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The Ugly American

Marlon Brando in The Ugly American (1963)

An ambitious American scholar becomes the ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war is brewing. An ambitious American scholar becomes the ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war is brewing. An ambitious American scholar becomes the ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war is brewing.

  • George Englund
  • William J. Lederer
  • Eugene Burdick
  • Stewart Stern
  • Marlon Brando
  • Sandra Church
  • 32 User reviews
  • 25 Critic reviews
  • 1 win & 3 nominations

The Ugly American

  • Ambassador Harrison Carter MacWhite

Eiji Okada

  • Marion MacWhite

Pat Hingle

  • Homer Atkins

Arthur Hill

  • Emma Atkins
  • Prime Minister Kwen Sai

Judson Pratt

  • Rachani, Deong's Wife

Judson Laire

  • Senator Brenner

Philip Ober

  • Ambassador Sears
  • Sawad, Deong's Assistant

Carl Benton Reid

  • Senator at Confirmation Hearing

Simon Scott

  • Late Arrival at Meeting
  • (as John Day)
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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The Appaloosa

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  • Trivia One key role, that of the Sarkhanese Prime Minister, was filled quite capably by a non-professional, Kukrit Pramoj , a prominent Thai newspaper publisher, former Thai Finance Minister, and, as fate would have it, future Prime Minister (1975-76). Speaking in Bangkok the day after its world premiere, the film's star, Marlon Brando , brought forth gasps by labeling his precocious co-star a "dissembler, liar and thief." Before shock could turn to indignation, Brando, straight face intact, quickly broke the stunned silence. "Mr. Kukrit told me he couldn't act, and then proceeded to prove he could act and, in fact, acted me off the screen. He stole the whole show."
  • Goofs As it is landing, the TWA plane is a Convair 880. When it arrives at the gate for deplaning, it has turned into a Boeing 707.

Ambassador Harrison Carter MacWhite : I'd like to interrupt, eh, gentlemen, to point out that the only thing that is clear so far is that there's no clarity at all. So if you don't mind, we'll stop this squabbling and I'll present you with some facts. About three hours ago, there were several people trampled to death, a policeman was pistol-whipped until his face looked like raspberry jam, and the man who represents the person of the president of United States was almost killed, along with his wife, and other members of his party. Now I- I don't mind telling you that I was afraid out there this afternoon, but I didn't know what fear was until this meeting got started. You gentlemen have given me something to think about. Now, here's something for you. Confusion, ignorance, and indifference will cease as of this moment. Information about everything that happens in Sarkhan will kept up to date and that's seven days a week. That's seven days a week gentleman! And Sundays included, and I don't give a damn where you live! And the next time that there are six thousand people that begin a riot, or six people, without this embassy being aware of it, those responsible will be on the first plane out of here with my personal recommendation that they be dropped from the foreign service!

  • Connections Featured in Brando (2007)
  • Soundtracks America the Beautiful (uncredited) Music by Samuel A. Ward and lyrics by Katharine Lee Bates Heard when the Ambassador arrives and over the closing credits

User reviews 32

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  • Mar 23, 2022
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  • Marlon Brando---Did He Have a Female Stand-in?
  • August 1, 1963 (Mexico)
  • United States
  • Der häßliche Amerikaner
  • Bangkok, Thailand (Chulalongkorn University)
  • Universal International Pictures (UI)
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro

Technical specs

  • Runtime 2 hours

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The Ugly American Reviews

ugly american movie review

For those who enjoyed the book, this movie will be a big disappointment. For those who didn't read the book, well, you might enjoy it.

Full Review | Jan 13, 2021

ugly american movie review

Brando is excellent, as is Okada (notwithstanding his Japanese ethnicity) as the two old friends find themselves on opposing political sides - both right, both wrong

Full Review | Dec 20, 2008

ugly american movie review

Too talky, conventional, vague and ponderous.

Full Review | Original Score: C+ | May 11, 2007

ugly american movie review

Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Aug 17, 2006

ugly american movie review

Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Jun 30, 2005

Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Aug 22, 2003

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The Ugly American

Some of the ambiguities, hypocrisies and perplexities of cold war politics are observed, dramatized and, to a degree, analyzed in The Ugly American. It is a thought-provoking but uneven screen translation taken from, but not in a literal sense based upon, the popular novel by William J. Lederer and Eugene Burdick.

By Variety Staff

Variety Staff

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Focal figure of the story is an American ambassador (Marlon Brando) to a Southeast Asian nation who, after jumping to conclusions in the course of dealing with an uprising of the natives of that country against the existing regime and what they interpret as Yankee imperialism comes to understand that there is more to modern political revolution than meets the casual or jaundiced bystander’s eye. As a result of his experience, he senses that Americans ‘can’t hope to win the cold war unless we remember what we’re for as well as what we’re against’.

Popular on Variety

Although skillfully and often explosively directed by George Englund and well played by Brando and others in the cast, the film tends to be overly talkative and lethargic in certain areas, vague and confusing in others. Probably the most jarring single flaw is the failure to clarify the exact nature of events during the ultimate upheaval.

Brando’s performance is a towering one; restrained, intelligent and always masculine. Japanese actor Eiji Okada of Hiroshima, mon amour renown, makes a strong impression.

Mass riot scene near the outset of the picture is frighteningly realistic. Art direction is outstanding, with a convincing replica of a Southeast Asian village on the Universal backlot.

  • Production: Universal. Director George Englund; Producer George Englund; Screenplay Stewart Stern; Camera Clifford Stine; Editor Ted J. Kent; Music Frank Skinner; Art Director Alexander Golitzen, Alfred Sweeney
  • Crew: (Color) Available on VHS. Extract of a review from 1963. Running time: 120 MIN.
  • With: Marlon Brando Eiji Okada Sandra Church Arthur Hill Pat Hingle Jocelyn Brando

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Film review – The Ugly American (1963)

ugly american movie review

The Ugly American , a 1958 novel by William J. Lederer and Eugene Burdick, sold so well Hollywood was obliged to buy the rights and make a big-release movie out of it – though the book is as much a fictionalised essay on the failings of US foreign policy in the late Eisenhower era as it is an actual story.  Several key real-world factors (eg: Castro’s takeover in Cuba) had changed by the time the film came out in 1963.

ugly american movie review

The book is primarily set in the representative but fictional South East Asian country of Sarkhan, but has chapters about real places like Burma, Vietnam and Cambodia, and sets out to show how the Cold War with the communist bloc was being lost by glad-handing, insular pork barrel American diplomats with no idea about or real interest in the lives of the foreigners they are ostensibly helping, while also giving examples of smaller-scale, mostly private enterprise projects run by American altruists that have a chance of succeeding.  The film simplifies things, concentrates the action in strife-torn Sarkhan where a corrupt regime is building ‘Freedom Road’ through the jungle with American aid (of course, only government officials and Americans have motor vehicles) and the opposition movement, rallying against the ‘military road’, is being infiltrated by Soviet-backed communists.

ugly american movie review

The film ramps up the book’s underlying message that communists are awfully sneaky, making its Americans well-intentioned naifs rather than greedy clods.  While offering an acute analysis of trends which would lead to fiascos like Vietnam (not to mention Iraq and Afghanistan), it doesn’t acknowledge that by 1963 America was as ready as the reds to get hands dirty – whether by backing counter-revolutionaries or bluntly sending in the troops to oppose revolutionary movements like the one headed in the film by Sarkhanese liberation hero Deong (Eiji Okada).

ugly american movie review

Directed lumpily by George Englund – producer of oddities like The World, the Flesh and the Devil and Terrorist on Trial and director also of the ‘acid Western’ Zachariah – The Ugly American has a lot of solid, interesting content, but is dramatically lopsided.  A few sequences, mostly those shot in Thailand, are remarkable: an opening coup as communists murder an American engineer working on the Freedom Road project, then make it seem as if he has drunkenly driven a heavy lorry over an incline and ploughed into a local workman who becomes a martyr; a mass demonstration at the airport which gets out of hand as an angry mob besieges and batters a car containing the new US ambassador Harrison MacWhite (Marlon Brando) and his wife (Sandra Church) as he arrives in the country (something similar happened to Vice President Nixon in South America).

ugly american movie review

However, these are outweighed by long scenes in which people talk exaggeratedly at each other – at the end of one exchange between former wartime friends Deong and MacWhite, the Ambassador regrets that they have both turned into ‘political cartoons’ spouting slogans at each other.  This moment of clarity that doesn’t excuse the fact that two world-class actors have just been absolutely terrible in an exchange of unspeakable lines.

ugly american movie review

The ugly American of the novel is an honest, homely engineer, here a minor figure (Pat Hingle, Commissioner Gordon in the Burton-Schumacher Batman films) who runs a rural clinic with his wife (Jocelyn Brando, Marlon’s sister).  In an unlikely scene, villagers form a human chain around the clinic to protect the couple from the murderous communists who have infiltrated and commandeered Deong’s revolution.  Of course, the term ‘ugly American’ has come to be identified with an ugliness of attitude rather than person, exemplified by jovial, know-nothing dolt Joe Bing (Judson Pratt) who replaces MacWilliams as Ambassador after the ‘failure’ of his mission.

ugly american movie review

Kukrit Pramoj, later the actual Prime Minister of Thailand, plays the Prime Minister of Sarkhan, a pro-American with his hand out who comes on like the unpopular tinpots successive US regimes have supported in all corners of the globe.  A key theme of the book is that Soviet diplomats and agitators have a major advantage because they all learn the local language, while Anglophone Americans abroad live in wealthy enclaves and hire servants – this, of course, is dropped in a movie which requires almost everyone to talk English all the time.  Okuda, a hot name after Hiroshima, Mon Amour , is crippled by having to perform in an uncongenial tongue, though Brando – in a role which might contextualise his reading of Colonel Kurtz in Apocalypse Now – see-saws between toffee-nosed twittery and powerhouse speech-making.

ugly american movie review

It ends with another cartoonish moment, which is admittedly effective – cutting away to a bland, affluent American living room as MacWhite delivers an impassioned speech about why America is losing the war of ideas and a bored representative Yank switching the television off.  Made before the Kennedy assassination (prefigured by a climax in which Deong’s supposed best disciple murders him so the communists can completely co-opt his nationalist movement) and US escalation in Vietnam (the Sarkhanese PM cannily ensnares MacWilliams into committing the US fleet lying off his country), this is for all its awkwardnesses a brave film.

ugly american movie review

A few years later, it would have been impossible to make: in 1965, Lederer and Burdick published a sequel, Sarkhan , in which the country slides further into a Vietnam-like war; Lederer reports Hollywood bidding for the rights ‘stopped abruptly when Washington hinted that if this novel were made into a motion picture, the industry might find it difficult to obtain export licenses.’  Of course, such measures weren’t necessary – like the modern audiences who preferred to see Transformers or Iron Man over In the Valley of Elah or Charlie Wilson’s War , 1963 crowds followed that middle-American TV viewer by not making The Ugly American a hit.  Even if it had outgrossed The Great Escape or Move Over, Darling , it probably wouldn’t have influenced Washington or affected the outcome of the Vietnam War – but the movie still earns a few plaudits for seeing the way the wind was blowing.

ugly american movie review

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The Ugly American (1963) Directed by George Englund

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The Ugly American

Film details, brief synopsis, cast & crew, george englund, marlon brando, sandra church, arthur hill, technical specs.

ugly american movie review

Harrison Carter MacWhite is appointed ambassador to the new nation of Sarkhan in Southeast Asia, despite objections from several members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. A former newsman, MacWhite is a longtime friend of Deong, revolutionary leader of the government opposition who led the struggle for his country's independence. MacWhite and his wife, Marion, arrive in Sarkhan and fight off a rioting crowd which greets them at the airport. MacWhite contacts Deong and tries to persuade him to end his opposition to Freedom Road, a U. S.-built highway which the rebel leader considers to be an example of Western imperialism. Deong refuses, mouthing propaganda, and MacWhite brands him a Communist and terminates their relationship. He then ignores the advice of Homer Atkins, supervising engineer of the road project, by suggesting to Prime Minister Kwen Sai that they shift the path of the road northward, thereby driving a wedge into the heart of the Communist stronghold. In return, MacWhite assures Kwen Sai of U. S. military support should there be intervention by foreign Communist troops. Deong learns of the plan, aligns himself with the local Communists, and leads a revolt. He succeeds in forcing Kwen Sai to admit defeat, but he is betrayed by the Communists when they bring in outside troops, take over the northern part of the country, and then assassinate him. Before dying, he urges his followers to form a coalition with Kwen Sai and the local government. Realizing that despite his good intentions he has bungled his assignment, MacWhite resigns from his post. He explains in an interview with the press that to help the countries of Southeast Asia, Americans must understand their internal problems before inflicting a way of life upon them. As his words are carried to the United States by television, an uninterested viewer switches off his set.

ugly american movie review

Jocelyn Brando

Kukrit pramoj.

ugly american movie review

Judson Pratt

George shibata, judson laire.

ugly american movie review

Philip Ober

Yee tak yip, stefan schnabel, pock rock ann.

ugly american movie review

Carl Benton Reid

Simon scott, frances helm.

ugly american movie review

Leon Lontoc

Sasidhorn bunnag, oliver emert, robert forrest, larry germain, joseph gershenson, bill gilmore, alexander golitzen, marshall green, ted j. kent, edward muhl, terence nelson, rosemary odell, frank skinner, stewart stern, clifford stine, alfred sweeney, waldon o. watson, james welch, bud westmore.

Location scenes filmed in Thailand.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Spring May 5, 1963

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The Ugly American

Where to watch

The ugly american.

Directed by George Englund

The most explosive adventure of our time!

An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace. Despite his knowledge, once he's there, MacWhite sees only a dichotomy between the U.S. and Communism. He can't accept that anti-American sentiment might be a longing for self-determination and nationalism. So, he breaks from his friend Deong, a local opposition leader, ignores a foreman's advice about slowing the building of a road, and tries to muscle ahead. What price must the country and his friends pay for him to get some sense?

Marlon Brando Eiji Okada Sandra Church Pat Hingle Arthur Hill Jocelyn Brando Reiko Sato Kukrit Pramoj Judson Pratt George Shibata Philip Ober Carl Benton Reid Judson Laire Yee Tak Yip Frances Helm James Yagi John Daheim Leon Lontoc Bill Stout Stefan Schnabel Simon Scott

Director Director

George Englund

Producer Producer

Writer writer.

Stewart Stern

Original Writers Original Writers

Eugene Burdick William J. Lederer

Editor Editor

Ted J. Kent

Cinematography Cinematography

Clifford Stine

Stunts Stunts

Paul Baxley John Daheim Carol Daniels Larry Duran George Robotham

Composer Composer

Frank Skinner

Universal International Pictures

Releases by Date

02 apr 1963, 09 aug 1963, releases by country.

  • Theatrical 16
  • Theatrical NR Certificate #20329

115 mins   More at IMDb TMDb Report this page

Popular reviews

kmeaston

Review by kmeaston ★★½ 2

About as gripping as an issue of Foreign Policy magazine.

📀 Cammmalot 📀

Review by 📀 Cammmalot 📀 ★★★

Cinematic Time Capsule 1963 Marathon - Film #14

”If we’re not on the first flight outta here, there’s gonna be hell to pay!”

Can you imagine landing a film role and then finding out that you’ll have to perform in an eight minute drunken debate with Marlon Brando?

I don’t care who you are, that’d scare the hell out of anyone.

And speaking of terrifying…

BONUS POINTS to that stuntman who was in the opening truck crash. I rewound it three times and then examined it frame for frame and I still don’t believe it. What kind of country do we live in that stuntwork like this isn’t considered a major Oscar-worthy category?

”I think you’re a dangerously misinformed man with a sinister notion about what the United States stands for”

Cinematic Time Capsule - 1963 Ranked

Quiller

Review by Quiller ★★★ 2

“If you want to prove to him how right you are, you’re welcome to try.”

Eugene Burdick and William Lederer’s The Ugly American  (1958) is one of those rare novels that directly — and significantly — influenced real-world politics. Its contention that the United States was on the verge of losing the Cold War due to its diplomats’ arrogance and unwillingness to understand Third-World countries on those countries’ own terms had a massive impact on politicians of the era. John F. Kennedy’s promise in his inaugural address that his approach to foreign policy would be to “pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of…

Stephen M

Review by Stephen M ★★★½ 4

I struggled over my rating here. I found this film maddening in that it at first seems to challenge and expose the real motives of American foreign policy during the Cold War. But then it winds up reinforcing a message about the evils of global Communism near the end.

Set in a fictional Southeast Asian country Sarkhan, which is clearly a stand-in for Vietnam, Marlon Brando plays MacWhite, the new Ambassador. The country is riven with conflict, with the royal government allied with the US who sees it as a bulwark against encroaching Communism and a growing internal rebellion against reliance of US money and goals. A lot of the conflict centers on a highway the US is constructing called…

Michael_Elliott

Review by Michael_Elliott ★★½

Marlon Brando was coming off the disaster of MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY when he decided to make this political thriller. The film would get mixed reviews but it was a disaster at the box office and it was pretty much the start of the end of Brando's early career.

There are all sorts of problems with this film but the biggest is that the story just isn't that interesting. You've got Brando playing an ambassador to an Asian country, which is about to be in the middle of a Civil War. His former best friend (Eiji Okada) is leading the rebels and the ambassador feels he can control everything.

This is a very talkative film and that's not necessarily good…

Fint

Review by Fint ★★★ 2

Brando sweats! Marlon has put as much attention to the droplets on his brow and the damp stains on his shirts as to his acting in this Saigon-in-all-but-name political drama. Actually, mentioning those whiffs of humidity is unfair to his performance which has flashes of his habitual intensity. The problem is him acting opposite performers who don’t approach his talent. It’s like Gulliver among the Lilliputians. 

All the way through, I was unsure if The Ugly American  was going to defend or condemn Vietnam-style intervention. Brando’s Ambassador character certainly spouts some ugly ideology but the film seems critical of his once friend, now opponent, whom he brands a Communist. There is one long dialogue scene between the two which could have…

Tyler MacGregor

Review by Tyler MacGregor ★★★ 1

This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.

There’s a stunt pulled off about 5 minutes in that actually made me jump out of my seat and yell “HOLY SHIT." I can’t even begin to fathom how they pulled it off without actually killing a man. That’s a feeling I rarely, rarely feel watching movies today. Unfortunately the film never quite reached that level of hype from me again. I credit it for being very blunt in what it had to say about American foreign policy during a very tumultuous point in history, but it’s storytelling is just so plain and unremarkable. Scene after scene of characters discussing plot and themes with little variation or nuance. None of the actors are really bad, but Marlon Brando is the…

Xebeche

Review by Xebeche ★★★½

This movie has absolutely no problem announcing that force-fed democracy abroad is just a smokescreen for financial and militaristic gain. For a movie that was made when the Cold War was at a fever pitch, The Ugly American is admirably blunt and decidedly un-American (by McCarthy's standards). One scene shows a drunken debate between our two leads, Marlon Brando and Eiji Okada, who play old friends torn apart by the interests of the parties they represent. Their argument is an impassioned deconstruction of American naivety, communist paranoia, and every other facet of their competing ideals. The movie has a few of the trappings of American exceptionalism, there's not much of an emotional throughline, and the "prestige picture" efforts are underwhelming, but it exhibits so much empathy and finger-wagging that it has a special "time and place" quality that's worthy of preservation.

Scavenger Hunt 58 3/31

Marie

Review by Marie

entering TCM fugue state. totally locked in. did I dream an entirely new Brando movie. or did I just lose 2 hours on a slightly limp foreign-policy not-quite-critique not-quite-epic that he was sleepwalking through, as an actor. if so it makes sense that I would include his hot moustache from this era

Justin Decloux

Review by Justin Decloux ★★★

A movie about the Vietnam war, starring Marlon Brandon, directed by the man behind the weirdo western ZACHARIA!?

Ah, it's too good to be true.

A respectable, but straight-faced, tale about how a country's people AREN'T COMMUNISTS, but just want to have the same freedom the good old US of A has. NOT COMMUNISTS. Also, Americans in power are dumb and wrong. Nothing new here folks. Move along.

Gabe Rodríguez

Review by Gabe Rodríguez ★★★★½

"Pretty soon, this country, Sarkhan, is going to end up just the way Cuba did." "Cuba? Cuba is what you've made it."

THE UGLY AMERICAN is a film I’ve always felt is criminally underrated, to the point that I think it should have at least received a Best Picture nomination for 1963. It’s a very in-depth (for its time) look at the failures of US diplomacy.

The film is based on a 1958 novel that caused a lot of political scandal when published; in fact, the Peace Corps was established by the Kennedy administration partly as a result of the book. Though, from what I’ve read, the film is a very loose adaptation.

Harrison MacWhite (Marlon Brando) is made the…

Sed. Dine

Review by Sed. Dine ★★★★

The ugliness of being so underrated ...

Like other cinematic oddities as "A Face in the Crowd" or "Johnny Guitar", "The Ugly American" invites for several questionings. Why didn't the film get much more recognition? Why did it fail to reach the same status as a lesser movie like "The Sound of Music"? Why even those who pretend to be movie fans tend to overlook it or didn't even hear about the title? Is it because it's a Marlon Brando picture that is not from the 50's or the 70's? Is it the title? The unknown director: who ever heard of George Englund anyway? The exotic setting that makes it look like another mindless escapist movie?

In fact, the only…

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Marlon Brando (Ambassador Harrison Carter MacWhite) Eiji Okada (Deong) Sandra Church (Marion MacWhite) Pat Hingle (Homer Atkins) Arthur Hill (Grainger) Jocelyn Brando (Emma Atkins) Kukrit Pramoj (Prime Minister Kwen Sai) Judson Pratt (Joe Bing) Reiko Sato (Rachani, Deong's Wife) George Shibata (Munsang)

George Englund

An ambitious American scholar becomes the ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war is brewing.

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Story of an ambassador caught in the political turmoil of an Asian country. Good Marlon Brando performance, and Stewart Stern's script faces issues squarely. Deong: Eiji Okada. Marion: Sandra Church. Homer: Pat Hingle. Grainger: Arthur Hill. Emma: Jocelyn Brando. Kwen Sai: Kukrit Pramoj.

An obviously sincere but nonetheless simplistic critique of American foreign policy in Southeast Asia, THE UGLY AMERICAN quickly squanders whatever interest it may hold due to its didactic script and dull direction. Set in the fictional Asian nation of Sarkhan, the film follows American ambassador Harrison Carter MacWhite (a somewhat silly-looking Marlon Brando, sporting the thinnest of mustaches), a powerful newspaper publisher who is sent to Sarkhan to oversee the construction of the "Freedom Road," an international highway financed by the US. Sarkhan, however, is engulfed in civil war, and construction of the road is constantly threatened by communist rebels. MacWhite, who has trouble understanding the aims of the communists, is shocked to discover that his former comrade-in-arms, Deong (Eiji Okada), is now the leader of the rebels. Through his association with Deong, MacWhite becomes aware of the reality of "Yankee imperialism" and begins to realize that the US "can't hope to win the Cold War unless we remember what we're for as well as what we're against." Although well-intentioned, THE UGLY AMERICAN simply isn't a very good film. Part of the problem is that producer-director George Englund, a friend of star Brando, isn't much of a director, and as a result the film is static and ponderous. Brando once again turns in an interesting performance, but as demonstrated in many of his films of this period, one good performance does not a good film make. Brando's costar, Japanese actor Eiji Okada, is best known for his performance in Alain Resnais' HIROSHIMA, MON AMOUR (1959).

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Classic, landmark films in cinematic history.

The Ugly American (1963)

The Ugly American movie storyline. An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace. Despite his knowledge, once he’s there, MacWhite sees only a dichotomy between the U.S. and Communism.

He can’t accept that anti-American sentiment might be a longing for self-determination and nationalism. So, he breaks from his friend Deong, a local opposition leader, ignores a foreman’s advice about slowing the building of a road, and tries to muscle ahead. What price must the country and his friends pay for him to get some sense?

The Ugly American is a 1963 American adventure film directed by George Englund, written by Stewart Stern, and starring Marlon Brando, Sandra Church, Eiji Okada, Pat Hingle, Judson Pratt and Arthur Hill. It is based on the 1958 novel The Ugly American by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer. The film was released on April 2, 1963, by Universal Pictures.

Film Review for The Ugly American

Some of the ambiguities, hypocrisies and perplexities of cold war politics are observed, dramatized and, to a degree, analyzed in The Ugly American. It is a thought-provoking but uneven screen translation taken from, but not in a literal sense based upon, the popular novel by William J. Lederer and Eugene Burdick.

Focal figure of the story is an American ambassador (Marlon Brando) to a Southeast Asian nation who, after jumping to conclusions in the course of dealing with an uprising of the natives of that country against the existing regime and what they interpret as Yankee imperialism comes to understand that there is more to modern political revolution than meets the casual or jaundiced bystander’s eye. As a result of his experience, he senses that Americans ‘can’t hope to win the cold war unless we remember what we’re for as well as what we’re against’.

Although skillfully and often explosively directed by George Englund and well played by Brando and others in the cast, the film tends to be overly talkative and lethargic in certain areas, vague and confusing in others. Probably the most jarring single flaw is the failure to clarify the exact nature of events during the ultimate upheaval.

Brando’s performance is a towering one; restrained, intelligent and always masculine. Japanese actor Eiji Okada of Hiroshima, mon amour renown, makes a strong impression. Mass riot scene near the outset of the picture is frighteningly realistic. Art direction is outstanding, with a convincing replica of a Southeast Asian village on the Universal backlot.

Highly controversial, filming in Thailand was okayed only after intervention from President John F. Kennedy. Kukrit Pramoj, who plays Kwen Sai, the prime minister of fictional Sarkhan and served as the film’s technical consultant, later went on to become Thailand’s real-life premier. These bits of trivia provide some additional context for this cold war drama (set in 1960) in which Marlon Brando plays the ugly American of the title, as Ambassador MacWhite to Sarkhan – a fictional country that could pass for any one of a number of real Asian nations.

It’s been 15 years since MacWhite was last in Sarkhan, and his old friend Deong (Eiji Okada) was and is an influential figure. But now, to MacWhite’s bitter disappointment, Deong seems to have shifted his political stance and resents what he sees as America’s imperialist moves. MacWhite sees things differently; he sees America helping to keep Communism out of Sarkhan … The themes of American foreign policy in Asia are crucial to the plot, but since the film is meant to be mass entertainment, the detail is less than comprehensive and the result is a political thriller in an exotic setting. And with honourable intent. It’s relevance is ongoing.

Brando is excellent, as is Okada (notwithstanding his Japanese ethnicity) as the two old friends find themselves on opposing political sides – both right, both wrong. Also notable is Sandra Church as Mrs MacWhite, and the entire supporting cast.

Directed by: George Englund Starring: Marlon Brando, Eiji Okada, Sandra Church, Pat Hingle, Arthur Hill, Jocelyn Brando, Kukrit Pramoj, Judson Pratt, Reiko Sato, George Shibata, Judson Laire, Philip Ober Screenplay by: Stewart Stern Production Design by: Marshall Green Cinematography by: Clifford Stine Film Editing by: Ted J. Kent Costume Design by: Rosemary Odell Set Decoration by: Oliver Emert Art Direction by: Alexander Golitzen, Alfred Sweeney Music by: Frank Skinner MPAA Rating: None. Distributed by: Universal Pictures Release Date: April 2, 1963

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The Ugly American Blu-ray Review

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  • August 8, 2019

An Examination of National Self

A number of stark images from The Ugly American stand out, doubly so in retrospect. Consider The Ugly American came out in 1963, at the dawn of the United State’s involvement in Vietnam. Suddenly, an image of the American flag and that of a fictional Asian nation (Sarkhan) situated side-by-side, but with dead bodies visible in the space between is outright eerie. Foreshadowing, but for the real world and the war’s eventual quagmire.

Ugly American warned the country – not what or what not to do, rather to approach cautiously. Remembering Korea’s ferocity against totalitarianism and then recent divisiveness of McCarthyism, Marlon Brando stars as the newly elected Ambassador to Sarkhan. Fears of communism force him to take posture, rejecting friends and inciting riots over American brow-beating. It’s sensational political cinema.

Bull-headed Brando sees only the economics and capitalism, not the consequences of power

The script’s merciless honesty is an aberration, coming from a western studio. During a late night visit, Brando heatedly exchanges dialog with a Sarkhan friend, played by Japan’s great Eiji Okada in his only western role. Okada plays a rebel leader, standing for his country as America installs a “Freedom Road” on his land. Bull-headed Brando sees only the economics and capitalism, not the consequences of power. Okada laments, “Your democracy is a fraud. It’s fair to white people only,” a chilling, commanding line with enough power to transcend decades.

Credit a number of films for exposing lies when breaking free of Hollywood’s post-WWII propaganda; the ‘60s produced many, stepping into the counter-culture that came to define a tumultuous decade. Ugly American is one of them. This doesn’t come from a veteran or every man; Brando demands patriotism from a place of authority. Eventually, whittled down emotionally, Brando turns into an apologetic, empathetic figure who understands his country’s egregious mistakes.

With its final frames, Ugly American cuts from Sarkhan to an average living room in the U.S. Brando gives a speech over airwaves, critical of his own actions as much as those perpetrated by the government he represents. Before his final words, the TV is turned off; Brando was about to suggest fault for his nationalist policies and blame the U.S. for inciting war rather than stopping it. How telling to see the TV image shrink to black at that moment. Admitting fault, hearing truth – both continue to evade America, true for Vietnam, then later, the Iraq war founded on a falsehood. National ego and feelings of superiority implant at birth. Brando plays one of the few willing to admit that failing.

ugly american movie review

Mill Creek brings this Eastman color production to Blu-ray in a fair presentation, and from the looks of it, pulled an older SD master. Resolution simply isn’t here to suggest anything near HD. It’s persistently soft with meager grain washed out by the lack of clarity. Ugly American looks like a digital presentation rather than projected film. The so-so print wavers in terms of damage and dirt; both persist, if not to any distracting tier.

Minimal detail is the result, sagging in definition. Scenery lacks the potency it deserves, although the encode appears up to handling this material. A few close-ups nearly bring out facial detail. Then, it’s lost in the haze of sub-par mastering.

It’s colorful at least. Shots from Thailand locations push saturation high. Western fashion pulls superb density from pastel blues and reds, with high brightness all around. Flesh tones and primaries excel. That’s helped by contrast, perky and pure with stable (if unremarkable) shadows.

Other than a messy action scene with coarse highs and lows, the DTS-HD track keeps integrity. The score holds back, rarely used, but pure for its age.

In some wider rooms with echoes, dialog fidelity lessens. Still, the lines stay audible.

Just a trailer.

Full disclosure : This Blu-ray was provided to us for review. This has not affected the editorial process. For information on how we handle review material, please visit our about us page to learn more.

The Ugly American

Marlon Brando stars in an eerily predictive takedown of foreign intervention just prior to the U.S. involvement in Vietnam via The Ugly American .

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The Ugly American

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Still ‘Ugly’ After All These Years

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By Michael Meyer

  • July 10, 2009

In the annals of misunderstood titles, a special place belongs to William J. Lederer and Eugene Burdick’s novel “The Ugly American.” Today, the phrase is shorthand for our compatriots who wear tube tops to the Vatican or shout for Big Macs in Beijing. But as summer vacation season begins (at least for those who can still afford it), it’s worth recalling that the impolitic travelers in “The Ugly American” aren’t drunken backpackers or seniors sporting black socks, but the so-called educated elite of the diplomatic corps, whose insensitivity to local language and customs prompts observations like this:

“The simple fact is, Mr. Ambassador, that average Americans, in their natural state, if you will excuse the phrase, are the best ambassadors a country can have,” a Filipino minister tells an American official. “They are not suspicious, they are eager to share their skills, they are generous. But something happens to most Americans when they go abroad. Many of them are not average . . . they are second-raters.”

Published in 1958, the book is often confused with another cold-war-era novel set in Southeast Asia, “The Quiet American,” which appeared in 1955. Yet “The Ugly American,” which depicted the struggle against insurgent Communism in the fictional nation of Sarkhan, was the bigger success, spending 76 weeks on the best-seller list and selling roughly five million copies. Writing in the Book Review, the veteran correspondent Robert Trumbull called it a “devastating indictment of American policy” and a “source of insight into the actual, day-by-day byplay of present titanic political struggle for Asia.”

The novel is a series of linked sketches of real people that Lederer, a Navy captain who served as special assistant to the commander in chief of United States forces in the Pacific and Asian theater, and Burdick, a political scientist, encountered overseas during the buildup to Vietnam. The book was originally commissioned by W. W. Norton as nonfiction, but an editor suggested it might be more effective as a novel. “What we have written is not just an angry dream,” the authors note in the introduction, “but rather the rendering of fact into fiction.” Yet the book’s enduring resonance may say less about its literary merits than about its failure to change American attitudes. Today, as the battle for hearts and minds has shifted to the Middle East, we still can’t speak Sarkhanese.

In “The Ugly American,” Ambassador “Lucky” Lou Sears stews in his luxurious compound in the capital, fuming over his Soviet counterpart’s latest checkmate. “The American ambassador is a jewel,” the Soviet diplomat — who is fluent in the local language, customs and religion — cables Moscow. “He keeps his people tied up with meetings, social events, and greeting and briefing the scores of senators, congressmen, generals, admirals, under secretaries of state and defense, and so on, who come pouring through here to ‘look for themselves.’ ” Sears undermines a Wisconsin dairyman’s self-started project to raise nutrition levels in the Sarkhan country­side, thwarts a band of anti-Communist irregulars formed by a militant Massachusetts priest, and orchestrates the dismissal of his more capable successor, who fails to convince Washington of an impending coup.

The Ugly American of the title is not one of these bunglers, but the book’s hero, a millionaire engineer named Homer Atkins, whose calloused and grease-blackened hands “always reminded him that he was an ugly man.” Homer is the very model of the enlightened ambassador (lowercase) the authors thought America should send into the world. He and his wife become a proto-Peace Corps couple, homesteading in an earthen-floored hut and collaborating with villagers on inventions like a bicycle-powered irrigation pump. Homer’s voice sounds surprisingly contemporary, as if he’s channeling “Dead Aid,” Dambisa Moyo’s recent polemic against current global development practices. “Whenever you give a man something for nothing,” Homer warns, “the first person he comes to dislike is you.”

“Our aim is not to embarrass individuals,” the authors declared in their introduction, “but to stimulate thought — and, we hope, action.” One person it inspired was John F. Kennedy, who mailed a copy of “The Ugly American” to each of his Senate colleagues. The book’s epilogue argues for the creation of “a small force of well-trained, well-chosen, hard-working and dedicated professionals” fluent in the local language — not unlike the Peace Corps, which Kennedy proposed in 1960.

For the earliest volunteers, “The Ugly American” provided a sort of how-not-to-travel guide. “When I was in college in the late ’50s, everyone was reading ‘The Organization Man,’ and plotting ways to get ahead in corporate life,” John Coyne, a co-founder of the unofficial Web site Peace Corps Worldwide, said in an e-mail message. “But some of us were reading ‘The Ugly American’ instead.”

Coyne left for Ethiopia in 1962. The following year, Paul Theroux arrived as a volunteer in Malawi. “ ‘The Ugly American’ was well known even by people who hadn’t read it,” Theroux said via text message while hiking in Portugal. “Because of the book, the Peace Corps was at pains to teach volunteers the host-country language. I was able to speak Chichewa well enough to hold lively conversations the day I arrived.”

By the time I was sent to China as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1995, “ugly American” was just a catchphrase, though China’s past suspicions of this supposed imperialist tool meant that officially I was not in the Peace Corps at all, but a “U.S.-China Friendship Volunteer.” I got intensive language training, yet some things had not changed since Lederer and Burdick’s era. In the novel, the American ambassador is incensed by an editorial cartoon showing him leading a Sarkhanese on a leash to a billboard for Coca-Cola. During my first month in China, a skeptical American diplomat said my real assignment was to “create future customers for Pepsi.” (Mission accomplished!)

But the book’s most enduring legacy is its argument that “we spend billions on the wrong aid projects while overlooking the almost costless and far more helpful ones,” which could serve as an unwieldy subtitle to the books of Rory Stewart, who chronicled his solo walk across war-torn Afghanistan in “The Places in Between” and described his year as a deputy provincial governor in Iraq under the British administration in “The Prince of the Marshes.” Stewart criticizes well-meaning Western policy makers who arrive in country with notions of “capacity building” and “democratization” but little local knowledge and even less patience.

“Many people don’t want to sit with a village leader in a tent and eat with their hands,” Stewart said by phone from Cambridge, Mass., where he is the director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School. “It’s much easier to announce an initiative to ‘stabilize Afghanistan.’ There’s a lack of realism.”

A half century after “The Ugly American,” the United States has another young president urging us to connect with the wider world, only this time he has lived in it. “I know that the stereotypes of the United States are out there,” Barack Obama recently told university students in Istanbul. “And I know that many of them are informed not by direct exchange or dialogue, but by television shows and movies and misinformation.”

Lederer and Burdick would most likely respond that no matter how cosmopolitan a superpower’s leadership, foreign opinion is also informed by its actions, or lack thereof. Obama’s 2010 budget proposes increasing the Peace Corps’s financing by 10 percent, to $373 million, though that will not come close to covering his proposal to double the number of volunteers to roughly 16,000, close to the 1965 peak. As Mark Gearan, a former Peace Corps director, lamented to The Boston Globe, “We spend more on the military marching bands.”

The Peace Corps is not a panacea, but when it comes to projecting America’s values abroad, its spirit comes closest to what the fictional Homer Atkins advocated decades before that global symbol of a different kind of ugly Americanism, Homer Simpson, told his children: “You tried your best and you failed miserably. The lesson is, never try.”

Michael Meyer’s book, “The Last Days of Old Beijing: Life in the Vanishing Backstreets of a City Transformed,” was recently published in paperback.

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Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews

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UGLY AMERICAN, THE

  • Post author: eenableadmin
  • Post published: August 5, 2019
  • Post category: Uncategorized

(director: George Englund; screenwriters: Stewart Stern/based on the novel by Eugene Burdick and William J. Lederer; cinematographer: Clifford Stine; editor: Ted J. Kent; music: Frank Skinner; cast: Marlon Brando (Harrison Carter MacWhite), Eiji Okada (Deong), Pat Hingle (Homer Atkins), Sandra Church (Marion MacWhite), Jocelyn Brando (Emma Atkins), Arthur Hill (Grainger), Judson Laire (Senator Brenner), Kukrit Pramoj (Prime Minister Kwen Sai); Runtime: 121; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: George Englund; Universal; 1963)

“Too talky, conventional, vague and ponderous.”

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

Better known as a TV director, George Englund (“Signpost to Murder”), does only a fair job as he helms this uneven muted political drama, that never quite spells out the hard lessons the best-selling book it was based on said about U.S. foreign policy in Asia; it’s loosely based on the novel by Eugene Burdick and William J. Lederer, and is written by Stewart Stern.

It’s set in 1960 in the mythical southeast Asian nation of Sarkhan (most resembles Vietnam), a monarchy with an unstable democracy that’s supported by American aid and arms against Communist advances from the north. Ex-journalist Harrison Carter MacWhite (Marlon Brando) is appointed the new ambassador to the strife-torn country. His arrival causes a bloody anti-American riot at the airport, which has him chew out his staff for being uninformed. MacWhite’s old rice farmer friend from WWII days, Deong (Eiji Okada, Japanese star of Hiroshima, Mon Amour), is now a high-profile political activist who wants the Yankees to go home, and is suspected by many in Washington of being a Communist. Deong’s opposition does not suit MacWhite who endorses his country’s plan to build a ‘Freedom Road’ to the country’s Northern border, which is an important road into the country’s inaccessible interior. The American enemies, which are made up of many different groups, claim it will extend the American influence in the country, and will be used only to support a military effort against the commies in the north.

Their reunion sours over this disagreement, as Deong sides with those who want to see the American-supported regime in the south topple. Kukrit Pramoj plays the calculating Prime Minister in the south. Mr. Pramoj, who doubled as adviser on this project, served as a former Minister of Finance in Thailand and later went on to become Thailand’s real-life premier.

In its liberal message, which is often muddled and diluted, the film offers its take on the ambiguities and problems over cold war politics. It’s well acted, especially by a likable Brando as the ‘ugly American’ who is blinded by his arrogance and gullibility; but it’s still too talky, conventional, vague and ponderous to be more than a modest drama.

ugly american movie review

REVIEWED ON 5/11/2007 GRADE: C+

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An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace. Despite his knowledge, once he's there, MacWhite sees only a dichotomy between the U.S. and Communism. He can't accept that anti-American sentiment might be a longing for self-determination and nationalism. So, he breaks from his friend Deong, a local opposition leader, ignores a foreman's advice about slowing the building of a road, and tries to muscle ahead. What price must the country and his friends pay for him to get some sense?

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An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace. Despite his knowledge, once he's there, MacWhite sees only a dichotomy between the U.S. and Communism. He can't accept that anti-American sentiment might be a longing for self-determination and nationalism. So, he breaks from his friend Deong, a local opposition leader, ignores a foreman's advice about slowing the building of a road, and tries to muscle ahead. What price must the country and his friends pay for him to get some sense?

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April 2, 1963,

George Englund

Marlon Brando, Eiji Okada, Sandra Church, Pat Hingle, Arthur Hill, Jocelyn Brando

Drama, Thriller

ugly american movie review

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The Ugly American (1963) Stream and Watch Online

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Want to behold the glory that is ' The Ugly American ' on your TV, phone, or tablet? Discovering a streaming service to buy, rent, download, or watch the George Englund-directed movie via subscription can be confusing, so we here at Moviefone want to take the pressure off. Read on for a listing of streaming and cable services - including rental, purchase, and subscription alternatives - along with the availability of 'The Ugly American' on each platform when they are available. Now, before we get into all the details of how you can watch 'The Ugly American' right now, here are some details about the Universal International Pictures drama flick. Released April 2nd, 1963, 'The Ugly American' stars Marlon Brando , Eiji Okada , Sandra Church , Pat Hingle The NR movie has a runtime of about 1 hr 55 min, and received a user score of 66 (out of 100) on TMDb, which collated reviews from 30 knowledgeable users. You probably already know what the movie's about, but just in case... Here's the plot: "An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace. Despite his knowledge, once he's there, MacWhite sees only a dichotomy between the U.S. and Communism. He can't accept that anti-American sentiment might be a longing for self-determination and nationalism. So, he breaks from his friend Deong, a local opposition leader, ignores a foreman's advice about slowing the building of a road, and tries to muscle ahead. What price must the country and his friends pay for him to get some sense?" 'The Ugly American' is currently available to rent, purchase, or stream via subscription on TCM .

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The Ugly American

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49 pages • 1 hour read

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.

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Chapters 1-4

Chapters 5-10

Chapters 11-15

Chapters 16-21

Character Analysis

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Summary and Study Guide

The Ugly American is a novel by William Lederer and Eugene Burdick. Published in 1958, the book is a venomous satire of America’s presence in Southeast Asia three years into the Vietnam War. While the book is categorized as a novel, it is an overt political commentary that is presented in the form of chapters that could be considered standalone short stories. The title refers to the stereotypical American insensitivity to the native language, customs, traditions, religions, and background of the people of Sarkhan , the fictional country in which the novel is set. The Ugly American is a notable work of anti-war commentary, taking its place among novels like Catch-22 and Slaughterhouse-Five. 

The novel hosts a large cast of characters. Many of them receive their own story but make minor reappearances in the stories of the other characters. As the novel begins, the US government has appointed Louis Sears as the American Ambassador to Sarkhan. Sears has no interest in learning the language or culture of the Sarkhanese. His political and diplomatic blundering do so much to alienate the natives that the Russians consider him an asset, and they view his presence in Sarkhan as an anti-capitalist advertisement. 

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The second story introduces the Russian Ambassador Louis Krupitzyn. Krupitzyn is a formidable tactician and devoted Communist. He is an expert in Sarkhanese politics and speaks Sarkhanese fluently. He is the opposite of Sears, and his efforts are effective, where Sears’s are inept. 

An anti-Communist Catholic priest named Father Finian begins an anti-Communist campaign in nearby Burma. After recruiting nine local Catholics who are also anti-Communist, he begins running a campaign through a small newspaper that he begins to publish. Each issue purports to be pro-Communist and features articles written by eminent Communists such as Lenin and Marx. The paper is read by peasants; the articles by the Communists often mock the peasantry and justify their slaughter, which leads to dissent in the villages where Finian’s group works. 

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A competent man named Gilbert MacWhite replaces Sears. MacWhite learns fluent Sarkhanese and is committed to the fight against Communism. When he learns that his servants—who pretend to speak no English—have been spying on him and passing secrets to the Communists, he admits his error and travels through Southeast Asia, hoping to find new ideas to use in the conflict. During his travel, he hears of a musician called “the Ragtime Kid”—an almost mythical figure who can win over any Sarkhanese person by admiring and participating in their culture. 

The rest of the novel shows these and other characters overlapping in their stories as they attempt—and mostly fail—to fight Communism. Many of them spend as much time covering up their own blunders and trying to save their careers. When the novel ends, MacWhite is being replaced by Joe Bing, a fast-talking politician who cares about little besides his own image and self-enrichment. MacWhite writes to government officials in Washington, listing several strategies that he believes would improve the relations between Asia and America. He also maintains that Russia will win the Cold War if the US government does not take his recommendations seriously. Although the stories in the book have shown that his solutions could work, the US rejects his proposals and enforces his return to America.

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COMMENTS

  1. The Ugly American

    American ambassador Harrison MacWhite (Marlon Brando) travels to a Southeast Asian country on a peacekeeping mission. Torn between rival factions, the turbulent nation is on the brink of civil war.

  2. The Ugly American (film)

    The Ugly American is a 1963 American adventure film directed by George Englund, written by Stewart Stern, and starring Marlon Brando, Sandra Church, Eiji Okada, Pat Hingle, Judson Pratt, Reiko Sato, and Arthur Hill.It is based on the 1958 novel The Ugly American by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer.The film was released on April 2, 1963, by Universal Pictures.

  3. The Ugly American (1963)

    Wuchakk 14 March 2014. Based on influential 1958 American political novel, "The Ugly American" (1963) is a realistic film, a political drama/thriller featuring Marlon Brando as a new American diplomat in a Vietnam-like Southeast Asian nation that is painfully struggling between capitalist & communist factions.

  4. The Ugly American (1963)

    The Ugly American: Directed by George Englund. With Marlon Brando, Eiji Okada, Sandra Church, Pat Hingle. An ambitious American scholar becomes the ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war is brewing.

  5. The Ugly American

    The Ugly American Reviews. For those who enjoyed the book, this movie will be a big disappointment. For those who didn't read the book, well, you might enjoy it. Full Review | Jan 13, 2021. Brando ...

  6. The Ugly American

    With: Marlon Brando Eiji Okada Sandra Church Arthur Hill Pat Hingle Jocelyn Brando. Some of the ambiguities, hypocrisies and perplexities of cold war politics are observed, dramatized and, to a ...

  7. Film review

    Film review - The Ugly American (1963) A piece on The Ugly American. Outside a few war films with explosions and martyred movie stars, American foreign policy disasters have never been a 'sexy' subject for Hollywood, though there has always been a trickle of ambitious, underperforming-at-the-box-office, political essay cinema.

  8. The Ugly American (1963)

    An in-depth review of the film The Ugly American (1963) directed by George Englund, featuring Marlon Brando, Eiji Okada, Sandra Church. The Ugly American (1963) ... The Ugly American offered a cogent and very timely reflection on the failings of United States foreign policy in the early 1960s. The fictional country of Sarkan is easily ...

  9. The Ugly American (1963)

    Brief Synopsis. An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace.

  10. The Ugly American

    The Ugly American. EDWARD LANSDALE'S COLD WAR. By Jonathan Nashel. Illustrated. 320 pp. University of. Massachusetts Press. $80. Paper, $24.95. A SPECTER is haunting Iraq, the specter of Edward ...

  11. ‎The Ugly American (1963) directed by George Englund • Reviews, film

    This movie has absolutely no problem announcing that force-fed democracy abroad is just a smokescreen for financial and militaristic gain. For a movie that was made when the Cold War was at a fever pitch, The Ugly American is admirably blunt and decidedly un-American (by McCarthy's standards). One scene shows a drunken debate between our two ...

  12. The Ugly American (1963)

    An ambitious American scholar becomes the ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war is brewing. ... Film Movie Reviews The Ugly American — 1963. The Ugly American. 1963. 2h.

  13. The Ugly American

    The Ugly American is a 1958 political novel by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer that depicts the failures of the U.S. diplomatic corps in Southeast Asia.. The book caused a sensation in diplomatic circles and had major political implications. The Peace Corps was established during the Kennedy administration partly as a result of the book. The bestseller has remained continuously in print and ...

  14. The Ugly American

    An obviously sincere but nonetheless simplistic critique of American foreign policy in Southeast Asia, THE UGLY AMERICAN quickly squanders whatever interest it may hold due to its didactic script ...

  15. The Ugly American (1963)

    The Ugly American is a 1963 American adventure film directed by George Englund, written by Stewart Stern, and starring Marlon Brando, Sandra Church, Eiji Okada, Pat Hingle, Judson Pratt and Arthur Hill. It is based on the 1958 novel The Ugly American by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer. The film was released on April 2, 1963, by Universal ...

  16. DoBlu.com

    An Examination of National Self. A number of stark images from The Ugly American stand out, doubly so in retrospect. Consider The Ugly American came out in 1963, at the dawn of the United State's involvement in Vietnam. Suddenly, an image of the American flag and that of a fictional Asian nation (Sarkhan) situated side-by-side, but with dead bodies visible in the space between is outright eerie.

  17. The Ugly American (1963)

    Find trailers, reviews, synopsis, awards and cast information for The Ugly American (1963) - George Englund on AllMovie - Taken from a best-selling book, this is an…

  18. Reconsidering 'The Ugly American,' by William J. Lederer and Eugene

    In "The Ugly American," Ambassador "Lucky" Lou Sears stews in his luxurious compound in the capital, fuming over his Soviet counterpart's latest checkmate. "The American ambassador is ...

  19. UGLY AMERICAN, THE

    UGLY AMERICAN, THE (director: George Englund; screenwriters: Stewart Stern/based on the novel by Eugene Burdick and William J. Lederer; cinematographer: Clifford Stine; editor: Ted J. Kent; music: Frank Skinner; cast: Marlon Brando (Harrison Carter MacWhite), Eiji Okada (Deong), Pat Hingle (Homer Atkins), Sandra Church (Marion MacWhite), Jocelyn Brando (Emma Atkins), Arthur Hill (Grainger ...

  20. The Ugly American streaming: where to watch online?

    Synopsis. An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace. Despite his knowledge, once he's there, MacWhite sees only a dichotomy between the U.S. and Communism.

  21. Where to stream The Ugly American (1963) online? Comparing 50

    The Ugly American. NR 1963 Drama, Thriller · 1h 55m. Stream The Ugly American. Watch Now. An intelligent, articulate scholar, Harrison MacWhite, survives a hostile Senate confirmation hearing at the hands of conservatives to become ambassador to Sarkan, a southeast Asian country where civil war threatens a tense peace.

  22. The Ugly American

    Marlon Brando stars in this volatile political thriller based on the critically acclaimed best-selling book. As a compassionate American ambassador to the strife-torn Southeast Asian nation of Sarkhan, Brando tries to keep the Communists in the north from overrunning the weakened democracy in the south by making sure a vital road into the country's inaccessible interior goes through.

  23. The Ugly American (1963) Stream and Watch Online

    Released April 2nd, 1963, 'The Ugly American' stars Marlon Brando, Eiji Okada, Sandra Church, Pat Hingle The NR movie has a runtime of about 1 hr 55 min, and received a user score of 66 (out of ...

  24. The Ugly American Summary and Study Guide

    The Ugly American is a novel by William Lederer and Eugene Burdick.Published in 1958, the book is a venomous satire of America's presence in Southeast Asia three years into the Vietnam War. While the book is categorized as a novel, it is an overt political commentary that is presented in the form of chapters that could be considered standalone short stories.