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La folle mission du docteur Schaeffer

Original title: The President's Analyst
  • 1967
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
James Coburn in La folle mission du docteur Schaeffer (1967)
When the overworked and stressed-out White House presidential shrink runs away, the CEA and the FBR scramble to retrieve him before he could be abducted by various competing foreign intelligence services.
Play trailer3:37
1 Video
99+ Photos
SatireComedySci-FiThriller

A psychiatrist suddenly gets assigned to be the US president's shrink. Paranoid from the many spies tailing him in hope of kidnapping him, he runs away, and dozens of spies, and the FBI, CIA... Read allA psychiatrist suddenly gets assigned to be the US president's shrink. Paranoid from the many spies tailing him in hope of kidnapping him, he runs away, and dozens of spies, and the FBI, CIA, and various agencies scramble to retrieve him.A psychiatrist suddenly gets assigned to be the US president's shrink. Paranoid from the many spies tailing him in hope of kidnapping him, he runs away, and dozens of spies, and the FBI, CIA, and various agencies scramble to retrieve him.

  • Director
    • Theodore J. Flicker
  • Writer
    • Theodore J. Flicker
  • Stars
    • James Coburn
    • Godfrey Cambridge
    • Severn Darden
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Theodore J. Flicker
    • Writer
      • Theodore J. Flicker
    • Stars
      • James Coburn
      • Godfrey Cambridge
      • Severn Darden
    • 71User reviews
    • 51Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:37
    Official Trailer

    Photos103

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    James Coburn
    James Coburn
    • Dr. Sidney Schaefer
    Godfrey Cambridge
    Godfrey Cambridge
    • Don Masters
    Severn Darden
    Severn Darden
    • Kropotkin
    Joan Delaney
    Joan Delaney
    • Nan Butler
    Pat Harrington Jr.
    Pat Harrington Jr.
    • Arlington Hewes
    • (as Pat Harrington)
    Barry McGuire
    • Old Wrangler
    Jill Banner
    Jill Banner
    • Snow White
    Eduard Franz
    Eduard Franz
    • Ethan Allan Cocket
    Walter Burke
    Walter Burke
    • Henry Lux
    Will Geer
    Will Geer
    • Dr. Lee-Evan
    William Daniels
    William Daniels
    • Wynn Quantrill
    Joan Darling
    Joan Darling
    • Jeff Quantrill
    Sheldon Collins
    Sheldon Collins
    • Bing Quantrill
    Arte Johnson
    Arte Johnson
    • Sullivan
    Martin Horsey
    • 1st Puddlian
    William Beckley
    William Beckley
    • 2nd Puddlian
    Kathleen Hughes
    Kathleen Hughes
    • White House Tourist
    Walt Davis
    • Phoneman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Theodore J. Flicker
    • Writer
      • Theodore J. Flicker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews71

    6.83.6K
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    Featured reviews

    aktaylor

    "You must be at LEAST this age: ____ to find this movie funny."

    Au contraire, Jacob Cremins, The President's Analyst is a brilliant snapshot of mid-60s America, with all the insane paranoia and absurdity of a culture spinning out of control. It is intensely funny to anyone born before 1955. I'm sorry you had such a disagreeable experience viewing it. Your generation will have your movies, this one is mine.

    This is a wonderful Christmas movie for the old fart on your shopping list. William Daniels' role as a gun-happy suburbanite is worth the price alone. The talented, and woefully under-used Godfrey Cambridge finally gets a star turn as a government agent undergoing analysis. And Barry ("Eve of Destruction") McGuire as the leader of a band of hippie musicians is a dead-on send up of the emerging flower children.

    Yes, one had to be a telephone customer before the advent of the Baby Bells to grasp the sheer villainy of THE PHONE COMPANY!
    9copper1963

    Drugs, death and John Adams, too.

    When James Coburn passed away in 2002, it was sad to see how little fanfare was generated by this event. Coburn's resume is as strong as any actor of the Sixties and Seventies. For almost a decade, Coburn played in some of the strangest and most unorthodox films of the era. Everyone knows that he capably spoofed the popular spy genre with his "Flint" films. But it wasn't until he became the President's analyst that he really hit his stride. The fabulous panoramic views of a pre-World Trade Center New York duel with the more grimy shots of the Manhattan Garment District. Look for a humorous assassination involving a knife and a clothing pushcart. Nostalgic observation: the New York Skyline appears the way it does on the New York Mets' uniform patch. The plot concerns the President's need for a head shrinker. Wanted: a man who can be trusted with the leader of the free world's secrets. Grandpa Walton (Will Gear) shows up as the President's prior therapist. He is wonderful as always. Edgy pop singer, Barry McGuire, plays a stoner with a catchy song on his acoustic guitar. One memorable sequence combines McGuire's tune (something about "changes") and a team of assassins in a field, attempting to kill our hero, Coburn. The killers use everything from guns to gas to blow darts. Even a net. In widescreen, the final shot of the movie resonates with a sly, satirical nod to the genre. The villain of the piece comes as a big surprise to anyone under the age of forty: think telephone exchanges and room-size computers. And mix. Bravo!
    8blanche-2

    A '60s satire

    James Coburn is "The President's Analyst" in this 1967 dark-humored film also starring Godfrey Cambridge, Severn Darden, Eduard Franz, Will Geer and Barry McGuire. Coburn is Sidney Schaefer, a New York psychiatrist chosen to be the analyst for the President of the United States. It's a great honor and all that, but the assignment turns out to be nothing but trouble. He becomes paranoid and when he starts to believe his girlfriend is a spy, he escapes his many watchers by joining a White House tour and attaching himself to a couple, Bing and Jeff Quantrill (Wiliam Daniels and Joan Darling). Claiming that he works for the President who wants to get a handle on what Americans are thinking, they agree to take him back to the New York suburbs with them. But Sidney can't escape - everyone seems to know where he is, even later on, when he runs away with a group of hippie musicians and dons a wig. One faction of the U.S. government wants him found and returned to Washington; another one, the FBR, wants him dead. All the other countries want him to find out what he knows, or they want him dead so no one else learns anything.

    There are lots of great things in this film, but the best is the segment with William Daniels and Joan Darling, who play two liberals who have more guns in their house than a gun store. "The people next door are Fascists," Bing says. "They ought to be gassed." With Sidney in Chinatown, government agents approach them to kidnap Sidney. Jeff attacks with karate while Bing shoots to kill - and Sidney takes off.

    Baby boomers will especially enjoy all the '60 elements. "The President's Analyst" walks a line between satire and the real feelings of the '60s (many of which are still held) about the government. And it succeeds beautifully. James Coburn was an underrated actor who always delivered unique characterizations, and he was never without some underlying humor. You can see the analyst deteriorate - he starts off with an ego as big as New York after getting his assignment, and bit by bit he descends into nervous breakdown-land. The other performances are excellent, from Godfrey Cambridge, Eduard Franz, Will Geer and the rest. But Daniels and Darling - priceless.

    Excellent film, highly recommended.
    mercuryix

    Discover or Rediscover this movie

    I forgot what a masterpiece of paranoia this movie is; only in this

    case, it isn't paranoia, everyone really IS out to get you! This is

    James Coburn's best performance in my opinion, as a psychiatrist

    who has been conscripted to become the President's analyst, and

    when he decides to quit, discovers just how disposal American

    citizens are. This is my pick for THE paranoia movie of the 1960s.

    That this movie came out in 1967 is incredible; it deals with

    assassination carried out casually by the FBI, the CIA, the violence

    that has been absorbed as wholesome by America, the escape

    from violence into sex and drugs, and much, much more, all

    during the time of the Vietnam War and zero tolerance for differing

    views. The speech by the black FBI agent in the beginning on

    how he discovered racism is especially painful, and remarkable

    given the time period.

    The movie is hysterically funny, cynical, black, and most ironically,

    hopeful, and a must-see for any film lover. The script is terrific, but

    the direction stands out in the inspired camerawork. This

    obviously was a labor of love by the director/writer, and

    interestingly, one of only two or three non-t.v. films he ever directed.

    If you see it, you may be bored by today's sex and gore standards.

    But if you remember the 60s, keep them in mind when you see

    this film. You'll wonder how it ever got made.

    Ten out of ten stars, because there isn't anything I can find wrong

    with this film; it's brilliant in every aspect.
    8mal-36139

    "Trust no one" Lol

    This satire is as relevant today as it was in the 60's. James Coburn's performance was more than just entertaining. It's easy to see why he was so sought after in those days. This film remains among my top picks along with the likes of "M.A.S.H. " and "Catch 22."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In one scene being shot on the lower west side of New York City, James Coburn was being chased by two uniformed NYPD officers, who were just actors playing New York cops. Shouting "Stop, stop", they chased Coburn around a corner and he ran into a real NYPD officer, who dropped him with one blow from his nightstick. Coburn had to seek medical treatment, which postponed the filming for a time.
    • Goofs
      Every line referring to the "FBR" or "CEA" is dubbed, often quite obviously. The actors were actually saying "FBI" and "CIA," but at the behest of the actual agencies the names were changed in post-production.
    • Quotes

      Don Masters, CEA Agent: I was five. And I knew there were colored people and white people. But then Mama took me to school, and it was almost all white kids. And nothing much happened on the first day. But on the second day, I was walking to school alone - my big brother, he was already in the third grade, and when you got a kid brother in kindergarten it can be kind of an embarrassment. So he ran on ahead to be with his buddies. Anyhow, there was a group of white kids on the street up ahead, and as I came up they started laughing and running and yelling, "Run! Run! Here comes the nigger! Run, run!"

      [softly:]

      Don Masters, CEA Agent: Here comes the nigger. And I looked around, and I didn't see any niggers. But if they wanted to play, so did I. So I started laughing and running and yelling, "Run, run! Here comes the nigger!"

      [Whispered:]

      Don Masters, CEA Agent: Run, run. Here comes the nigger. Suddenly there was my big brother. And I ran up to him, and I started yelling, "Run, run, here comes the nigger!" And he hit me. Then he did something worse - he told me what a nigger was. And that I was it.

    • Crazy credits
      Film disclaimer: 'This film has not been made with the consent or cooperation of the Federal Board of Regulations (F.B.R.) or the Central Enquires Agency (C.E.A.). Any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental, and so forth and so on.
    • Alternate versions
      Due to a copyright dispute, all recent video and laserdisc releases omit a sequence featuring songs by Barry McGuire on the soundtrack.
    • Connections
      Featured in Film Review: International Films (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Inner Manipulations
      Composed by Barry McGuire and Paul Potash

      Sung by Barry McGuire

      (A Dunhill Records Artist)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 8, 1969 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • The President's Analyst
    • Filming locations
      • Washington, District of Columbia, USA
    • Production company
      • Panpiper Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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