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The Magic Christian is
Guy Grand (Sellers in the movie) is an eccentric billionaire who spends most of his time playing elaborate practical jokes on people. A big spender, he does not mind losing large sums of
money to complete strangers if only he can have a good laugh. All his escapades are designed to prove his theory that everyone
has got their price - it just depends on the amount one is prepared to pay them. Episodic in character, The Magic
Christian is an unrelenting satire on capitalism and human greed.
Warning: Plot details
follow.
For example, Grand pays the actor playing a surgeon in a live television soap
opera to deviate from the script, comment in drastic terms on the bad quality of the show, and walk off the set. In another
episode, he secretly buys a respectable New York advertising agency, installs a pygmy as
its president and has him "scurry about the offices like a squirrel and chatter raucously in his native tongue" in front of all
the top executive staff and their prominent clients. In a third, he buys a cosmetics company and launches a big promotional
campaign for a new shampoo which, as it turns out in the end, has a very detrimental effect on those who happen to use it. He
also shows up at a safari in Africa with three natives carrying a howitzer. Grand's final adventure takes place on board the S.S. Magic
Christian.
McGrath's film adaptation differs considerably from Southern's novel. Relocated to 60s London, it also introduces an orphan (Starr) whom Grand picks up in a park and whom, on a whim, he decides to adopt. The
movie is usually remembered for its soundtrack by Badfinger, a British rock band promoted by Paul McCartney. McCartney also wrote "Come and Get It", the film's most popular
song whose lyrics refer to Guy Grand's schemes of handing out money to strangers if they do as he pleases ("If you want it, here
it is, come and get it").
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