Seconds Movie Review
Seconds Review
"Seconds" Overview

Rating: R
1966
Cast and Crew
Director : John FrankenheimerProducer : Edward Lewis
Screenwiter : Lewis John Carlino
Starring : John Randolph,Frances Reid,Jeff Corey,Will Geer,Richard Anderson,Rock Hudson,Wesley Addy,Salome Jens,Nedrick Young,Dodie Heath
Arthur Hamilton has a problem: he's wealthy and successful... but he's getting
old.
An old friend phones him out of the blue: Come to this address and prepare for
an unimaginable new future. Indeed, no sooner has Hamilton entered the
building (couriered there from a meat-packing plant, naturally) than he has
become a customer, willing or not, of "the organization," which provides a
radical plastic surgery regemin to cut about 30 years off the looks of its
clients. Oh, and it also fakes the death of the client and provides a new
identity -- and the client's new life is paid for with backdated insurance
policies (after the organization takes its cut, of course).
Of course, there's no miracle life extension here -- you only look younger, you
aren't really Rock Hudson, who John Randolph's Hamilton gains the appearance
of. As Tony Wilson, Hudson turns in a tour de force as the unnaturally younger
Tony, at first reluctant to accept his new life as a "second" or a "reborn,"
but soon diving into it whole-hog. He meets an appropriately young lady (or is
she...?), throws wild parties, and uncovers a secret society of reborns living
in Malibu (that explains it, at last!). Eventually he is even called upon to
recruit another client after he flips out... and things go downhill as certain
secrets about the organization are revealed.
John Frankenheimer directed Seconds during one of the most fertile eras of his
life -- a time which included The Manchurian Candidate and Seven Days in May --
and some of his cinematic flourishes in this film have been copied ever since:
his use of extremely deep focus, ultra-low Dutch angles, and an inventive
camera that attaches to its subject, much like Darren Aronofsky aped in Pi.
The look and feel of the film inspires nothing but dread and terror -- the
perfectly subtle horror movie that terrifies without a single scene of gore.
The final act is a tad too slow in reaching the conclusion, but this
Of course, lately, Frankenheimer has been directing junk like The Island of Dr.
Moreau and Reindeer Games. He's actually making another Exorcist movie now.
Maybe it's time for Frankenheimer to visit the organization himself...
The newly released DVD features an enlightening commentary by Frankenheimer
along with the original trailer. Excellent disc for an excellent film.
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Review by Christopher Null
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