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The Man Who Had Power Over Women -

If you’re looking for a vintage romp, this isn't it. But if you want a biting, cynical look at the dark side of fame and the collapse of the 1960s dream, it remains a compelling—if bleak—piece of media.

Whether you are looking at the 1967 novel by Gordon Williams or the 1970 film starring Rod Taylor, the story serves as a jagged, often uncomfortable time capsule of toxic masculinity and the disillusionment of the "Swinging Sixties." The Plot: The Golden Cage The Man Who Had Power Over Women

The 1970 film adaptation took this even further. Directed by John Korty, it used a fragmented, almost frantic editing style to mirror Reaney’s mental breakdown. It wasn't the breezy comedy audiences expected from the title; it was a psychological dive into a man losing his grip. The Legacy of the "Power" If you’re looking for a vintage romp, this isn't it

The title itself is a bit of a trick. By the end of the story, it becomes clear that Reaney has no power at all—least of all over himself. He is a slave to his impulses and the very industry he helped build. Directed by John Korty, it used a fragmented,

"The Man Who Had Power Over Women" is a fascinating piece of pop culture history that exists at a strange crossroads of 1960s hedonism and the crushing reality of the "mid-life crisis" before that term was even a household name.