation by calling in Frankenheimer.”
  99. ^ Prately, 1969 p. 123-125: See here for Frankenheimer's remarks.
    Smith, 2010. TCM: “At the behest of star Burt Lancaster, Frankenheimer replaced Arthur Penn as the director of The Train (1965)”
    Higham, 1973 p. 295: “The Train (1965), taken over from Arthur Penn, was a botch for which he cannot be held responsible.”
    Palen, 2010: See here for same Frankenheimer passages quoted in Pratley, 1969.
  100. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 140
  101. ^ Palen, 2010
    Wood, 2004 TCM: “Frankenheimer in turn discarded Penn's footage, brought in his own writers to overhaul the script, and ultimately delivered the WWII thriller Lancaster had hoped for.”
  102. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 125
  103. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 122: “The director has been criticized, of course, for his ironic comments about the values of art and of human life.” And p 125: Frankenheimer: “The point I wanted to make was that no work of art is worth a human life.”
  104. ^ Bowie, 2006:
    Abele, 2018: Abele quoting Guillermo del Toro “...the movie clearly states two points of view...Lancaster is pro-human. Scofield cares about art but has no hint of the humanity of that art...an artistic piece about how much art is worth in human lives.”
  105. ^ Palen, 2010: “John Frankenheimer's 1964 masterly moving painting The Train.. grounded in the grimy documentary-like detail of the neo-realist style the director admired.”
    Wood, 2004 TCM: “...a masterful achievement of heightened and prolonged suspense...one of the best action films of the 1960s.”
    Abele, 2018: Abele's article highlights Guillermo del Toro's fulsome praise for The Train as a superlative action film.
    Wood, 2004 TCM: “No miniatures were used in The Train...apparent when one views such sequences of carefully-orchestrated destruction that punctuate the film's tightly-wound narrative.”
    Bowie, 2006: “The terrifically entertaining The Train (1965) best represents this synthesis.”
  106. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 126
  107. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 120-121 And p. 119
  108. ^ Palen, 2010:
  109. ^ Georgaris, 2021 TSPDT: Georgaris quoting from The Film Encyclopedia, 2012
  110. ^ "The Train - IMDb". IMDb.
  111. ^ Balio 1987, p. 279.
  112. ^ Buford 2000, p. 240.
  113. ^ "Most Popular Film Star." The Times, December 31, 1965, p. 13 via The Times Digital Archive, September 16, 2013.
  114. ^ Wilshire, 2001
    Pratley, 1969 p. 135: “...a horrifying, shattering, screaming climax [as] he is taken away to become a cadaver for another second…” And p. 139: “...the horrific ending…”
  115. ^ Barson, 2021
  116. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 134
  117. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 141-142, p. 148: Composite quote, ellipses added for clarity.
  118. ^ a b c d Wilshire, 2001
  119. ^ Smith, 2010 TCM: “Frankenheimer preferred Laurence Olivier, whom he considered a natural for the dual role of Arthur Hamilton/Tony Wilson, but Paramount wanted a bigger name” for the youthful Wilson.
  120. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 135:
  121. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 143-144: Frankenheimer: “I don't think the [disparity in stature] was too noticeable.” And: “...the film was obscure and nobody ever understood why [Wilson] didn't make it.” And: “We did not successfully dramatize the second act” i.e. the Tony Wilson phase. See also Frankenheimer's remarks on deleted sequence about Wilson's encounter with a small girl.
  122. ^ Wilshire, 2001: Wilshire quoting Vincent LoBrotto “the screenplay...had a surreal quality, which suggested an extreme visual approach to Frankenheimer.”
  123. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 144: “9.5mm lens...” And p. 146: Arriflex methods. And p. 145 “...psychedelic...”
    Wilshire, 2001: “Most importantly, the theme of distortion is central to Seconds...The camera is used not only as a recording device, but also as an expressive tool.” And:“Howe was the ideal choice to visually realize Frankenheimer's ambitious and surreal vision in Seconds...”
  124. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 145: Frankenheimer: “I had splendid co-operation from Jame Wong Howe, who's a marvelous cameraman.” And p. 139: Pratley states “James Wong Howe's photography has never been better than in this picture...”
  125. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 133-134: “The French and European critics at Cannes gave Seconds such a hostile reception and denounced it so bitterly as being ‘cruel and inhuman’ that Frankenheimer refused to leave Monte Carlo...to attend the press conference...” And p. 146: “It was a disaster. Most critics hated it.” And: Frankenheimer: “Paramount lost all faith in the film...put no effort into selling it.”
    Baxter, 2002: “...Seconds was so badly received at the Cannes film festival that he boycotted the press conference.”
  126. ^ Barson, 2021: “Although a critical and commercial disappointment, Seconds later developed a cult following. “
    Smith, 2010 TCM: “Although it would eventually find its cult, Seconds was relegated to the Paramount vault and forgotten...”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 145: Frankenheimer: “We all know [cast and crew] that the film was a failure, but I think its an excellent case against [entering movies] in film festivals.”
  127. ^ Wilshire, 2001: “Seconds failed miserably at the box-office in 1966.”
  128. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 134: Pratley declares that Seconds will one day be “described as a masterpiece.”
  129. ^ Baxter, 2001
  130. ^ Higham, 1973 p. 295
  131. ^ Baxter, 1970 p. 175: Hamilton-Wilson “rejects [the] oiled efficiency [of his surgery] and goes, albeit unwillingly, to death rather than deny his true self.”
  132. ^ Thurber and King, 2002: “...in 1964, Frankenheimer seemed firmly entrenched as a top director in Hollywood. A year later he made his first color film, the car-racing saga Grand Prix.”
  133. ^ Axmaker, 2010 TCM: “Grand Prix (1966), a sprawling drama of race car drivers shot on locations across Europe with a glamorous international cast.”
  134. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 151; “...it communicates the director's enthusiasm for the subject…” And: Frankenheimer: “[I’ve] driven a race car and driven one fairly well…”
    Goodman, 2003 TCM: “Grand Prix is Frankenheimer's first color film...Shot in 70mm Cinerama.” And: Frankenheimer: "...one of the most satisfactory films I've made.” And: “Having been an amateur racer himself, Frankenheimer is intensely passionate about the subject...”
  135. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 150 and pp.151-153: “...his first original screenplay since The Young Stranger…” And: “...his most expensive production…”
  136. ^ Goodman, 2003 TCM: “As could be expected, a tight race ensues with plenty of thrills, chills, and spills, before a final victor emerges from the big event.”
  137. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 151-152 And p. 154-155: Frankenheimer: “I want to show what racing was really like and every incident in the film is based on truth.” And: “I used to do racing as an amateur…”
    Goodman, 2003 TCM: “Frankenheimer and cinematographer Lionel Lindon used specially constructed cameras mounted on the racing cars…creative use of split-screen…” And: “Having been an amateur racer himself, Frankenheimer is intensely passionate about the subject...”
  138. ^ Goodman, 2003 TCM: “To achieve the level of realism that Frankenheimer wanted, there were no "process shots" used in the film. All scenes used real cars with mounted cameras...cinematographer Lionel Lindon used specially constructed cameras mounted on the racing cars, which put us on the track with the drivers.”
  139. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 159: Frankenheimer: “There was not a single process shot in the entire film.”
  140. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 156-158: See Frankenheimer narrative re: Francis Thompson's To Be Alive! (1964), and World Series televised baseball.
    Goodman, 2003 TCM: “...Frankenheimer used the wide space to his advantage with a creative use of split-screen…By combining the ‘on-track’ footage with helicopter shots of the cars in a split-screen action sequence, he combats the monotony of racing cars merely driving around in circles.”
  141. ^ Goodman, 2003 TCM: “For the spectacular crashes, special effects man Milton Rice created a hydrogen cannon, which functioned as a giant pea-shooter. A car could be attached to a shaft on the cannon, and then ‘shot’ out like a projectile at speeds in excess of 125 miles an hour.”
  142. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 161
  143. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 156
  144. ^ Walsh, 2002. WSWS: “Grand Prix, a story of race-car drivers, is largely a technical exercise, whose dramatic narrative seems accidental...”
    Barson, 2021: “...The racing sequences were entertaining, but the rest of the film was largely dull.”
  145. ^ Georgaris, 2021 TSPDT: “...Frankenheimer seemed to be losing his edge by brandishing style for its own sake.” - The Film Encyclopedia, 2012
  146. ^ Walsh, 2002. WSWS: “Sarris suggested that the director's style had ‘degenerated into an all-embracing academicism, a veritable glossary of film techniques.’”
  147. ^ Goodman, 2003 TCM: “..earning three Oscars for Best Sound Effects (by Gordon Daniel), Best Editing, and Best Sound.”
    Baxter, 2002 “...returning to France [he made] his commercially successful, biggest budget, and first colour movie, Grand Prix (1966).
    Pratley, 1969 p. 149: See here for credits
  148. ^ Axmaker, 2010 TCM: “...Though he'd shown darkly satire edges in The Manchurian Candidate (1962) and Seconds (1966), he was known as a director of serious dramas with social concerns.” And: “...more farce than satire...a light comedy.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 165-166: Pratley distinguished The Extraordinary Seaman from Frankenheimer's “big pictures” (e.g. Grand Prix and The Train)
  149. ^ Axmaker, 2010 TCM: “It's a wartime comedy of a misfit unit and a Captain of questionable pedigree, a military farce, a slapstick romance and a crazy ghost story all in one strange package...incompetence of the characters on screen.”
  150. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 163-164: See Synopsis for detailed sketch.
    Axmaker, 2010 TCM: “..the fourth feature for rising star Faye Dunaway, who was fresh off [director Arthur Penn's] Bonnie and Clyde (1967).”
  151. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 165-166: “...spoofing war…While [the characters] are not exactly endearing, they are treated and shown with sympathy and dignity.” And p. 172: Frankenheimer on the use of newreel clips and combat footage used for satire.
  152. ^ Charles Champlin; John Frankenheimer; Directors Guild of America (May 1995). John Frankenheimer: a conversation. Riverwood Press. pp. 103. ISBN 9781880756096.
  153. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 172
  154. ^ AFI: “The story is broken into segments, each titled to match five of U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill's six installments of his World War II memoirs.”
  155. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 169 “thematic relationship” And p. 171-173: Frankenheimer: Co-screenwriter Hal Dresner “is very much against the war in Vietnam (which I am too)...”
  156. ^ Axmaker, 2010 TCM
  157. ^ Barson, 2021: “The Extraordinary Seaman was released in 1969, after having sat on the shelf for two years. It was Frankenheimer's first comedy and one of his most poorly received films...”
    Axmaker, 2010 TCM: “More likely, MGM was scared off after a string of dismal screenings for exhibitors and critics, where the response was tepid at best. MGM held up the film for two years, and then gave it a nominal release before it disappeared except for infrequent television showings.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 172
  158. ^ AFI: “...the picture contains at least ten minutes of newsreel footage...the release date had been delayed while filmmakers underwent the process of matching the material to the rest of the color Panavision footage.”
  159. ^ AFI: “Despite the high profile of director John Frankenheimer and the popularity of Faye Dunaway following her star turn in Bonnie and Clyde (1967), The Extraordinary Seaman was poorly received by critics and not distributed for a large scale release.” And: “Var box-office reports indicated scattered local openings” across the US.
  160. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 186: See Frankenheimer's comments here. Malamud forwarded the manuscript to Frankenheimer for his consideration.
  161. ^ Pratley, 1969 pp. 177-179: See Synopsis.
  162. ^ "The 41st Academy Awards | 1969". Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved February 7, 2018.
  163. ^ Ebert, 1968: “...played with great sensitivity by Alan Bates…”
    Adler, 1968 NYT: “The acting, from Alan Bates...through Dirk Bogarde as the cerebral, sympathetically homosexual prosecutor, and David Warner as an effete, pragmatic Count, is very fine.”
  164. ^ Toole, 2003 TCM: Bates plays “a Russian Jew falsely accused of murder [and] remarkably, his only Oscar nomination.”
  165. ^ a b Adler, 1968 NYT
  166. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 230: Frankenheimer's comments, composite quote, minor edits for brevity, clarity.
  167. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 187-188: Composite quote from these pages, edited for brevity and clarity, meaning is unchanged.
  168. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 183: “...feel better about…” And p. 233: Frankenheimer: “I happen to love The Fixer. I don't know how other people will react to it, but to me it is my best work.” And p. 228: “In The Fixer there is hardly a single scene that does not please me…” And p. 225: Frankenheimer: “...the only film I never made compromises on…”
    Adler, 1968 NYT: “Bernard Malamud, who won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for "The Fixer" in 1967…”
    Baxter, 2002: “...despite intense performances from Bates and Dirk Bogarde, the film was patchily received. Frankenheimer, who thought it his best work
  169. ^ a b Ebert, 1968
  170. ^ Adler, 1968
  171. ^ Higham, 1973 p. 297
  172. ^ a b Harmetz, Aljean (April 10, 1977). "Frankenheimer Rides a Blimp To a Big, Fat Comeback". The New York Times.
  173. ^ Armstrong, Stephen B., ed. (2013). John Frankenheimer: Interviews, Essays, and Profiles. The Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 168.
  174. ^ Broeske, Pat H. (November 25, 1985). "The Curious Evolution of John Rambo: How He Hacked His Way Through the Jungles of Hollywood". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles. p. AB32.
  175. ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
  176. ^ O'Sullivan, Kevin (June 23, 1996). "Kilmer Gets the Knife; He's Voted Least Popular by a Bunch of H'wood Big Shots". NYDailyNews.com. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  177. ^ Ascher-Walsh, Rebecca (May 31, 1996). . Entertainment Weekly. New York City: Meredith Corporation. Archived from the original on December 1, 2008. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  178. ^ Simon, 2008: Frankenheimer: “My dad was Jewish and my mother was Irish-Catholic, which was never an issue because my father was never a practicing Jew. He's the one who drove us to (Catholic) Sunday school. I went to a Catholic military academy for high school. I had wanted to be a priest.”
    Thurber and King, 2002: “Frankenheimer was born the son of a Jewish stockbroker, and was raised Catholic by his Irish American mother...At one time he wanted to be a priest...”
  179. ^ Simon, 2002
  180. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “Possessed of a liberal sensibility and shaped by the Cold War era, Frankenheimer was an artistic eclectic...”
  181. ^ a b c Simon, 2008
  182. ^ Simon, 2008: Frankenheimer quoting JFK, presumably based on Sinatra's report. See here for Sinatra's role as go-between. And: Frankenheimer: JFK “loved the movie…”
  183. ^ IMDb: See here for info on wife Carolyn Miller, with whom Frankenhimer had two children.
    Pratley, 1969 p. 114: Frankenheimer's comments to Pratley appear to conflate President Kennedy's reaction to Manchurian Candidate (1962) with his assistance in the production of Seven Days in May (released in 1964). Contradicts Frankenheimer's remarks in Simon interview, 2008.
  184. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 220, pp. 221-222: Frankenheimer
  185. ^ Simon, 2008
    Pratley, 1969 p. 114
  186. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “President John Kennedy helped persuade a Hollywood studio to finance the film, according to one account, and offered White House locations for shooting. Frankenheimer's next project centered on a plot by the head of the US military's Joint Chiefs of Staff to organize a coup and overthrow the elected president.”
  187. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 114
  188. ^ Simon, 2008
    Pratley, 1969 p. 139-140: Frankenheimer: “When I returned from Europe, I had change a great deal...I saw my own country from a different perspective, from a very tragic perspective we were in Europe during the assassination of the President and we were able to judge foreign reaction to us and our behavior...I saw myself from a different perspective too.”
  189. ^ Simon, 2008
    Pratley, 1969 p. 221: Frankenheimer: “The deaths of the Kennedys [John and Robert] were probably the most horrible events to happen to American since [President Abraham] Lincoln's assassination.” And p. 139-140: Frankenheimer: “...I saw my own country from a different perspective, from a very tragic perspective [when] we were in Europe during the assassination of the President and we were able to judge foreign reaction to us and our behavior...I saw myself from a different perspective too.”
  190. ^ Pratley, 1969 p. 217: “I was very active politically with Senator Kennedy…” And p. 221: “I think he represented everything that was good in this country…”
  191. ^ Simon, 2008: See here for Frankenheimer quote
  192. ^ Simon, 2008: “ I was there with [RFK] for 102 days” before his assassination in June 1968. Frankenheimer reportedly used his cinematic talent to counter the Kennedy's reputation as “arrogant and cold.”
    Thurber and King, 2002: “Always politically liberal, Frankenheimer spent part of 1968 working on Kennedy's presidential campaign, acting as director of campaign spots.”
  193. ^ Simon, 2008
    Walsh, 2002 WSWS: “He identified strongly with the liberal wing of the Democratic Party and suffered with its collapse. This is literally so: on the final day of Senator Robert Kennedy's life in 1968, he was staying at Frankenheimer's house and the director drove him to the Ambassador Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, the site of his assassination.”
    Pratley, 1969 p. 221: Frankenheimber: ... there was no doubt that Robert Kennedy was going to be President...Now [1968] we are on the brink of chaos in this country. We were on our way out of it with President [John] Kennedy...I see no way out now...With Richard Nixon [as US president] God knows what will happen. We could all be dead before this book comes out…”
  194. ^ Simon, 2008: Frankenheimer: “there was this tremendous involvement with Robert Kennedy. We were very, very close friends and I did all the film and television for his campaign. He stayed with me and I drove him to the Ambassador Hotel the night he was shot. All his clothes were in my house...and I really had a nervous breakdown after that.”
    Thurber and King, 2002 NYT: “He spent several years in France, where he studied cooking at the Le Cordon Bleu, emerging as a gourmet chef.”
  195. ^ Walsh, 2002 WSWS:
    Barson, 2021: “Personal problems—exacerbated by the assassination in 1968 of his close friend Robert F. Kennedy, whom Frankenheimer had driven to the hotel where he was killed—began to take their toll, and Frankenheimer counted few real successes over the next several years.”
    Thurber and King, 2002: “But despite his early success, Frankenheimer's career went into sharp decline in the 1970s and ‘80s, when he made a series of films that were both critical and commercial failures.
  196. ^ "John Frankenheimer Collection". Academy Film Archive. September 5, 2014. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  197. ^ "Television Hall of Fame Honorees: Complete List". emmys.com. Retrieved May 7, 2017.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Mitchell, Lisa, Thiede, Karl, and Champlin, Charles (1995). John Frankenheimer: A Conversation with Charles Champlin (Riverwood Press); ISBN 978-1-880756-09-6.
  • Armstrong, Stephen B. (2008). Pictures About Extremes: The Films of John Frankenheimer (McFarland); ISBN 0-7864-3145-8.

External links edit

  • John Frankenheimer at IMDb
  • OpsRoom.org
  • John Frankenheimer, Senses of Cinema, Issue 41 "Great Directors Series"
  • John Frankenheimer at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television
  • Literature on John Frankenheimer
  • John Frankenheimer: The Hollywood Interview

john, frankenheimer, john, michael, frankenheimer, february, 1930, july, 2002, american, film, television, director, known, social, dramas, action, suspense, films, among, credits, were, birdman, alcatraz, 1962, manchurian, candidate, 1962, seven, days, 1964, . John Michael Frankenheimer February 19 1930 July 6 2002 1 was an American film and television director known for social dramas and action suspense films Among his credits were Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 The Manchurian Candidate 1962 Seven Days in May 1964 The Train 1964 Seconds 1966 Grand Prix 1966 French Connection II 1975 Black Sunday 1977 The Island of Dr Moreau 1996 and Ronin 1998 John FrankenheimerBornJohn Michael Frankenheimer 1930 02 19 February 19 1930Queens New York City U S DiedJuly 6 2002 2002 07 06 aged 72 Los Angeles CaliforniaAlma materWilliams CollegeOccupationFilm directorYears active1948 2002SpousesJoanne Frankenheimer divorced Carolyn Miller m 1954 div 1962 wbr Evans Evans m 1963 wbr Children2He won four Emmy Awards three consecutive in the 1990s for directing the television movies Against the Wall The Burning Season Andersonville and George Wallace the last of which also received a Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Television Film Frankenheimer s 30 feature films and over 50 plays for television were notable for their influence on contemporary thought He became a pioneer of the modern day political thriller having begun his career at the height of the Cold War 2 He was technically highly accomplished from his days in live television many of his films were noted for creating psychological dilemmas for his male protagonists along with having a strong sense of environment 2 similar in style to films by director Sidney Lumet for whom he had earlier worked as assistant director He developed a tremendous propensity for exploring political situations which would ensnare his characters 2 Movie critic Leonard Maltin writes that in his time 1960s Frankenheimer worked with the top writers producers and actors in a series of films that dealt with issues that were just on top of the moment things that were facing us all 3 Contents 1 Childhood and schooling 1 1 Air Force Film Squadron 1951 1953 2 Television s Golden Age 1953 1960 3 Film career 3 1 The Young Stranger 1957 3 2 The Young Savages 1961 3 3 All Fall Down 1962 3 4 Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 3 5 The Manchurian Candidate 1962 3 6 Seven Days in May 1964 3 7 The Train 1964 3 8 Seconds 1966 3 9 Grand Prix 1966 3 10 The Extraordinary Seaman 1969 3 11 The Fixer 1968 3 12 1970s 3 13 1980s 3 14 1990s 3 15 Last years and death 4 Politics 4 1 Political relationships with the Kennedys 5 Archive 6 Filmography 6 1 Film 6 2 Television 7 Awards and nominations 8 Footnotes 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksChildhood and schooling editI was always a very introverted child and as far back as seven years old I recall finding great escape in films in all seriousness I have always been terribly interested in films and it was not something that happened to me later in life I look back and realize it was the medium I liked most John Frankenheimer quoted in The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1968 4 Frankenheimer was born in Queens New York City the son of Helen Mary nee Sheedy and Walter Martin Frankenheimer a stockbroker 3 5 His father was of German Jewish descent his mother was Irish Catholic and Frankenheimer was raised in his mother s religion 6 7 As a youth Frankenheimer the eldest of three siblings struggled to assert himself with his domineering father 8 Growing up in New York City he became fascinated with cinema at an early age and recalls avidly attending movies every weekend Frankenheimer reports that in 1938 at the age of age of seven or eight he attended a 25 episode 7 1 2 hour marathon of The Lone Ranger accompanied by his aunt 4 In 1947 he graduated from La Salle Military Academy in Oakdale Long Island New York and in 1951 he earned a baccalaureate in English from Williams College in Williamstown Massachusetts As captain of the tennis team at Williams Frankenheimer briefly considered a professional career in tennis but reconsidered 9 I gave that up when I really started acting at eighteen or nineteen because there wasn t any time to do both my interest was more toward acting in those days and an actor is what I wanted to be I did act at college and summer stock for a year But I was really not a very good actor I was quite shy and quite stiff 10 Air Force Film Squadron 1951 1953 edit After graduating Williams College Frankenheimer was drafted into the Air Force and assigned to the Reserve Officers Training Corps ROTC serving in the Pentagon mailroom at Washington D C He quickly applied for and was transferred without any formal qualifications 11 to an Air Force film squadron in Burbank California It was there that Lieutenant Frankenheimer really started to think seriously about directing 12 Frankenheimer recollects his early apprenticeship with the Air Force photography unit as one of almost unlimited freedom As a junior officer Frankenheimer superiors couldn t have cared less what he did in terms of utilizing the filmmaking equipment Frankenheimer reports that he was free to set up the lighting operate the camera and perform the editing on projects he personally conceived His first film was a documentary about an asphalt manufacturing plant in Sherman Oaks California 13 Lieutenant Frankenheimer recalls moonlighting at 40 a week as writer producer and cameraman making television infomercials for a local cattle breeder in Northridge California in which livestock were presented on the interior stage sets The FCC terminated the programming after 15 weeks In addition to mastering the basic elements of filmmaking Frankenheimer began reading widely on film technique including the writings of Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein 14 Frankenheimer was discharged from the military in 1953 15 Television s Golden Age 1953 1960 edit nbsp Frankenheimer at Columbia Broadcasting Studios CBS 1952During his years in military service Frankenheimer strenuously sought a film career in Southern California Failing this at age 23 he returned to New York upon his military discharge to seek work in the emerging television industry His earnestness impressed Columbia Broadcasting System CBS television executives landing him a job in the summer of 1953 to serve as a director of photography on The Garry Moore Show 16 Frankenheimer recalls his apprenticeship at CBS When I stop and look back on The Garry Moore Show I was particularly well suited for that job what you would do is prepare a shot for the director He would tell you what he wanted and you would get it from the cameraman You d also be responsible for the timing of the show But I think well I know I was born with a good eye for the camera and so the job really was playing right into what I would call my own strength 17 Television scripts of the 1950s exploring problems at the societal level were systematically ignored i e racial discrimination structural poverty and other social ills Instead critics complain too many golden age dramas were little more than simplistic morality tales focusing on the everyday problems and conflicts of weak individuals confronted by personal shortcomings such as alcoholism greed impotence and divorce for example I t is important to note that the golden age coincided with the Cold War era and McCarthyism and that cold war references such as avoiding communism and loving America were frequently incorporated in teleplays of the mid to late 1950s Anna Everett in Golden Age Museum of Broadcast Communications 18 Frankenheimer was picked up as assistant to director Sidney Lumet s for CBS s historical dramatization series You Are There and further on Charles Russell s Danger and Edward R Murrow s Person to Person In late 1954 Frankenheimer replaced Lumet as director on You Are There and Danger under a 5 year contract with a studio standard option to terminate a director with a two week notice Frankenheimer s directorial debut was The Plot Against King Solomon 1954 a critical success 19 Throughout the 1950s he directed over 140 episodes of shows like Playhouse 90 and Climax under the auspices of CBS executive Hubbell Robinson and producer Martin Manulis 20 These included outstanding adaptations of works by Shakespeare Eugene O Neill F Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway and Arthur Miller Leading actors and actresses from stage and film starred in these live productions among them Ingrid Bergman John Gielgud Mickey Rooney Geraldine Page and Jack Lemmon Frankenheimer is widely considered a preeminent figure in the so called Golden Age of Television 21 22 Film historian Stephen Bowie offers this appraisal of Frankenheimer s legacy from the Golden Age of television Along with Sidney Lumet John Frankenheimer was the major director to emerge from and be influenced by the aesthetics of live television drama which flourished briefly in the US Frankenheimer s later fame and his oft repeated nostalgia for live television have designated him as the quintessential exponent of the form this is a crucial misconception The aesthetics of live television were defined by their temporal and spatial limitations all that could be shown was what could be physically created within an hour or half hour and photographed within the confines of a small space emphasizing cramped blue collar settings kitchen drama because these were the most easily staged for live broadcast though perfectly suited to this world of emotional intimacy and physical claustrophobia Frankenheimer reacted instinctively against it He sought material and visual strategies that expanded the boundaries of what could be done in live television As the live TV director who took the medium in an explicitly cinematic direction Frankenheimer was actually the least typical 23 Film career editFrankenheimer s earliest films addressed contemporary issues such as juvenile delinquency criminality and the social environment and are represented by The Young Stranger 1957 The Young Savages 1961 and All Fall Down 1962 24 The Young Stranger 1957 edit Frankenheimer s first foray into filmmaking occurred while he was still under contract to CBS television The head of CBS in California William Dozier became the CEO of RKO movie studios Frankenheimer was assigned to direct a film version of his television Climax production entitled Deal a Blow written by William Dozier s son Robert The 1956 movie version The Young Stranger stars James MacArthur as the rebellious teenage son of a powerful Hollywood movie producer James Daly Frankenheimer recalled that he found his first film experience unsatisfactory 25 I have a very high regard for my television crews because I hand pick them on The Young Stranger I was given a crew and I thought they were terrible and treated me very badly It made me very bitter about the whole experience I felt very confined constricted and a bad director There were so many things I thought I could have done but didn t do As a result of this experience I was fed up with films and went back to television 26 Frankenheimer adds that in the late 1950s television was transitioning from live productions to taped shows a live television director was like being a village blacksmith after the advent of the automobile I knew I had to get out In 1961 Frankenheimer abandoned television and returned to filmmaking after a four year hiatus continuing his examination of the social themes that informed his 1957 The Young Stranger 27 Film historian Gordon Gow distinguishes Frankenheimer s handling of themes addressing individualism and misfits during the Fifties obsession with disaffected teenagers There was an especially true feeling to the problem of the 16 year old boy who became The Young Stranger This film in 1957 at the height of the problem teen vogue sounded a quiet note of contrast In part its genuine quality might be put down to the fact both director and writer were in their mid twenties much nearer to the age of their central character James MacArthur about twenty himself at the time but looking younger What made it especially distinctive amid the general sensationalism was the triviality of the boy s misdemeanor a minor bit of roughhouse in a neighborhood cinema The difference between The Young Stranger which attained a happy ending plausibly and the general run of delinquent problem movies was its moderation 28 The Young Savages 1961 edit Frankenheimer s second cinematic effort is based on novelist Evan Hunter s A Matter of Conviction 1959 United Artists publicity executives changed the box office title to the vaguely lurid The Young Savages to which Frankenheimer objected 29 The story involves the attempted political exploitation of a brazen murder involving Puerto Rican and Italian youth gangs set in New York City s Spanish Harlem 30 District Attorney Dan Cole Edward Andrews who is seeking the state governorship sends assistant D A Hank Bell Burt Lancaster to gather evidence to secure a conviction Bell who grew up in the tenement district has escaped from his impoverished origins to achieve social and economic success He initially adopts a cynical hostility towards the youths he investigates which serves his own career aims The narrative explores the human and legal complexities of the case and Bell s struggle to confront his personal and social prejudices and commitments 31 The film s arresting opening sequence depicting a killing which is key to the plot reveals Frankenheimer s origins in television The action brilliantly filmed and edited occurs preliminary to the credits and is accompanied by an impelling soundtrack by composer David Amram serving to quickly rivet audience interest 32 The Young Savages though focusing on juvenile delinquency is cinematically a significant advance over Frankenheimer s similarly themed first film effort The Young Stranger 1957 33 Film historian Gerald Pratley attributes this to Frankenheimer s insistence on hand picking his leading technical support for the project including set designer Bert Smidt cinematographer Lionel Lindon and scenarist JP Miller 34 Pratley observed The Young Savages is far more alive and real than The Young Stranger the youths might well be some of those we met in the first film but now further along their delinquent ways The acting throughout is authoritative with vivid portrayals by the Italian and Puerto Rican players the entire film is photographically alive with a strong visual sense which was to characterize all of Frankenheimer s future work 33 Though contrived and familiar in its social concerns Frankenheimer and leading man Burt Lancaster both Liberals in their political outlook dramatize the poverty violence and despair of city life with a restraint such that the events and characters seem consistently believable 35 Frankenheimer recalled I shot The Young Savages mainly to show people that I could make a movie and while it was not completely successful my point was proved The film was made on a relatively cheap budget and shooting on location in New York for a Hollywood company is very expensive Those were the days before Mayor Lindsay when you had to pay off every other cop on the beat 36 All Fall Down 1962 edit The coming of age film All Fall Down was both filmed and released while Frankenheimer s Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 was in post production and his The Manchurian Candidate 1962 was in pre production 37 38 The picture was scripted by William Inge who also wrote Splendor in the Grass 1961 and concerns character Berry Berry Warren Beatty an emotionally irresponsible hustler and his adoring younger brother Clinton Brandon deWilde to whom Berry Berry appears as a romantic Byronesque figure The older brother s cruel treatment of Echo O Brien Eva Marie Saint his lover who becomes pregnant disabuses the naive Clinton of Berry Berry s perfection His anguished insight permits Clinton to achieve emotional maturity and independence 39 40 41 Film critic David Walsh comments All Fall Down is vaguely moralistic and conformist and the scenes of the Beatty character s comeuppance contrived in the extreme All Fall Down is saved by the portrayals of Eva Marie Saint quiet and gracious as the unfortunate Echo and Angela Lansbury extravagant and outlandish as Berry Berry s mother within whom incestuous fires appear to blaze Critics have noted that Annabell Willart Lansbury was the first of three desperately controlling mothers in Frankenheimer s films of 1962 the other two played by Thelma Ritter in Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 and Lansbury again in The Manchurian Candidate 1961 In all three films the father is either weak or absent 42 Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 edit I can t really think of a scene in Birdman of Alcatraz I liked I like the total effect of the film but I don t think there was any scene that stands out for me as being extraordinary in any way John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 43 Based on a biography by Thomas E Gaddis Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 is a documentary like dramatization of the life of Robert Stroud sentenced to life imprisonment in solitary confinement for killing a prison guard 44 While serving his sentence Stroud Burt Lancaster becomes a respected expert in avian diseases though the study of canaries Frankenheimer traces Stroud s emergence from his anti social misanthropy towards a humane maturity despite the brutal conditions of his incarceration 45 In 1962 the production and filming of Birdman of Alcatraz was already underway when United Artists enlisted Frankenheimer to replace British director Charles Crichton 46 47 As such key production decisions had already been made and Frankenheimer regarded himself as a hired director with little direct control over the production 48 Producer Harold Hecht and screenwriter Guy Trosper insisted on an exhaustive adaption of the Gaddis biography The filmed rough cut that emerged was over four hours in length When simply editing the work was ruled out as impracticable the script was rewritten and the film largely re shot producing a final cut of 2 hours 49 According to Frankenheimer he had an option in the 1950s to make a television adaption of the Stroud story but CBS was warned off by the Federal Bureau of Prisons and the project was dropped 50 51 The Manchurian Candidate 1962 edit Frankenheimer s 1962 political thriller The Manchurian Candidate is widely regarded as his most remarkable cinematic work 52 Biographer Gerald Prately observes that the impact of this film was enormous With it John Frankenheimer became a force to be reckoned with in contemporary cinema it established him as the most artistic realistic and vital filmmaker at work in America or elsewhere 53 Frankenheimer and producer George Axelrod bought Richard Condon s 1959 novel after it had already been turned down by many Hollywood studios After Frank Sinatra committed to the film they secured backing from United Artists 54 The plot centers on Korean War veteran Raymond Shaw part of a prominent political family Shaw is brainwashed by Chinese and Russian captors after his Army platoon are imprisoned He returns to civilian life in the United States where he becomes an unwitting sleeper assassin in an international communist conspiracy to subvert and overthrow the U S government 55 The film co starred Laurence Harvey as Sergeant Raymond Shaw Janet Leigh James Gregory and John McGiver Angela Lansbury as the mother and controller to her sleeper assassin son garnered an Academy Award nomination for a riveting performance in the greatest screen role of her career 56 Frank Sinatra as Major Bennett Marco who reverses Shaw s mind control mechanisms and exposes the conspiracy delivers perhaps his most satisfactory film performance 57 Frankenheimer declared that both technically and conceptually he had complete control over the production 58 The technical fluency exhibited in The Manchurian Candidate reveals Frankenheimer s struggle to convey this Cold War narrative Film historian Andrew Sarris remarked that the director was obviously sweating over his technique instead of building sequences Frankenheimer explodes them prematurely preventing his films from coming together coherently 59 The Manchurian Candidate nonetheless conveys the paranoia and delirium of the Cold War years 60 through its documentary style mise en scene A demonstration of Frankenheimer s bravura direction and visual inventiveness appears in the notable brainwashing sequence presenting the sinister proceedings from the perspective of both the perpetrator and victim 61 62 The complexity of the sequence and its antecedents in television are described by film critic Stephen Bowie The famous brainwashing sequence in which Frankenheimer moves seamlessly between an objective perspective captured soldiers in a communist seminar and a subjective one the soldiers attending an innocuous meeting of the Ladies Garden Society This tour de force was a pure distillation of Frankenheimer s television technique opening with a self conscious 360 degree pan that utilised the wild sets which allowed TV cameras to move into seemingly impossible positions 63 In 1968 Frankenheimer acknowledged that the methods he used on television were the same kind of style I used on The Manchurian Candidate It was the first time I had the assurance and self confidence to go back to what I had been really good at in television 64 Compositionally Frankenheimer concentrates his actors into long lens menage in which dramatic interactions occur at close up mid shot and long shot a configuration that he repeated obsessively Film critic Stepen Bowie observes that this style meant that Frankenheimer s early output became a cinema of exactitude rather than spontaneity 65 More and more I think that our society is being manipulated and controlled the most important aspect is that in 1962 this country was just recovering from the McCarthy era and nothing had ever been filmed about it I wanted to do a picture that showed how ludicrous the whole McCarthy far Right syndrome was and how dangerous the far Left syndrome is The Manchurian Candidate dealt with the McCarthy era the whole idea of fanaticism the far Right and the far Left being really the same thing and the idiocy of it I wanted to show that and I think we did John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 66 The Manchurian Candidate was released in the post Red Scare period of the early 1960s when anti Communist political ideology still prevailed 67 Just one month after the film s release the John F Kennedy administration was in the midst of Cuban Missile Crisis and nuclear brinkmanship with the Soviet Union 68 That Frankenheimer and screenwriter Axelrod persisted in the production is a measure of their political liberalism in a historical period when according to biographer Gerald Pratley it was clearly dangerous to speak of politics in the out spoken satiric vein that characterized this picture 69 Film critic David Walsh adds that the level of conviction and urgency that informs The Manchurian Candidate reflects the relative confidence and optimism American liberals felt in the early 1960s 70 Frankenheimer s terrifying parable of the American political milieu was sufficiently well received to avoid its summary rejection by distributors 71 The Manchurian Candidate due its subject matter and its proximity to the Kennedy assassination is inextricably linked to that event 72 Frankenheimer acknowledged as much when in 1968 he described The Manchurian Candidate as a horribly prophetic film It s frightening what s happened in our country since that film was made 73 After completing The Manchurian Candidate Frankenheimer recalls that he was determined to continue filmmaking I wanted to initiate the project I wanted to have full control I never wanted to go back to be hired as a director again 74 He was offered a contract to direct a biopic about French singer Edith Piaf with Natalie Wood in the starring role He emphatically rejected the offer when he learned that Piaf s songs would be sung in English rather than in the original French 75 In 1963 Frankenheimer and screenwriter George Axelrod were introduced to the producer Edward Lewis considering a TV production concerning the American Civil Liberties Union When the project was deemed too expensive for television Frankenheimer was approached by an associate of Lewis actor and producer Kirk Douglas to purchase and adapt to film the novel Seven Days in May by Fletcher Knebel and Charles W Bailey II 76 Seven Days in May 1964 edit Television screens glimpsed throughout Seven Days in May are one of the most recognisable Frankenheimer trademarks Frankenheimer became the first filmmaker to acknowledge television s roles in modern society as an intrusion upon privacy and as a tool by which the powerful manipulate others Film critic Stephen Bowie in John Frankenheimer Senses of Cinema 2006 23 Seven Days in May 1964 based closely on Fletcher Knebel and Charles W Bailey II s best selling novel and a screenplay by Rod Serling dramatizes an attempted military coup d etat in the United States set in 1974 77 The perpetrators are led by General James M Scott Burt Lancaster chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff JCS a virulently anti Communist authoritarian When US President Jordan Lyman Fredric March negotiates a nuclear disarmament treaty with the Soviet Union an act that Scott considers treasonable Scott mobilizes his military cabal Operating at a remote base in West Texas they prepare to commandeer the nation s communication networks and seize control of Congress When Scott s JCS aide Colonel Martin Jiggs Casey Kirk Douglas discovers the planned coup he is appalled and convinces President Lyman as to the gravity of the threat Lyman mobilizes his own governmental loyalists and a clash over Constitutional principles between Lyman and Scott plays out in the Oval Office with the President denouncing the General as a traitor to the US Constitution When Scott is exposed publicly his military supporters abandon him and the conspiracy collapses 78 Frankenheimer points to the topical continuity of his political thrillers 79 Seven Days in May was as important to me as The Manchurian Candidate I felt that the voice of the military was much too strong the General MacArthur syndrome was very much in evidence Seven Days in May was the opportunity to illustrate what a tremendous force the military industrial complex is we did not ask the Pentagon for co operation because we knew we wouldn t get it 80 The character of General Scott has been identified by film historians as a composite of two leading military and political figures Curtis LeMay and Edwin Walker 81 The film places great emphasis on the sanctity of US Constitutional norms as a bulwark against encroachments by anti democratic elements in the United States 82 Biographer Gerald Pratley writes An aspect to admire is Frankenheimer s use of speeches given by President Lyman Scoffed by some critics as reflecting respectable liberal lines they are delivered by March with complete naturalism at times where they are logically called for and with great honesty and conviction They restate familiar Constitutional principles Frankenheimer handles them pointedly but never in a propagandistic way 83 Film critic Joanne Laurier adds that screenwriter Rod Serling and Frankenheimer s major theme is the need for the military to be subordinated to elected civilian rule As visual emphasis the opening credits of Seven Days in May roll over an image of the original 1787 draft of the Constitution of the United States 84 Seven Days in May has been widely praised for the high caliber of the performances by the cast 85 Biographer Charles Higham writes that the film is played with extraordinary skill proving that Frankenheimer s intensity communicated itself successfully to his actors 86 Frankenheimer a former Air Force officer who worked briefly in the Pentagon 87 anticipated hostility from the military establishment to the premise of Seven Days in May 88 Indeed internal memos circulated in the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI registering alarm that Seven Days in May could potentially damage the bureau s reputation 89 Film critics Joanne Laurier and David Walsh report that The military and FBI took a very definite note of Seven Days in May revealing their intense sensitivity to such criticism A memo uncovered in Ronald Reagan s FBI file reveals that the bureau was concerned the film would be used as Communist propaganda and was therefore harmful to our Armed Forces and Nation 90 President Kennedy personally expressed approval for the film adaption and his Press Secretary Pierre Salinger permitted Frankenheimer to view the Oval Office so as to sketch its interior 91 84 Seven Days in May filmed in the summer of 1963 was scheduled for release in December that year but was delayed due to the assassination of President John F Kennedy in November The release of director Stanley Kubrick s satire Dr Strangelove 1964 was similarly postponed 92 Frankenheimer recognized the prophetic aspects of his The Manchurian Candidate 1962 a film that examines conspiratorial political assassinations 73 The historical context in which Seven Days in May appeared inevitably links it to the 1963 Kennedy assassination 93 Film critic David Walsh makes the connection explicit By the time Seven Days in May reached movie theaters Kennedy had been assassinated in an operation widely believed to have been organized by those with CIA or military connections 94 Seven Days in May was well received by critics and movie goers 95 The Train 1964 edit In early 1964 Frankenheimer was reluctant to embark upon another film project due to fatigue The Train is a film I had no intention of ever doing and was not a subject that I cared that much about I d just finished Seven Days in May 1964 I was quite tired 96 Adapted from the novel Le Front de l Art Le front de l art Defense des collections francaises 1939 1945 by Rose Valland the documentary styled picture examines the desperate struggle by the French Resistance to intercept a train loaded with priceless art treasures and sabotage it before Wehrmacht officers could escape with it to Nazi Germany The film dramatizes a contest of wills between French railway inspector Labiche Burt Lancaster and German art connoisseur Colonel von Waldheim Paul Scofield tasked with seizing the art work 97 Shooting for The Train had commenced in France when filmmaker Arthur Penn originally enlisted to direct the adaption was dismissed by actor producer Lancaster allegedly over personal incompatibility and irreconcilable interpretive differences 98 Frankenheimer who had successfully directed Lancaster on three previous films consented to replace Penn but with grave reservations considering the screenplay almost appalling and noting that the damn train didn t leave the station until p 140 99 Frankenheimer postponed production of Seconds 1966 to accommodate Lancaster s production 100 Filming for The Train was temporarily shut down and the existing footage discarded Frankenheimer in collaboration with screenwriters Nedrick Young uncredited Franklin Coen Frank Davis and Walter Bernstein framed an entirely new script that combined suspense intrigue and action reflecting Lancaster s prerequisites 101 The point I wanted to make in The Train was that no work of art is worth a human life That s what the film is about I feel that very deeply But to say that the film is a statement of a theme like that is really being unfair to the film the lives of people what they do and how they think feel and behave is in itself important Honesty and reality are reflected in people s attitudes without individuals having to perform great deeds or being great heroes or villains proclaiming great messages about life The Train is this kind of movie John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 102 Frankenheimer inserts an ethical question into the narrative Is it justified to sacrifice a human life to save a work of art His controversial answer was emphatically no 103 Film critic Stephen Bowie observes Frankenheimer s thesis that human life has more value than art may seem simplistic but it adds an essential moral component to what would otherwise be just an expensive live action version of an electric train set 104 The Train is lauded for its documentary like realism and Frankenheimer s masterful integration of the human narrative with its tour de force action scenes 105 Smashing up trains was easy to do It s every boy s childhood fantasy There isn t a child who ever owned an electric train who didn t want to do a wreck with it putting a car across the track and sending an engine into it Well of course we did just that John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 106 Biographer Gerald Pratley offers this appraisal of Frankenheimer s handling of the complex series of train sequences discerning the influence of Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein Frankenheimer s expert sense of narrative carries the events along with ever mounting drama and excitement and at times overwhelming tragedy as men are shot and killed he can wreck trains and stage air raids and yet he sustains his characters on a high level of interest Frankenheimer s insistence on using natural backgrounds gives a tremendous feeling of reality to the film The stark dramatic outlines of the camouflaged armored locomotive emerging from the sheds is worthy of Eisenstien the chase into the tunnel showing the locomotive stopping inches from the opening and the engineer pulling on the whistle chain is masterly 107 Film critic Tim Palen elaborates on Frankenheimer s technical expertise in The Train The director makes excellent use of wide angle lenses long tracking shots and extreme close ups whilst maintaining depth of field deliberately ensures that elaborate camera movement and cutting was planned so that logistically you knew where each train was in relation to the action 108 The Train exemplifies the centrality of technical applications that began to characterize Frankenheimer s approach to film in the late 1960s brandishing style for its own sake 109 The Train s original screenplay received an Academy Award nomination 110 111 It had cost 6 7 million 112 and was one of the 13 most popular films in the UK in 1965 113 Seconds 1966 edit Seconds presents a surreal and disturbing tale of a disillusioned corporate executive Arthur Hamilton John Randolph In an effort to escape his empty existence he submits to a traumatic surgical procedure that transforms his body into that of a younger man Tony Wilson Rock Hudson Randolph s effort to erase his former self in a new persona proves futile and leads to his horrific demise 114 115 Biographer Gerald Pratley describes Seconds as a cold grey frightening picture of a dehumanized world based on the age old search for eternal youth an amalgam of mystery horror and science fiction 116 Based on a novel by David Ely and a screenplay by Lewis John Carlino Frankenheimer explained his thematic objectives An individual is what he is and he has to live with his life He cannot change anything and all of today s literature and films about escapism are just rubbish because you cannot and should not ever escape from what you are Your experience is what makes you the person that you are That s really what the film is about It s also about this nonsense in society that you must always be young this accent on youth in advertising I wanted to make a matter of fact yet horrifying portrait of big business that will do anything for anybody providing you are willing to pay for it and the belief that all you need to do in life is to be financially successful 117 118 Frankenheimer acknowledged his difficulty in casting for the elderly and demoralized Arthur Hamilton which required the director to convincingly show his metamorphosis both surgically and physiologically into the youthful and artistic Tony Wilson A dual role played by a single actor was considered with Frankenheimer advocating for British actor Laurence Olivier Paramount rejected this in favor of two players in which one actor Randolph undergoes a radical transformation to emerge with the appearance and identity of the other Hudson Rock Hudson s portrayal of Wilson introduced a troubling plausibility issue that Frankenheimer fully recognized We knew we were going to have a terrible time getting audiences to believe that the man who went into the operating room Randolph could emerge as Rock Hudson citing the physical disparity between the actors as problematic 119 118 Film historian Gerald Pratley concurs the weakness in Seconds is trying to convince audiences that the actor playing Hamilton could emerge after plastic surgery as Wilson in the form of Rock Hudson This is where the star system has worked against Frankeheimer 120 Frankenheimer identified the source of the film s weakness less on the physical disparities in his actors and more on his difficulties conveying the themes required to explain Wilson s inability to adjust socially to his new life We thought we had shown why Wilson failed but after the film was finished I realized we had not 121 118 Frankenheimer s technical prowess is on display in Seconds where the director and his cameraman James Wong Howe experimented with various lenses including the 9 5 mm fisheye lens to achieve the distortion and exaggeration that would dramatize Hamilton s struggle to break free of his emotional straightjacket 122 Howe and Frankenheimer s use of visual distortions are central to revealing his character s hallucinatory mental states and according to Frankenheimer almost psychedelic In one scene a total of four Arriflexes are brought to bear to emphasis Hamilton s sexual impotency with his estranged wife 123 Film historian Peter Wilshire considers Frankenheimer s choice of James Wong Howe as cameraman for the project was his most important directional decision Howe was nominated at the Academy Awards in Best Cinematography for his efforts 124 At Frankenheimer s urging Paramount executives agreed to enter Seconds at the 1966 Cannes Film Festival hoping the film might confer prestige on the studio and enhance box office returns On the contrary Seconds was savaged by European critics at the film competition regarding it as misanthropic and cruel Frankenheimer recalled it was a disaster and declined to attend the festival s post preview press conference In the aftermath of this fiasco Paramount withdraw promotional resources and Seconds failed at the box office 125 As consolation for its critical and commercial failures Seconds was ultimately rewarded with a cult following among cineastes 126 127 Critical appraisal of the film has varied widely Gerald Pratley in 1968 declares that Seconds despite its poor reception in 1966 will one day be recognized as a masterpiece 128 Film critic Peter Wilshire offers qualified praise In spite of its obvious weaknesses Seconds is an extremely complex innovative and ambitious film 118 Brian Baxter disparages Seconds as embarrassing unconvincing even as science fiction 129 and critic David Walsh considers Seconds particularly wrongheaded strained and foolish 24 Biographer Charles Higham writes Seconds superbly shot by James Wong Howe fails to achieve the political portrait of the California rich which would have made it a triumph The important central passages at Malibu have all the softness of a dream come true By conspiring with his own target Frankenheimer shows that corruption has crept up on him Not even a powerful climax the hero preferring death in New York to life in Malibu returning to be killed in a horrifying operating room scene alters the fact that the film has been compromised 130 131 Grand Prix 1966 edit nbsp Frankenheimer on the set of Grand PrixBy the mid sixties Frankenheimer had emerged as one of Hollywood s leading directors 132 As such M G M provided lavish financing for Grand Prix 1966 Frankenheimer s first color film and shot in 70mm Cinerama 133 A former amateur race car driver himself he approached the project with genuine enthusiasm 134 The screenplay by Robert Alan Aurthur and an uncredited Frankenheimer concerns the professional and personal fortunes of Formula One racer Pete Aron James Garner during an entire season of competitive racing The action climaxes at Monza where Aron Scott Stoddard Brian Bedford Jean Pierre Sarti Yves Montand and Nino Barlini Antonio Sabato Sr compete for the championship with tragic results 135 136 Wishing to craft a highly realistic rendering of racing and its milieu he assembled a panoply of innovative film techniques with ingenious apparatus and special effects 137 Working closely with cinematographer Lionel Lindon Frankenheimer mounted cameras directly onto the race cars eliminating process shots and providing audiences with a driver s eye view of the action 138 139 Frankenheimer incorporated split screens to juxtapose documentary like interviews of the racers with high speed action shots on the track 140 Frankenheimer explains his use of the hydrogen cannon 141 The special effects the accidents were very hard to do I had an excellent special effects man Milton Rice who devised a hydrogen cannon which worked on the principle of a pea shooter The car was attached to a shaft and when the hydrogen exploded the car was literally propelled through the air like a projectile at about 125 to 135 miles an hour and you could aim it anywhere you wanted it to go And all the wrecks were done that way They were real cars No models at all Everything was very real And that s why it was good 142 I m not saying its my best film But it is certainly one of the most satisfactory film I ve made to be able to indulge your fantasies with ten and a half million dollars is I think marvelous John Frankenheimer on Grand Prix in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 143 Characterized largely by Frankenheimer s bravura application of his striking cinematic style Grand Prix has been termed largely a technical exercise by film critic David Walsh and brandishing style for its own sake according to The Film Encyclopedia 144 145 Film historian Andrew Sarris observed that Frankenheimer s style had degenerated into an all embracing academicism a veritable glossary of film techniques 146 A commercial success Grand Prix garnered three Oscars at the Academy Awards for Best Sound Effects by Gordon Daniel Best Editing Henry Berman Stu Linder and Frank Santillo and for Best Sound Recording Franklin Milton and Roy Charman 147 The Extraordinary Seaman 1969 edit Frankenheimer s first foray into light comedy represents a major departure from his often dystopian and dramatic work addressing social issues and his big budget action films 148 The Extraordinary Seaman presents a menagerie of misfit characters set in the final days of World War II in the Pacific theatre British Lt Commander Finchhaven R N David Niven a ghost is condemned to a Flying Dutchman like existence roaming the seas in his ship Curmudgeon in search of redemption for his shameful ineptitude during a World War I combat mission During World War II the Curmudgeon is chartered then beached on a remote Pacific Island by party goers Four castaway American sailors stumble upon the unseaworthy vessel Lt Morton Krim Alan Alda Cook 3 C W W J Oglethorpe Mickey Rooney Gunner s Mate Orville Toole Jack Carter and Seaman 1 C Lightfoot Star Manu Tupou Jennifer Winslow Faye Dunaway the proprietor of a jungle garage provides supplies to repair the derelict Curmudgeon for passage off the island Commander Finchaven enlists the largely incompetent crew to seek out and sink a Japanese battleship and thus vindicate his family honor The 79 minute picture depicts the crew s subsequent hazards and misadventures 149 150 The Extraordinary Seaman based on a screenplay and story by Phillip Rock is a spoof of war time conventions and cliches which integrates newsreel clips from the period for comic effect 151 152 I don t think you can make an anti war film by killing a lot of people and by showing how horrible war is in the last five minutes after you ve had two hours of fun with machine guns and bombs I mean one of the most atrocious war films ever made is The Green Berets 1968 I m against violence like this I think it s totally wrong that at the end of it they try to justify all this violence by some pretentious statement I will not make a film like that I don t believe in it John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 153 Frankenheimer engages in a mock heroic burlesque titling the film s episodes Grand Alliance The Gathering Storm Their Finest Hour The Hinge of Fate and Triumph and Tragedy borrowed from Winston Churchill s post war memoirs 154 Filmed during the Vietnam War film historian Gerald Pratley discerns a strong thematic relationship between Frankenheimer s opposition to US invasion of Indo China and The Extraordinary Seaman Frankenheimer recalls that he and screenwriter Phillip Rock decided we could really use this premise of a ghostly naval officer to make an anti war statement I think we did and it terrified MGM 155 156 Metro Goldwyn Mayer delayed the release of the film for two years reportedly due its poor response among critics and dismal screenings though Frankenheimer attributes the delay to legalities obtaining release of historic newsreel footage 157 158 The studio made only perfunctory efforts to promote and exhibit the film after The Extraordinary Seaman s poor critical reviews and weak box office response 159 The Fixer 1968 edit Frankenheimer approached his film adaption of Bernard Malamud s The Fixer with alacrity obtaining the galleys for the 1966 novel in advance of its publication 160 The Fixer is based on the 1913 persecution and trial of the Jewish peasant Menahem Mendel Beilis accused of Blood Libel during the reign of Czar Nicholas II 161 162 The Fixer was widely praised by movie critics for Frankenheimer s success in eliciting outstanding performances from Alan Bates as the brutalized Yakov Shepsovitch Bok Dirk Bogarde as Boris Bibikov his humane court appointed defense attorney and David Warner as Count Odoevsky Minister of Justice 163 Bates received his only Academy Award nomination for Best Actor in this role 164 Renata Adler of the New York Times observed the direction by John Frankenheimer is powerful and discreet It averts its eyes at the easy ugly consummations of violence and gives you credit for imagining the result 165 This despite Frankenheimer s admission that there is a very violent scene in The Fixer You have to show what this man Bok went through in five years of prison and what his captors did to him The executives at Metro were worried about this one scene They said with the climate of today it is dangerous to show this I said it has to be in there This is the scene where the Russians come and beat him for refusing to be converted to Christianity it is not a scene of violence just put there for its own sake I hope the audience feels this I don t believe in violence for the sake of exploitation 166 The Fixer investigates the fact that the victory Yakov Bok won was being brought to trial the Minister of Justice Count Odoevsky offers Bok a pardon And Bok says no That I think is probably the best scene in the film The Fixer is about the dignity of a human being who never knew he had this strength in him and suddenly finds it within him Bok is not a literary man He s a peasant and you see this great strength developed within him That s what the film is about It has nothing to do with the fact that he is a Jew It could be any man any time anywhere I think this is a very good story to tell John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 167 Whereas Frankenheimer was deeply gratified with his cinematic handling of Malamud s Pulitzer Prize winning work declaring I feel better about The Fixer than anything I ve ever done in my life 168 a number of movie critics registered severe critiques Film critic Roger Ebert wrote Frankenheimer s task was to make a film that in itself would make a moral statement He has failed The film has little reality of its own instead it draws its power and emotion from the raw material of its subject matter The temptation is to praise the film because we agree with its message This is the same critical fallacy that led to praise of Judgment at Nuremberg 1961 a corrupt commercial film because we disapproved of Nazi war crimes A movie doesn t become good simply by taking the correct ideological position 169 Ebert adds What were needed were fewer self conscious humanistic speeches Frankenheimer should have shown us his hero s suffering and the Kafkaesque legal tortures of the state without commenting on them 169 Film critic Renata Adler singles out screenwriter and blacklist victim Dalton Trumbo for disparagement The triviality of the script by Dalton Trumbo the old sentimental Hollywood formula a few moments of mild happiness an hour and a half of reversals and misery with violins a blitz happy ending with drums applies almost intact to dog stories horse stories sports stories love stories 165 Adler concludes it is not enough to put Bok Bates in a few cliche predicaments the dialogue becomes demeaning and vulgar when drawn out with hack plot fiction approximations of eloquence 170 Biographer Charles Higham dismisses the film writing that since the commercial failure of Seconds 1966 Frankenheimer s films have been mediocre ranging from The Fixer 1968 to The Horsemen 1971 171 Frankenheimer became a close friend of Senator Robert F Kennedy during the making of The Manchurian Candidate in 1962 In 1968 Kennedy asked Frankenheimer to make some commercials for use in the presidential campaign at which he hoped to become the Democratic candidate On the night he was assassinated in June 1968 it was Frankenheimer who had driven Kennedy from Los Angeles Airport to the Ambassador Hotel for his acceptance speech 6 172 The Gypsy Moths was a romantic drama about a troupe of barnstorming skydivers and their impact on a small midwestern town The celebration of Americana starred Frankenheimer regular Lancaster reuniting him with From Here to Eternity co star Deborah Kerr and it also featured Gene Hackman The film failed to find an audience but Frankenheimer claimed it was one of his favorites 173 1970s edit Frankenheimer followed this with I Walk the Line in 1970 The film starring Gregory Peck and Tuesday Weld about a Tennessee sheriff who falls in love with a moonshiner s daughter was set to songs by Johnny Cash Frankenheimer s next project took him to Afghanistan The Horseman focused on the relationship between a father and son played by Jack Palance and Omar Sharif Sharif s character an expert horseman played the Afghan national sport of buzkashi Impossible Object also known as Story of a Love Story suffered distribution difficulties and was not widely released Next came a four hour film of O Neill s The Iceman Cometh in 1973 starring Lee Marvin and the decidedly offbeat 99 and 44 100 Dead a crime black comedy starring Richard Harris With his fluent French and knowledge of French culture Frankenheimer was asked to direct French Connection II set entirely in Marseille With Hackman reprising his role as New York cop Popeye Doyle the film was a success and got Frankenheimer his next job Black Sunday based on author Thomas Harris s only non Hannibal Lecter novel involves an Israeli Mossad agent Robert Shaw chasing a pro Palestinian terrorist Marthe Keller and a PTSD afflicted Vietnam vet Bruce Dern who plan a spectacular mass murder involving the Goodyear Blimp which flies over the Super Bowl It was shot on location at the actual Super Bowl X in January 1976 in Miami with the use of a real Goodyear Blimp 172 The film tested very highly and Paramount and Frankenheimer had high expectations for it but it was not a hit with Paramount blaming the failure on the special effects work in the climax and Universal Studios releasing the similarly themed thriller Two Minute Warning only six months prior In 1977 Carter DeHaven hired Frankenheimer to direct William Sackheim and Michael Kozoll s screenplay for First Blood After considering Michael Douglas Powers Boothe and Nick Nolte for the role of John Rambo Frankenheimer cast Brad Davis He also cast George C Scott as Colonel Trautman However the production was abandoned after Orion Pictures acquired its distributor Filmways and Sackheim and Kozoll s script would be rewritten by Sylvester Stallone as the basis for Ted Kotcheff s 1982 film 174 175 Frankenheimer is quoted in Champlin s biography as saying that his alcohol problem caused him to do work that was below his own standards on Prophecy 1979 an ecological monster movie about a mutant grizzly bear terrorizing a forest in Maine 1980s edit In 1981 Frankenheimer travelled to Japan to shoot the cult martial arts action film The Challenge with Scott Glenn and Japanese actor Toshiro Mifune He told Champlin that his drinking became so severe while shooting in Japan that he actually drank on set which he had never done before and as a result he entered rehab on returning to America The film was released in 1982 along with his HBO television adaptation of the acclaimed play The Rainmaker In 1985 Frankenheimer directed an adaptation of the Robert Ludlum bestseller The Holcroft Covenant starring Michael Caine That was followed the next year with another adaptation 52 Pick Up from the novel by Elmore Leonard Dead Bang 1989 followed Don Johnson as he infiltrated a group of white supremacists In 1990 he returned to the Cold War political thriller genre with The Fourth War with Roy Scheider with whom Frankenheimer had worked previously on 52 Pick Up as a loose cannon Army colonel drawn into a dangerous personal war with a Soviet officer It was not a commercial success 1990s edit nbsp Frankenheimer on the set of the television film Andersonville in 1994Most of his 1980s films were less than successful both critically and financially but Frankenheimer was able to make a comeback in the 1990s by returning to his roots in television He directed two films for HBO in 1994 Against the Wall and The Burning Season that won him several awards and renewed acclaim The director also helmed two films for Turner Network Television Andersonville 1996 and George Wallace 1997 that were highly praised Frankenheimer s 1996 film The Island of Doctor Moreau which he took over after the firing of original director Richard Stanley was the cause of countless stories of production woes and personality clashes and received scathing reviews Frankenheimer was said to be unable to stand Val Kilmer the young co star of the film and whose disruption had reportedly led to the removal of Stanley half a week into production 176 177 When Kilmer s last scene was completed Frankenheimer reportedly said Now get that bastard off my set He also stated There are two things I will never ever do in my whole life I will never climb Mt Everest and I will never work with Val Kilmer ever again The veteran director also professed that Will Rogers never met Val Kilmer In an interview Frankenheimer refused to discuss the film saying only that he had a miserable time making it However his next film 1998 s Ronin starring Robert De Niro was a return to form featuring Frankenheimer s now trademark elaborate car chases woven into a labyrinthine espionage plot Co starring an international cast including Jean Reno and Jonathan Pryce it was a critical and box office success As the 1990s drew to a close he even had a rare acting role appearing in a cameo as a U S general in The General s Daughter 1999 He earlier had an uncredited cameo as a TV director in his 1977 film Black Sunday Last years and death edit Frankenheimer s last theatrical film 2000 s Reindeer Games starring Ben Affleck underperformed In 2001 he worked on the BMW action short film Ambush for the promotional series The Hire starring Clive Owen Frankenheimer s final film Path to War 2002 for HBO was nominated for numerous awards A look back at the Vietnam War it starred Michael Gambon as President Lyndon Johnson along with Alec Baldwin and Donald Sutherland Frankenheimer was scheduled to direct Exorcist The Beginning but it was announced before filming started that he was withdrawing citing health concerns Paul Schrader replaced him About a month later he died suddenly in Los Angeles California from a stroke due to complications following spinal surgery at the age of 72 Politics editFrankenheimer was born into a politically conservative family and attended a Catholic military academy He served as a junior officer in the US Air Force during the Korean War In his youth he briefly considered entering the priesthood 178 He came of age during the height of the Red Scare and the Anti Communist House Un American Activities Committee investigations during the early 1950s a period that saw the blacklisting of left wing filmmakers and screenwriters by the Hollywood studios Frankenheimer s early liberal political sensibilities first manifested themselves in disputes with his conservative father a stockbroker When I was in high school I started disagreeing a lot with my father on politics because he was really very conservative He really wanted the status quo and I didn t want the status quo The whole racial question really really bothered me I came from New York and one of my first girlfriends was an African American dancer And this caused a furor of sorts within my family 179 Frankenheimer s liberal sensibility emerged professionally when he began his apprenticeship in the early TV industry 180 When I got into live television in 1952 there was the whole business of McCarthy you can t imagine how terrible that was That really galvanized me into a political arena And of course in live television it was very hard to do political stuff because there was the blacklist You could do anything psychological but nothing sociological 181 Film critic David Walsh notes that any medium which emerged as the profit driven property of large American corporations and under the close scrutiny of the US authorities in the midst of the Cold War with its anticommunism conformism and generally stagnant intellectual climate would inevitably be deformed by those processes Frankenheimer worked and apparently thrived within this overall artistic and ideological framework 24 Political relationships with the Kennedys edit In a 1998 interview with film critic Alex Simon Frankenheimer recalled that his first contact with Kennedy family politics occurred during the 1960 presidential campaigns I was probably the best known television director around And I was approached to do some work for John Kennedy And I don t know I was 30 years old I was going through a divorce with wife Carolyn Miller and I just didn t want to deal with it so I said no 181 In light of Kennedy s assassination in November 1963 Frankenheimer lamented Then he was killed and I d always felt guilty about not having done that work for him early on 181 During his filming of The Manchurian Candidate 1962 Frankenheimer reports that he and producer screenwriter George Axelrod were anxious that the Kennedy administration might object to the plot which graphically depicts an assassination attempt on a liberal presidential candidate by a right wing conspiracy When cast member Frank Sinatra a personal friend of Kennedy was sent to sound out his reaction to the film Kennedy who had read the Richard Condon novel responded enthusiastically I love The Manchurian Candidate Who s going to play the mother 182 183 There is no such thing as an unpolitical man You have to take a stand in life I was very impressed with and devoted to Senator Robert Kennedy I believe in what he stood for I arranged supervised and directed all his television film appearances I dedicated myself to that in full his death was an irreplaceable loss I think he represented everything that was good in this country And there s been a terrible void since he was killed John Frankenheimer in Gerald Pratley s The Cinema of John Frankenheimer 1969 184 When Frankenheimer began pre production on his political thriller Seven Days in May 1964 in the summer of 1963 he approached Kennedy s press secretary Pierre Salinger to arrange to film a segment on location in vicinity of the White House The story concerns a political coup organized by a fascistic Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff played by Burt Lancaster to depose the liberal president played by Fredric March and install a military dictatorship Kennedy approved the picture and accommodated Frankenheimer by withdrawing to his home in Hyannisport for the weekend during the White House shoot 185 186 As to whether Frankenheimer ever met Kennedy the director offered contradictory versions To biographer Gerald Pratley in 1968 Frankenheimer said I never had the pleasure of meeting JFK personally but noted that Kennedy had fully supported the production of Seven Days in May In 1998 during an interview with film critic Alex Simon Frankenheimer recalled that Kennedy purportedly said to Salinger if it s John Frankenheimer directing Seven Days in May I want to meet him Frankenheimer adds So I met him went to a press conference with him He was wonderful to me 187 188 Frankenheimer regarded Kennedy s assassination as a profound calamity for America I think we lost our innocence as a country with John F Kennedy s death 189 Film critics Joanne Laurier and David Walsh observe that The Kennedy assassination marked a historical turning point One of its aims in which it ultimately succeeded was to shift US government policies to the right and intimidate political opposition 90 Frankenheimer s most significant bond with the Kennedys was his political and personal relationship with Senator Robert F Kennedy to whom he quickly committed his services during the 1968 presidential campaign When Robert Kennedy declared his candidacy in 68 I immediately called campaign manager Pierre Salinger and said Pierre I want to be part of this 190 191 Frankenheimer reports that he filmed Robert Kennedy s campaign appearances and coached the senator on improving his political persona providing this support for Kennedy over three months in the spring of 1968 192 Frankenheimer was devastated by RFK s assassination in June 1968 due in part to his proximity to the event Kennedy spent the height before the California primary in Frankenheimer s Malibu home He had first been scheduled to accompany Kennedy through the Ambassador Hotel after the candidate s victory speech in the California primaries Early news reports listed Frankenheimer as one of the wounded in Kennedy s entourage Frankenheimer and spouse Evans Evans were waiting at a side entrance of the Ambassador Hotel to pick up Kennedy when he emerged from the press conference and drive him to their home According to Frankenheimer they witnessed police removing Sirhan Sirhan later convicted of the shooting from the premises then discovered Kennedy had been mortally wounded 193 Traumatized by the event Frankenheimer withdrew from politics and after completing The Gypsy Moths 1969 moved to France to study the culinary arts He recalled in 1998 Yeah I managed to finish one film The Gypsy Moths but I just felt like What s the point What does any of this really matter I mean when you re a part of something like that and then all of the sudden it s taken away with just one bullet snaps fingers It really makes you take stock in what s important That s when I went to France and that s when I went to Le Cordon Bleu because I just had to do something else with my life and I really couldn t go near politics for a long time after that 194 Walsh comments Frankenheimer s social concerns largely disappeared from his work for the next two decades He became identified more and more as an action director with competent and uninspired works such as French Connection II 1975 and Black Sunday 1977 The first is memorable principally for the strain of violence indeed sadistic violence which appears in Frankenheimer s work This reached something of a height in the grisly and pointless 52 Pick Up 1986 and endured in Frankenheimer s work through his final feature films including Ronin 1998 and Reindeer Games 2000 195 Archive editThe moving image collection of John Frankenheimer is held at the Academy Film Archive 196 Filmography editFilm edit Year Title Notes1957 The Young Stranger1961 The Young Savages1962 All Fall Down Nominated Palme d OrBirdman of Alcatraz Nominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Feature FilmThe Manchurian Candidate Also producerNominated Golden Globe Award for Best DirectorNominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Feature Film1964 Seven Days in May Nominated Golden Globe Award for Best DirectorThe Train Replaced Arthur Penn1966 Seconds Nominated Palme d OrGrand Prix Nominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Feature Film1968 The Fixer1969 The Extraordinary SeamanThe Gypsy Moths1970 I Walk the Line1971 The Horsemen1973 The Iceman ComethImpossible Object1974 99 and 44 100 Dead1975 French Connection II1977 Black Sunday1979 Prophecy1982 The Challenge1985 The Holcroft Covenant1986 52 Pick Up1989 Dead Bang1990 The Fourth War1991 Year of the Gun Nominated Deauville Critics Award for Best Feature Film1996 The Island of Dr Moreau Replaced Richard Stanley1998 Ronin2000 Reindeer Games2001 Ambush Short filmTelevision edit TV series Year Title Notes1954 You Are There Episode The Plot Against King Solomon 1954 55 Danger 6 episodes1955 56 Climax 26 episodes1956 60 Playhouse 90 27 episodes1958 Studio One in Hollywood Episode The Last Summer 1959 DuPont Show of the Month Episode The Browning Vision Startime Episode The Turn of the Screw 1959 60 NBC Sunday Showcase 2 episodes1960 Buick Electra Playhouse 3 episodes1992 Tales from the Crypt Episode Maniac at Large TV movies Year Title Notes1956 The Ninth Day1960 The Snows of KilimanjaroThe Fifth Column1982 The Rainmaker Nominated CableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or Miniseries1994 Against the Wall Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or MovieNominated CableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or MiniseriesNominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Miniseries or TV FilmThe Burning Season Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or MovieCableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or MiniseriesNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television MovieNominated CableACE Award for Best Movie or Miniseries1996 Andersonville Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or MovieNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television MovieNominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Miniseries or TV Film1997 George Wallace Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or MovieCableACE Award for Best MiniseriesCableACE Award for Best Direction in a Movie or MiniseriesNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television MovieNominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Miniseries or TV Film2002 Path to War Nominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or MovieNominated Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television MovieNominated DGA Award for Outstanding Directing Miniseries or TV FilmAwards and nominations editBritish Academy Film Awards 1964 Train nominated for Best Film Any Source 1962 Manchurian Candidate nominated for Best Film Both Any Source and BritishCannes Film Festival 1966 Seconds nominated for Competing Film 1962 All Fall Down nominated for Competing FilmNew York Film Critics Circle Award 1968 Fixer nominated for Best Direction 1968 Fixer nominated for Best FilmVenice Film Festival 1962 Birdman of Alcatraz nominated for Competing Film 1962 Birdman of Alcatraz won for San Giorgio PrizeFrankenheimer is also a member of the Television Hall of Fame and was inducted in 2002 197 Footnotes edit Barson Michael John Frankenheimer American director Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved December 11 2017 a b c Yoram Allon Yoram Cullen Hannah Patterson Contemporary North American Film Directors Wallflower Press 2000 pp 181 83 a b Hollywood director John Frankenheimer dies at 72 abc net au Retrieved May 7 2017 a b Pratley 1968 p 16 Moritz Charles 1964 Current biography yearbook H W Wilson Company p 135 a b Thurber Jon King Susan July 7 2002 John Frankenheimer 72 Director Was Master of the Political Thriller Los Angeles Times Walsh David Issues raised by the career of US filmmaker John Frankenheimer Bowie 2006 Frankenheimer felt overshadowed by a strong father Pratley 1968 p 17 Frankenheimer I have a brother four years younger and a sister six years younger Baxter 2002 he had a fitness and determination that allowed him to contemplate a tennis career he abandoned both tennis and his religion i e Catholicism Pratley 1968 p 18 And p 17 See brief comment on a father son contretemps over Frankenheimer s pursuit of an acting career rather than tennis Pratley 1968 p 18 Frankenheimer s coursework at American University included speech and TV producing which the USAF accepted as qualifications Pratley 1968 p 18 Frankenheimer s remarks in quotations And p 21 Years in the Air Force 1951 1953 Barson 2021 After making training films for the U S Air Force during the Korean War Frankenheimer decided to become a director Pratley 1968 p 18 Frankenheimer states repeatedly that nobody cared or could care less what he did He took the equipment home on the weekends to shoot all manner of stuff Pratley 1968 p 19 20 FCC objection was the excessive commercial content not sanitary issues related to cows Baxter 2002 joined the US air force in the early 1950s Put in charge of a film unit he immersed himself in amateur movies training documentaries and local television work and read classic texts on cinema theory and practice Pratley 1968 p 21 Pratley 1968 p 21 24 See here of Frankenheimer s efforts to secure directorial position Walsh 2002 In 1953 he obtained a position with CBS television in New York as an assistant director and within 18 months of his discharge from the military he was co directing a weekly dramatic series Pratley 1968 p 24 Walsh 2002 Anna Everett essay Golden Age quoted here See article http www americancentury or ing ag tenthman pdf Pratley 1968 p 25 26 p 28 Pratley 1968 p 29 30 Baxter 2002 It initiated a brilliant period of more than 100 productions notably Playhouse 90 dramas Walsh 2002 Between 1954 and 1960 Frankenheimer directed 152 live television dramas including 42 episodes of the Playhouse 90 series He is considered one of the leading figures of American television s so called Golden Age Barson 2021 one of the most important and creatively gifted directors of the 1950s and 60s John Frankenheimer A Master Craftsman Rogerebert com Retrieved August 12 2014 a b Bowie 2006 a b c Walsh 2002 WSWS Baxter 2002 The experience was unhappy Frankenheimer had grown used to controlling his technicians Pratley 1969 p 41 42 Pratley quoting Frankenheimer Pratley 1969 p 43 Re village blacksmith Pratley quoting Frankenheimer And p 47 48 Prately notes his return to ideas events places and themes he addressed in The Young Stranger Gow 1971 pp 113 114 See also section 5 Individuals or Misfits pp 104 116 Pratley 1969 p 44 p 47 the director disliked the new title Gow refers to its cheaply made second feature impression Stafford 2005 TCM Stafford 2005 TCM Bell uncovers the true murderer while making an important decision involving his own career Barson 2021 The Young Savages an overheated but often potent courtroom drama that starred Burt Lancaster in the first of five movies he made with the director Pratley 1969 p 45 a b Pratley 1969 p 48 49 Stafford 2005 TCMPratley 1969 p 48 Pratley 1969 p 47 48Stafford 2005 TCM The film script appealed to the liberal Democrat in Frankenheimer and Lancaster Baxter 2002 It launched a movie career that allowed the director a liberal who wrote and directed all of Robert F Kennedy s television appearances to buck the system and make several landmark social and political works Pratley 1969 p 55 Pratley 1969 p 80 Frankenheimer explains the chronology here Stafford 2003 TCM John Houseman and Frankenheimer eagerly agreed to do it in between post production on Birdman of Alcatraz and preparation for The Manchurian Candidate Baxter 2002 Birdman of Alcatraz was delayed when the first section had to be shortened and reshot and in the interim Frankenheimer made the hothouse All Fall Down Higham 1973 p 294 295 a beautifully made film about adolescence the boy reaches manhood by way of anguish concerned with the theme of the outsider Barson 2021 All Fall Down starred Warren Beatty as a callous womanizer whose adoring younger brother Brandon deWilde gradually comes to despise him Baxter 2002 Frankenheimer made the hothouse All Fall Down with Warren Beatty as an archetypal Frankenheimer anti hero drifter Walsh 2002 WSWS All Fall Down is a fairly silly work Warren Beatty plays the impossibly named Berry Berry Willart a ne er do well son of a quarrelsome middle class Cleveland couple His abuse of a family friend Echo O Brien Eva Marie Saint leads to her death and the disillusionment of Berry Berry s younger brother Walsh 2002 WSWS Pratley 1969 p 227 Baxter 2002 Frankenheimer s documentary style produced an intense story of injustice and endurance Pratley 1969 p 58 This film is almost pure documentary Walsh 2002 WSWS Stroud s transformation from a sullen misanthrope into a humane and thoughtful individual Stafford 2003 TCM Stroud s Stroud s life altering experience establishing himself as one of the world s leading authorities on canaries Pratley 1969 p 59 60 Frankenheimer offers a narrative in which Stroud s character changes completely becomes a slow quiet thoughtful man Honan William H September 16 1999 Charles Crichton Film Director Dies at 89 NY Times The New York Times Company Retrieved August 7 2018 Stafford 2003 TCM Remarks on Crichton dismissal Pratley 1969 p 64 65 p 66 hired director Strafford 2003 TCM The rough cut ran four and a half hours requiring a re write of the script That s what we did Then we went back and re shot the whole first part of the movie Stafford is quoting from a Charles Champlin interview with the director Pratley 1969 p 66 Prately 1969 p 64 Frankenheimer recalls that the Bureau threatened to withhold any future cooperation with CBS if they sponsored the story He also cites anticipated difficulties handling small birds in a live TV drama Stafford 2003 TCM Stafford or Frankenheimer may be confusing USBP interference regarding film vs TV Nixon 2006 TCM Frankenheimer became a major cinematic force with The Manchurian Candidate its power and influence have not been diminished Barson 2021 Britannica The Manchurian Candidate is arguably Frankenheimer s most respected film Walsh 2002 WSWS The Manchurian Candidate is a peculiar film perhaps Frankenheimer s most important but certainly not entirely coherent or convincing Pratley 1969 p 82 And p 224 Frankenheimer the film that people say is my best The Manchurian Candidate Bowie 2006 The Manchurian Candidate 1962 is an achievement so elephantine that it tends to dwarf the others in critical assessments of its director s work Pratley 1969 p 97 See Frankenheimer autobiographical remarks in Pratley Barson 2021 Britannica A chilling adaption of the Richard Condon novel it starred Frank Sinatra and Laurence Harvey as American soldiers who are brainwashed during the Korean War in a scheme to have a communist elected U S president Walsh 2002 WSWS brief film summaryPratley 1969 p 81 82 See Synopsis Baxter 2002 greatest screen role Nixon 2006 TCM Angela Lansbury s Oscar nominated performance is usually what is remembered most about the film Barson 2021 Britannica Angela Lansbury who was nominated for best supporting actress Walsh 2004 WSWS Angela Lansbury is riveting as the sleeper assassin s mother Pratley 1969 p 85 Angela Lansbury is carried over from All Fall Down 1962 again a splendidly possessive mother Nixon 2006 TCM a creative atmosphere that allowed Frank Sinatra to give what many feel is his best performance Pratley 1969 p 87 both Frank Sinatra and Laurence Harvey give superlative restrained performances Prately 1969 p 97 Frankenheimer The Manchurian Candidate is the first film I really instigated and had complete control And p 98 I had complete control over the production Walsh 2002 WSWS Sarris quoted by Walsh Bowie 2006 documentary styled mise en scene Walsh 2002 WSWS paranoia and delirium Baxter 2002 The Manchurian Candidate is dominated by Frankenheimer s technical fluency Pratley 1969 p 85 87 Frankenheimer s continual visual inventiveness Pratley 1969 p 85 87 the script contains no directions for the filming of the masterly brainwashing an extremely complicated piece of filming which he devised And p 87 More on shot sequence Bowie 2006 Pratley 1969 p 98 Bowie 2002 Prately 1969 p 100 101 Nixon 2006 TCM The nation s shameful anti Communist era was essentially over but its effects lingered and the idea of presenting a McCarthy type movement as a sinister Communist plot was outrageous Walsh 2004 WSWS Frankenheimer s The Manchurian Candidate appeared in cinemas in the US at an extraordinary moment October 24 1962 in the middle of the Fourteen Days of the Cuban Missile Crisis October 15 28 when the Cold War came as close as it ever did to becoming a nuclear catastrophe Nixon 2006 TCM both Frankenheimer and Sinatra were close friends of the Kennedy family Pratley 1969 p 81 Pratley reports that the film was released on 27 September 1962 Pratley 1969 p 82Walsh 2002 WSWS one assumes Frankenheimer and Axelrod are making the ultimate liberal statement about extremism Walsh 2004 WSWS Pratley 1969 p 84 The Manchurian Candidate provoked its share of rage and anguish but the film was too great an achievement both in artistic and commercial terms to go down before it Nixon 2006 TCM a volatile and terrifying parable of American political life Baxter 2002 Box office receipts were modest the film went from failure to cult classic without even being a success Bowie 2006 It occupies a place in the popular memory as an eerie prediction of the Kennedy assassination a year later a b Pratley 1969 p 98 Pratley p 108 Frankenheimer quoted in Pratley Pratley 1969 p 109 Frankenheimer comments on this topic Pratley 1969 p 103 p 110 111Safford 2007 TCM The literary property was purchased for the screen through the joint efforts of Frankenheimer and Kirk Douglas who agreed to produce and star in the film Safford 2007 TCM political conspiracy thriller based on the popular novel by Fletcher Knebel and Charles W Bailey II Pratley 1969 p 104Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS To a certain and important extent the encounter between Lyman and Scott does concretize and concentrate artistically a pivotal social collision an obligation of enduring drama Higham 1973 p 295 In The Manchurian Candidate the inspiration for the revolt lay in Russia in Seven Days in May the seeds of destruction are seen to lie in the American military system itself Pratley 1969 p 113 Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS Scott is generally taken to be a fictional version or composite of Curtis LeMay appointed by Kennedy to be Air Force Chief of Staff and Edwin Walker Pratley 1969 p 108 The war like pronouncements of many American military men place this film right on the line between fantasy and fact it would take only the slightest push to move it over into truth Higham 1973 p 295 expertly tackles a political theme Once again Frankenheimer deals with an attempt to obtain supreme power by a fascist clique Safford 2007 TCM a chilling scenario of the dangers of misplaced power in the military industrial complex it remains a hot topic today Pratley 1969 p 108 it plausibly and intelligently projects a warning that this could happen in the near future and we should be on our guard Pratley 1969 p 107 108 a b Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS Pratley 1969 p 107 There are splendid performances from the entire cast Higham 1973 p 295 Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS Douglas Lancaster and March clearly threw themselves into the production They are thoroughly believable as these human beings Pratley 1969 p 18 p 114 Frankenheimer it gave me a sense of satisfaction to make a picture about a place I worked as a mail boy Pratley 1969 p 114 Frankenheimer I m sure the Pentagon weren t happy when they heard we were going to make it Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS Seven Days in May angered the Pentagon the FBI and the extreme right Safford 2007 TCM the filmmakers knew it was futile to ask any Pentagon officials if they could shoot any sequences at their headquarters Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS A March 20 1964 memo details communications between retired Admiral Arleigh Burke and Assistant Director William Sullivan of the FBI in regard to the film and its potential damage a b Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS Pratley 1969 p 114 President Kennedy indirectly said he very much wanted the film made Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS theatrical release scheduled for December That release was held up by the murder of Kennedy in Dallas on November 22 The appearance of Stanley Kubrick s Dr Strangelove in theaters was delayed for the same reason Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS The painful irony is that the real life models for the fanatical right wing elements in the military and intelligence apparatus fictionalized in Frankenheimer s film were no doubt linked to the cabal that carried out the Kennedy assassination Walsh 2002 WSWS Safford 2007 TCM When Seven Days in May opened theatrically it fared well with critics and audiences alike Laurier and Walsh 2020 WSWS Received warmly by both critics and audiences On the whole Seven Days in May stands up 56 years later Higham 1973 p 295 Frankenheimer s great virtues his sense of realism attack pacing and electrifying creative energy were evident in Seven Days in May Pratley 1969 p 123 125 p 139 Composite quote Baxter 2002 The film is dominated by Lancaster s athleticism and Paul Scofield s steely performance as his German adversary Pratley 1969 p 115 116Wood 2004 World War II action film tinged with a Cold War sensibility p 47 Penn Arthur Arthur Penn Interviews University Press of Mississippi 2008Pratley 1969 p 123 Frankenheimer a conflict of personalities a conflict over the type of film being made Barson 2021 Lancaster and Frankenheimer combined forces for the fourth time on The Train 1965 although not by original design Arthur Penn had begun the picture but was fired soon after filming began Wood 2004 TCM Lancaster was concerned that Penn was neglecting the story s potential for action and suspense and remedied the situation by calling in Frankenheimer Prately 1969 p 123 125 See here for Frankenheimer s remarks Smith 2010 TCM At the behest of star Burt Lancaster Frankenheimer replaced Arthur Penn as the director of The Train 1965 Higham 1973 p 295 The Train 1965 taken over from Arthur Penn was a botch for which he cannot be held responsible Palen 2010 See here for same Frankenheimer passages quoted in Pratley 1969 Pratley 1969 p 140 Palen 2010Wood 2004 TCM Frankenheimer in turn discarded Penn s footage brought in his own writers to overhaul the script and ultimately delivered the WWII thriller Lancaster had hoped for Pratley 1969 p 125 Pratley 1969 p 122 The director has been criticized of course for his ironic comments about the values of art and of human life And p 125 Frankenheimer The point I wanted to make was that no work of art is worth a human life Bowie 2006 Abele 2018 Abele quoting Guillermo del Toro the movie clearly states two points of view Lancaster is pro human Scofield cares about art but has no hint of the humanity of that art an artistic piece about how much art is worth in human lives Palen 2010 John Frankenheimer s 1964 masterly moving painting The Train grounded in the grimy documentary like detail of the neo realist style the director admired Wood 2004 TCM a masterful achievement of heightened and prolonged suspense one of the best action films of the 1960s Abele 2018 Abele s article highlights Guillermo del Toro s fulsome praise for The Train as a superlative action film Wood 2004 TCM No miniatures were used in The Train apparent when one views such sequences of carefully orchestrated destruction that punctuate the film s tightly wound narrative Bowie 2006 The terrifically entertaining The Train 1965 best represents this synthesis Pratley 1969 p 126 Pratley 1969 p 120 121 And p 119 Palen 2010 Georgaris 2021 TSPDT Georgaris quoting from The Film Encyclopedia 2012 The Train IMDb IMDb Balio 1987 p 279 Buford 2000 p 240 Most Popular Film Star The Times December 31 1965 p 13 via The Times Digital Archive September 16 2013 Wilshire 2001Pratley 1969 p 135 a horrifying shattering screaming climax as he is taken away to become a cadaver for another second And p 139 the horrific ending Barson 2021 Pratley 1969 p 134 Pratley 1969 p 141 142 p 148 Composite quote ellipses added for clarity a b c d Wilshire 2001 Smith 2010 TCM Frankenheimer preferred Laurence Olivier whom he considered a natural for the dual role of Arthur Hamilton Tony Wilson but Paramount wanted a bigger name for the youthful Wilson Pratley 1969 p 135 Pratley 1969 p 143 144 Frankenheimer I don t think the disparity in stature was too noticeable And the film was obscure and nobody ever understood why Wilson didn t make it And We did not successfully dramatize the second act i e the Tony Wilson phase See also Frankenheimer s remarks on deleted sequence about Wilson s encounter with a small girl Wilshire 2001 Wilshire quoting Vincent LoBrotto the screenplay had a surreal quality which suggested an extreme visual approach to Frankenheimer Pratley 1969 p 144 9 5mm lens And p 146 Arriflex methods And p 145 psychedelic Wilshire 2001 Most importantly the theme of distortion is central to Seconds The camera is used not only as a recording device but also as an expressive tool And Howe was the ideal choice to visually realize Frankenheimer s ambitious and surreal vision in Seconds Pratley 1969 p 145 Frankenheimer I had splendid co operation from Jame Wong Howe who s a marvelous cameraman And p 139 Pratley states James Wong Howe s photography has never been better than in this picture Pratley 1969 p 133 134 The French and European critics at Cannes gave Seconds such a hostile reception and denounced it so bitterly as being cruel and inhuman that Frankenheimer refused to leave Monte Carlo to attend the press conference And p 146 It was a disaster Most critics hated it And Frankenheimer Paramount lost all faith in the film put no effort into selling it Baxter 2002 Seconds was so badly received at the Cannes film festival that he boycotted the press conference Barson 2021 Although a critical and commercial disappointment Seconds later developed a cult following Smith 2010 TCM Although it would eventually find its cult Seconds was relegated to the Paramount vault and forgotten Pratley 1969 p 145 Frankenheimer We all know cast and crew that the film was a failure but I think its an excellent case against entering movies in film festivals Wilshire 2001 Seconds failed miserably at the box office in 1966 Pratley 1969 p 134 Pratley declares that Seconds will one day be described as a masterpiece Baxter 2001 Higham 1973 p 295 Baxter 1970 p 175 Hamilton Wilson rejects the oiled efficiency of his surgery and goes albeit unwillingly to death rather than deny his true self Thurber and King 2002 in 1964 Frankenheimer seemed firmly entrenched as a top director in Hollywood A year later he made his first color film the car racing saga Grand Prix Axmaker 2010 TCM Grand Prix 1966 a sprawling drama of race car drivers shot on locations across Europe with a glamorous international cast Pratley 1969 p 151 it communicates the director s enthusiasm for the subject And Frankenheimer I ve driven a race car and driven one fairly well Goodman 2003 TCM Grand Prix is Frankenheimer s first color film Shot in 70mm Cinerama And Frankenheimer one of the most satisfactory films I ve made And Having been an amateur racer himself Frankenheimer is intensely passionate about the subject Pratley 1969 p 150 and pp 151 153 his first original screenplay since The Young Stranger And his most expensive production Goodman 2003 TCM As could be expected a tight race ensues with plenty of thrills chills and spills before a final victor emerges from the big event Pratley 1969 p 151 152 And p 154 155 Frankenheimer I want to show what racing was really like and every incident in the film is based on truth And I used to do racing as an amateur Goodman 2003 TCM Frankenheimer and cinematographer Lionel Lindon used specially constructed cameras mounted on the racing cars creative use of split screen And Having been an amateur racer himself Frankenheimer is intensely passionate about the subject Goodman 2003 TCM To achieve the level of realism that Frankenheimer wanted there were no process shots used in the film All scenes used real cars with mounted cameras cinematographer Lionel Lindon used specially constructed cameras mounted on the racing cars which put us on the track with the drivers Pratley 1969 p 159 Frankenheimer There was not a single process shot in the entire film Pratley 1969 p 156 158 See Frankenheimer narrative re Francis Thompson s To Be Alive 1964 and World Series televised baseball Goodman 2003 TCM Frankenheimer used the wide space to his advantage with a creative use of split screen By combining the on track footage with helicopter shots of the cars in a split screen action sequence he combats the monotony of racing cars merely driving around in circles Goodman 2003 TCM For the spectacular crashes special effects man Milton Rice created a hydrogen cannon which functioned as a giant pea shooter A car could be attached to a shaft on the cannon and then shot out like a projectile at speeds in excess of 125 miles an hour Pratley 1969 p 161 Pratley 1969 p 156 Walsh 2002 WSWS Grand Prix a story of race car drivers is largely a technical exercise whose dramatic narrative seems accidental Barson 2021 The racing sequences were entertaining but the rest of the film was largely dull Georgaris 2021 TSPDT Frankenheimer seemed to be losing his edge by brandishing style for its own sake The Film Encyclopedia 2012 Walsh 2002 WSWS Sarris suggested that the director s style had degenerated into an all embracing academicism a veritable glossary of film techniques Goodman 2003 TCM earning three Oscars for Best Sound Effects by Gordon Daniel Best Editing and Best Sound Baxter 2002 returning to France he made his commercially successful biggest budget and first colour movie Grand Prix 1966 Pratley 1969 p 149 See here for credits Axmaker 2010 TCM Though he d shown darkly satire edges in The Manchurian Candidate 1962 and Seconds 1966 he was known as a director of serious dramas with social concerns And more farce than satire a light comedy Pratley 1969 p 165 166 Pratley distinguished The Extraordinary Seaman from Frankenheimer s big pictures e g Grand Prix and The Train Axmaker 2010 TCM It s a wartime comedy of a misfit unit and a Captain of questionable pedigree a military farce a slapstick romance and a crazy ghost story all in one strange package incompetence of the characters on screen Pratley 1969 p 163 164 See Synopsis for detailed sketch Axmaker 2010 TCM the fourth feature for rising star Faye Dunaway who was fresh off director Arthur Penn s Bonnie and Clyde 1967 Pratley 1969 p 165 166 spoofing war While the characters are not exactly endearing they are treated and shown with sympathy and dignity And p 172 Frankenheimer on the use of newreel clips and combat footage used for satire Charles Champlin John Frankenheimer Directors Guild of America May 1995 John Frankenheimer a conversation Riverwood Press pp 103 ISBN 9781880756096 Pratley 1969 p 172 AFI The story is broken into segments each titled to match five of U K Prime Minister Winston Churchill s six installments of his World War II memoirs Pratley 1969 p 169 thematic relationship And p 171 173 Frankenheimer Co screenwriter Hal Dresner is very much against the war in Vietnam which I am too Axmaker 2010 TCM Barson 2021 The Extraordinary Seaman was released in 1969 after having sat on the shelf for two years It was Frankenheimer s first comedy and one of his most poorly received films Axmaker 2010 TCM More likely MGM was scared off after a string of dismal screenings for exhibitors and critics where the response was tepid at best MGM held up the film for two years and then gave it a nominal release before it disappeared except for infrequent television showings Pratley 1969 p 172 AFI the picture contains at least ten minutes of newsreel footage the release date had been delayed while filmmakers underwent the process of matching the material to the rest of the color Panavision footage AFI Despite the high profile of director John Frankenheimer and the popularity of Faye Dunaway following her star turn in Bonnie and Clyde 1967 The Extraordinary Seaman was poorly received by critics and not distributed for a large scale release And Var box office reports indicated scattered local openings across the US Pratley 1969 p 186 See Frankenheimer s comments here Malamud forwarded the manuscript to Frankenheimer for his consideration Pratley 1969 pp 177 179 See Synopsis The 41st Academy Awards 1969 Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved February 7 2018 Ebert 1968 played with great sensitivity by Alan Bates Adler 1968 NYT The acting from Alan Bates through Dirk Bogarde as the cerebral sympathetically homosexual prosecutor and David Warner as an effete pragmatic Count is very fine Toole 2003 TCM Bates plays a Russian Jew falsely accused of murder and remarkably his only Oscar nomination a b Adler 1968 NYT Pratley 1969 p 230 Frankenheimer s comments composite quote minor edits for brevity clarity Pratley 1969 p 187 188 Composite quote from these pages edited for brevity and clarity meaning is unchanged Pratley 1969 p 183 feel better about And p 233 Frankenheimer I happen to love The Fixer I don t know how other people will react to it but to me it is my best work And p 228 In The Fixer there is hardly a single scene that does not please me And p 225 Frankenheimer the only film I never made compromises on Adler 1968 NYT Bernard Malamud who won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for The Fixer in 1967 Baxter 2002 despite intense performances from Bates and Dirk Bogarde the film was patchily received Frankenheimer who thought it his best work a b Ebert 1968 Adler 1968 Higham 1973 p 297 a b Harmetz Aljean April 10 1977 Frankenheimer Rides a Blimp To a Big Fat Comeback The New York Times Armstrong Stephen B ed 2013 John Frankenheimer Interviews Essays and Profiles The Scarecrow Press Inc p 168 Broeske Pat H November 25 1985 The Curious Evolution of John Rambo How He Hacked His Way Through the Jungles of Hollywood Los Angeles Times Los Angeles p AB32 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved June 11 2021 O Sullivan Kevin June 23 1996 Kilmer Gets the Knife He s Voted Least Popular by a Bunch of H wood Big Shots NYDailyNews com Retrieved August 12 2019 Ascher Walsh Rebecca May 31 1996 Psycho Kilmer Entertainment Weekly New York City Meredith Corporation Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved August 12 2019 Simon 2008 Frankenheimer My dad was Jewish and my mother was Irish Catholic which was never an issue because my father was never a practicing Jew He s the one who drove us to Catholic Sunday school I went to a Catholic military academy for high school I had wanted to be a priest Thurber and King 2002 Frankenheimer was born the son of a Jewish stockbroker and was raised Catholic by his Irish American mother At one time he wanted to be a priest Simon 2002 Walsh 2002 WSWS Possessed of a liberal sensibility and shaped by the Cold War era Frankenheimer was an artistic eclectic a b c Simon 2008 Simon 2008 Frankenheimer quoting JFK presumably based on Sinatra s report See here for Sinatra s role as go between And Frankenheimer JFK loved the movie IMDb See here for info on wife Carolyn Miller with whom Frankenhimer had two children Pratley 1969 p 114 Frankenheimer s comments to Pratley appear to conflate President Kennedy s reaction to Manchurian Candidate 1962 with his assistance in the production of Seven Days in May released in 1964 Contradicts Frankenheimer s remarks in Simon interview 2008 Pratley 1969 p 220 pp 221 222 Frankenheimer Simon 2008Pratley 1969 p 114 Walsh 2002 WSWS President John Kennedy helped persuade a Hollywood studio to finance the film according to one account and offered White House locations for shooting Frankenheimer s next project centered on a plot by the head of the US military s Joint Chiefs of Staff to organize a coup and overthrow the elected president Pratley 1969 p 114 Simon 2008Pratley 1969 p 139 140 Frankenheimer When I returned from Europe I had change a great deal I saw my own country from a different perspective from a very tragic perspective we were in Europe during the assassination of the President and we were able to judge foreign reaction to us and our behavior I saw myself from a different perspective too Simon 2008Pratley 1969 p 221 Frankenheimer The deaths of the Kennedys John and Robert were probably the most horrible events to happen to American since President Abraham Lincoln s assassination And p 139 140 Frankenheimer I saw my own country from a different perspective from a very tragic perspective when we were in Europe during the assassination of the President and we were able to judge foreign reaction to us and our behavior I saw myself from a different perspective too Pratley 1969 p 217 I was very active politically with Senator Kennedy And p 221 I think he represented everything that was good in this country Simon 2008 See here for Frankenheimer quote Simon 2008 I was there with RFK for 102 days before his assassination in June 1968 Frankenheimer reportedly used his cinematic talent to counter the Kennedy s reputation as arrogant and cold Thurber and King 2002 Always politically liberal Frankenheimer spent part of 1968 working on Kennedy s presidential campaign acting as director of campaign spots Simon 2008Walsh 2002 WSWS He identified strongly with the liberal wing of the Democratic Party and suffered with its collapse This is literally so on the final day of Senator Robert Kennedy s life in 1968 he was staying at Frankenheimer s house and the director drove him to the Ambassador Hotel in downtown Los Angeles the site of his assassination Pratley 1969 p 221 Frankenheimber there was no doubt that Robert Kennedy was going to be President Now 1968 we are on the brink of chaos in this country We were on our way out of it with President John Kennedy I see no way out now With Richard Nixon as US president God knows what will happen We could all be dead before this book comes out Simon 2008 Frankenheimer there was this tremendous involvement with Robert Kennedy We were very very close friends and I did all the film and television for his campaign He stayed with me and I drove him to the Ambassador Hotel the night he was shot All his clothes were in my house and I really had a nervous breakdown after that Thurber and King 2002 NYT He spent several years in France where he studied cooking at the Le Cordon Bleu emerging as a gourmet chef Walsh 2002 WSWS Barson 2021 Personal problems exacerbated by the assassination in 1968 of his close friend Robert F Kennedy whom Frankenheimer had driven to the hotel where he was killed began to take their toll and Frankenheimer counted few real successes over the next several years Thurber and King 2002 But despite his early success Frankenheimer s career went into sharp decline in the 1970s and 80s when he made a series of films that were both critical and commercial failures John Frankenheimer Collection Academy Film Archive September 5 2014 Retrieved May 7 2017 Television Hall of Fame Honorees Complete List emmys com Retrieved May 7 2017 Sources editAbele Robert 2018 The Cost of War Guillermo del Toro revels in the proficiency and poignancy of John Frankenheimer s intimate WWII epic The Train Directors Guild of America Winter 2018 https www dga org Craft DGAQ All Articles 1801 Winter 2018 Screening Room The Train asp Retrieved 26 July 2021 Adler Renata 1968 Screen The Fixer Put Through Hollywood Mill Frankenheimer Directs From Malamud Novel Alan Bates Plays Lead Bogarde in Cast The New York Times https www nytimes com 1968 12 09 archives screen the fixer put through hollywood millfrankenheimer directs html Retrieved 15 August 2021 American Film Institute 2021 The Extraordinary Seaman AFI Catalog of Feature Films American Film Institute AFI https catalog afi com Catalog MovieDetails 19644 Retrieved 31 July 2021 Axmaker Sean 2010 The Extraordinary Seaman Turner Movie Classics https www tcm com tcmdb title 74365 the extraordinary seaman articles reviews articleId 353373 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Balio Tino United Artists The Company That Changed the Film Industry Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press 1987 ISBN 978 0 29911 440 4 Barson Michael 2021 John Frankenheimer American Director https www britannica com biography John Frankenheimer Retrieved 4 July 2021 Baxter John 1970 Science Fiction in the Cinema Edited by Peter Cowie Paperback Library New York Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 69 14896 Bowie Stephen 2006 John Frankenheimer Senses of Cinema Great Director Issue 41 https www sensesofcinema com 2006 great directors frankenheimer Retrieved 1 July 2021 Buford Kate Burt Lancaster An American Life New York Da Capo 2000 ISBN 0 306 81019 0 Ebert Roger 1968 The Fixer Reviews December 25 1968 https www rogerebert com reviews the fixer 1968 Retrieved 15 August 2021 Evans Alun Brassey s Guide to War Films Dulles Virginia Potomac Books Inc 2000 ISBN 978 1 57488 263 6 Baxter Brian 2002 John Frankenheimer a director of classic 1960s films he survived depression to enjoy a late creative renaissance The Guardian 8 July 2002 https www theguardian com news 2002 jul 08 guardianobituaries booksobituaries Retrieved 5 July 2021 Georgaris Bill 2021 John Frankenheimer They Shoot Pictures Don t They TSPDT TSPDT quoting from The Film Encyclopedia 1912 https www theyshootpictures com frankenheimerjohn htm Retrieved 10 July 2021 Gow Gordon 1971 Hollywood in the Fifties The International Film Guide Series A S Barnes amp Co New York ISBN 0302021345 Pratley Gerald 1968 The Cinema of John Frankenheimer The International Film Guide Series A S Barnes amp Company New York ISBN 0302020004 Laurier Joanne and Walsh David 2020 Seven Days in May 1964 When American filmmaking envisioned a military coup The World Socialist Web Site https www wsws org en articles 2020 06 19 7day j19 html Retrieved 3 July 2021 Palen Tim 2010 The Train John Frankenheimer s Monumental Tribute to Wartime Railway Resistance https cinephiliabeyond org train john frankenheimers monumental tribute wartime railway resistance Retrieved 20 July 2021 Simon Alex 1998 JOHN FRANKENHEIMER RENAISSANCE AUTEUR The Hollywood Interview http thehollywoodinterview blogspot com 2008 02 john frankenheimer hollywood interview html Retrieved 15 August 2021 Stafford Jeff 2005 The Young Savages Turner Classic Movies https www tcm com tcmdb title 17857 the young savages articles reviews articleId 99308 Retrieved 1 July 2021 Stafford Jeff 2003 All Fall Down Turner Classic Movies https www tcm com tcmdb title 1974 all fall down article Retrieved 1 July 2021 Stafford Jeff 2003 Birdman of Alcatraz Turner Classic Movies https www tcm com tcmdb title 68798 birdman of alcatraz articles reviews articleId 21846 Retrieved 2 July 2021 Safford Jeff 2007 Seven Days in May Turner Classic Movies https www tcm com tcmdb title 16136 seven days in may articles reviews articleId 160820 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Silver Charles 2013 John Frankenheimer s The Young Stranger Museum of Modern Art Department Film https www moma org explore inside out 2013 04 02 john frankenheimers the young stranger Retrieved 1 July 2021 Smith Richard Harland 2010 Seconds Turner Classic Movies https www tcm com tcmdb title 4210 seconds articles reviews articleId 276958 Retrieved 31 July 2021 Toole Michael T 2003 Sir Alan Bates 1934 2003 Turner Classic Movies https www tcm com tcmdb title 1881 the fixer articles reviews articleId 64876 Retrieved 15 August 2021 Walsh David 2002 Issues raised by the career of US filmmaker John Frankenheimer World Socialist Web Site https www wsws org en articles 2002 07 fran j19html Retrieved 5 July 2021 Walsh David 2004 An honorable effort but it lacks fire The Manchurian Candidate directed by Jonathan Demme World Socialist Web Site https www wsws org en articles 2004 08 manc a05 html Retrieved 3 July 2021 Further reading editMitchell Lisa Thiede Karl and Champlin Charles 1995 John Frankenheimer A Conversation with Charles Champlin Riverwood Press ISBN 978 1 880756 09 6 Armstrong Stephen B 2008 Pictures About Extremes The Films of John Frankenheimer McFarland ISBN 0 7864 3145 8 External links editJohn Frankenheimer at IMDb John Frankenheimer OpsRoom org John Frankenheimer Senses of Cinema Issue 41 Great Directors Series John Frankenheimer at The Interviews An Oral History of Television Literature on John Frankenheimer John Frankenheimer The Hollywood Interview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Frankenheimer amp oldid 1194155539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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