The Candidate
■ Basic Data
| Item | Content |
|---|---|
| Year | 1972 |
| Country | United States |
| Director | Michael Ritchie |
| Cast | Robert Redford, Peter Boyle, Melvyn Douglas, Don Porter, Allen Garfield, Karen Carlson |
| Genre | Political satire, comedy-drama |
■ Title Language Table
| Language | Text | Romanization |
|---|---|---|
| English | The Candidate | – |
| Español | – | – |
| Français | – | – |
| Deutsch | – | – |
| Português | – | – |
| Italiano | – | – |
| Русский | – | – |
| 中文(简体) | – | – |
| 中文(繁體) | – | – |
| 한국어 | – | – |
| ไทย | – | – |
| Tiếng Việt | – | – |
| Bahasa Indonesia | – | – |
| 日本語 | 候補者ビル・マッケイ | Kouhosha Bill McKay |
■ One-Line Definition
👉 A work that depicts a structure in which political conviction and electoral machinery collide within public image production
■ Synopsis
An idealistic candidate enters a Senate campaign and is gradually absorbed by the logic of winning.
■ RECIPE Tags
#PoliticalMachinery #PublicImage #HollowVictory #InstitutionalAbsorption
■ Primary Axis
- Entry: Idealism Entering the System
Reason: Personal conviction is converted into campaign material.
Related Film: The Ides of March - Middle: Electability Over Conviction
Reason: Winning gradually becomes more important than the original position.
Related Film: Primary Colors - Core: Victory Without Answer
Reason: The system produces success while emptying the candidate’s purpose.
Related Film: Bob Roberts
■ Secondary Axes
- Image Construction: Public identity replaces interior judgment.
Related Film: A Face in the Crowd - Institutional Corruption: The political process absorbs the reformer into its own logic.
Related Film: All the King’s Men
■ Person
- Director: Michael Ritchie
- Cast: Robert Redford, Peter Boyle, Melvyn Douglas, Don Porter, Allen Garfield, Karen Carlson
■ Structural Tags
#SystemAbsorption #ImageMediation #VictoryParadox
■ Attribute Tags
#UnitedStates #1970s #PoliticalSatire


































