Seconds (1966)

Movie · 1966 · Science Fiction, Thriller, Horror · 1h 47m · R · English

Curator score: 8.6/10 (84.9K ratings)

Who are SECONDS? The answer is almost too terrifying for words!

Overview

An unhappy middle-aged banker agrees to a procedure that will fake his death and give him a completely new look and identity; one that comes with its own price.

Ratings

Director

John Frankenheimer

Production

Gibraltar Productions, Joel Productions, John Frankenheimer Productions Inc., Paramount Pictures

Cast

Rock Hudson, Salome Jens, John Randolph, Will Geer, Jeff Corey, Richard Anderson, Murray Hamilton, Karl Swenson, Khigh Dhiegh, Frances Reid, Wesley Addy, John Lawrence, Elisabeth Fraser, Dodie Heath, Robert Brubaker, Jane Wald, Dorothy Morris, Frank Campanella, Barbara Werle, Edgar Stehli

Curator Review

Verdict

A bleak, inventive paranoia thriller about identity, consumerism, and the terror of starting over. Its unnerving imagery, bold editing, and existential sadness make it one of the most distinctive American films of the 1960s.

Best for

  • Viewers who like psychological sci-fi with a nightmare edge
  • Fans of existential stories about reinvention and alienation
  • People drawn to stylish, formally daring 1960s cinema
  • Anyone interested in films that turn the American Dream into a horror story

Skip if

  • You want fast-paced action or clear-cut genre thrills
  • You dislike chilly, pessimistic endings
  • You prefer straightforward plotting over ambiguity
  • You are not in the mood for a film that is more disturbing than entertaining

Overview

Seconds is a savage little nightmare about the fantasy of becoming someone else. What begins as a seductive premise quickly curdles into a study of emptiness, conformity, and the violence hidden inside self-improvement. The film’s central idea is simple, but its emotional effect is devastating: if you erase your life, you may also erase the only thing that made it yours.

Worth noting

John Frankenheimer stages the film with a restless, destabilizing energy that makes the world feel slightly off from the first frame. The editing, camera movement, and distorted compositions create a sense of panic that keeps tightening around the story. It’s a film that looks and feels ahead of its time, especially in the way it turns ordinary spaces into traps.

Bottom line

Rock Hudson gives the movie its tragic core, playing a man whose dissatisfaction has hardened into spiritual vacancy. The result is both eerie and heartbreaking, a science-fiction premise that lands as a horror story about identity, aging, and the cost of wanting a second chance. It remains one of the great American films about reinvention gone wrong.

Top Letterboxd reviews

sydney (5★) · 2228 likes

Let's get this out there first:1. the goddamn opening credits2. the goddamn editing3. the knowledge of Rock Hudson's own personal life takes his performance to Morrissey-levels of melancholy4. this should be required viewing for any filmmaker wanting to experiment with handheld/found footage/other bizarre camera techniques5. the goddamn e d i t i n g6. the double meaning of the title (measure of time/2nd)7. appearance by the mayor from JAWS There are about a… more

demi adejuyigbe (4.5★) · 1537 likes

"The years I've spent trying to get all the things I was told were important - that I was supposed to want! Things! Not people... or meaning. Just things. And California was the same. They made the decisions for me all over again and they were the same things, really. It's going to be different from now on. A new face and a name. I'll do the rest. I know it's going to be different. Every two days or so… more

davidehrlich (4.5★) · 977 likes

not really happy with how this turned out, but too tired to nudge it in the right direction... also, you should probably watch the movie before reading this. not like *immediately* before, but maybe at some point in your life. It’s appropriate, and perhaps nearly necessary, that John Frankenheimer’s “Seconds” is a very good film that’s dying to be great. The final film in Frankenheimer’s informal “Paranoia Trilogy,” (the other installments being “The Manchurian Candidate” and “Seven Days in May”),… more

Mike Ginn (4.5★) · 877 likes

Cool tidbit from the commentary. They couldn’t close Grand Central while filming there, and were having issues with people gathering and looking into the camera. So director John Frankenheimer set up a false camera on the other side of the station, gave the film’s writer a microphone, and had him direct a male model and a playboy bunny in a fake romance scene. The crowd gathered over there and he got to film the real scenes.

Will Menaker (3.5★) · 582 likes

One of the coolest and scariest opening credit sequences of all time. Plus there's an extended nude grape stomping wine orgy scene.

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Topics

psychological thriller, science fiction, existential horror, paranoia, 1960s cinema, identity, midlife crisis, surreal imagery, urban dread, satire

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