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The Chairman

United Kingdom, United States

1969

98 Min
Color
2.35:1
English
  • Currently 2.0/5 Stars.
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DIR J. Lee Thompson

EXEC Arthur P. Jacobs

PROD Mort Abrahams, Pepi Lenzi

SCR Ben Maddow, Jay Richard Kennedy

DP John Wilcox, Ted Moore

CAST Gregory Peck, Anne Heywood, Arthur Hill, Alan Dobie, Keye Luke, Conrad Yama, Francesca Tu, Mai Ling

ED Richard Best

PROD DES Peter Mullins

MUSIC Jerry Goldsmith

Synopsis

From prominent sixties and seventies director J. Lee Thompson comes this ‘red menace’ film where Oscar winner Gregory Peck plays a Nobel Prize winning scientist named Dr. John Hathaway. When the movie begins, the government of the United States has enlisted Hathaway’s help – it seems that the Chinese have almost finished development of a powerful growth enzyme that will allow them to grow wheat anywhere even under the harshest of weather conditions. This will give them some serious control over the world’s food supply and they’ll be able to throw their weight around and maybe even take over the world. Uncle Sam is none too happy about that, which is where Hathaway comes in. You see, the lead Chinese scientist on this project is one Dr. Soing Li, an old acquaintance of Hathaway’s. The government decides to send him in to pose as a traitor in hopes of Hathaway being able to get the secret from Soing Li and bring it back to the U.S.A. before the Chinese can finish it. So serious is this issue that the Americans have opted to work with the U.S.S.R. on this project to assure that it gets taken care of properly.

Before the feds ship Hathaway off to China, they install a transmitter in his head that will allow them to listen in on his conversations. He’s okay with this as he knows it’ll help him get the job done. What Hathway doesn’t realize is that the government has also installed a bomb in his head, so that if he’s found out or captured they can kill him remotely before he can talk. Hathaway’s knowledge is so great that he could very well hold the key that the Chinese need to finish things up, so they don’t want to chance anything.

Hathaway makes it in, reunites with Soing Li, and even convinces the current Chairman that he’s on the up and up. Things seem to be going well until Soing Li is accused of being a traitor and the resulting turmoil causes him to take his own life. Before he killed himself, however, he gave his foxy daughter a book of Mao Tse Tung’s teachings and hidden inside this book, in code that only he and Hathaway could possibly understand, is the formula. Hathaway soon finds out that he has to get this book and make it from China to the Russian border before the Chinese figure out what he’s up to or the Americans decide to detonate the bomb in his head. He’s going to have to go this one alone as sending in any troops or firing even a single shot could start a war. —DVDtalk.com

Director

Original

J. Lee Thompson

John Lee Thompson (1 August 1914 – 30 August 2002), better known as J. Lee Thompson, was an English film director, active in England and Hollywood.

Thompson was born in Bristol, England to a theatrical family. After studying at Dover College, he briefly appeared on the stage and wrote crime plays in his spare time. Thompson first drew critical notice when his play Double Error was staged on the West End of London in 1935, upon which he was hired as a scriptwriter for British International Pictures, acquirer of the play’s film rights. During this initial BIP stint, Thompson made his only film appearance in the Carol Reed-directed Midshipman Easy (1935) and worked as a dialogue coach for Alfred Hitchcock’s production of Jamaica Inn (1939).

The small-framed Englishman was occupied during World War II as a tailgunner and wireless operator for the Royal Air Force. He eventually returned to his scriptwriting duties at the Associated British Picture Corporation, a successor of… read more

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