The President's Analyst (1967) Reviews

The President's Analyst (1967)
Member Rating:  
The President's Analyst is James Coburn, whose position makes him privy to any number of delicate government secrets. Thus Coburn becomes a most desirable prize for several secret-agent organizations, including the CEA and the FBR (we know who these folks are really supposed to be, even though the phony names were crudely dubbed onto the soundtrack after the film was completed). When Coburn becomes expendable, he finds a pair of strong allies in the form of likeable political assassin Godfrey Cambridge and gay Soviet spy Severn Darden. The main plot involves an insidious, unnamed concern that wishes to harness Coburn's talents in order to brainwash the president -- and everyone else in America -- into submission. The President's Analyst is a terrific, on-target satire of virtually every sacred cow of the late 1960s; the satire was so potent, in fact, that when the NBC network broadcast the film in the early 1970s, it was compelled to remove the picture's punchline. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
James CoburnGodfrey Cambridge, (more)
Director(s):
Theodore J. Flicker
Format(s):
DVD
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Average Ratings

(6 member reviews)  


Member Reviews


Malcom G.

Really a good movie, spoofing the secret agent movies from the 60's including "Our Man Flint". The Bad? The print this was made from is pretty muddy. Its widescreen, but alot of detail is missing. I have a VHS that has a better picture, but its pan and scan. I expected better out of a DVD presentation. But pay attention to the ending, you might see something that was so far fetched in the sixties, that almost has become fact today.

Yes   |   No


Mikee C.

A great movie, with "far out" music montages, showing how "hip" & "groovy" the producers are (today-not so much) utilizing a simplistic attitude to the the emerging psychedelic & "free love scene, man." The satire amuses and is chillingly accurate in predicting technology. Lots of color, innuendo and just enough of James Coburn's toothy grins to make this film a terrific paranoid romp & a lot o' fun. Joan Delaney is a joy to watch, sexy, too-darn-cute for words and a compelling voice that distracts from her being a very good actress. Whatever happened to her? Coburn is at his best. Strange looks & mannerisms accentuate the comedy. Godfrey Cambridge doesn't steal the show, but only because Severn Darden, as the Russian spy does. In fact, every character is a fun-to-watch joy to see. Larger than life and full of "wow" it takes a larger-than-life Coburn to keep all the three-ring circus of circumstances wrangled into a great movie experience.

Yes   |   No


Chris K.

Delightful satire of 1960's politics.

Yes   |   No


Dorothy D.

I thought this was a fairly stupid and farfetched movie the first time I saw it many years ago. It has not improved with age.

Yes   |   No


Brian H.

look what cell ohones are doing, this movie is dead on when it comes to survalance methods.The only difference is they marketed it instead of forcing it on the public.

Yes   |   No


Edward and Anne F.

Because of copyright disputes, the VHS version was heavily edited, with some of the original music missing. The film, as released, had some really great musical numbers by Barry McGuire ("Eve of Destruction") and the VHS version just didn't feel right without them. Maybe some member could provide this information: Is the DVD the original, or the edited version?

Yes   |   No


 
 
 

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    Member Reviews
     
    Malcom G.

    Really a good movie, spoofing the secret agent movies from the 60's including "Our Man Flint". The Bad? The print this was made from is pretty muddy. Its widescreen, but alot of detail is missing. I have a VHS that has a better picture, but its pan and scan. I expected better out of a DVD presentation. But pay attention to the ending, you might see something that was so far fetched in the sixties, that almost has become fact today.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Mikee C.

    A great movie, with "far out" music montages, showing how "hip" & "groovy" the producers are (today-not so much) utilizing a simplistic attitude to the the emerging psychedelic & "free love scene, man." The satire amuses and is chillingly accurate in predicting technology. Lots of color, innuendo and just enough of James Coburn's toothy grins to make this film a terrific paranoid romp & a lot o' fun. Joan Delaney is a joy to watch, sexy, too-darn-cute for words and a compelling voice that distracts from her being a very good actress. Whatever happened to her? Coburn is at his best. Strange looks & mannerisms accentuate the comedy. Godfrey Cambridge doesn't steal the show, but only because Severn Darden, as the Russian spy does. In fact, every character is a fun-to-watch joy to see. Larger than life and full of "wow" it takes a larger-than-life Coburn to keep all the three-ring circus of circumstances wrangled into a great movie experience.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Chris K.

    Delightful satire of 1960's politics.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 6 Reviews