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À cause d'un assassinat

Titre original : The Parallax View
  • 1974
  • PG
  • 1h 42m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,1/10
23 k
MA NOTE
À cause d'un assassinat (1974)
Theatrical Trailer from Paramount
Liretrailer2 min 30 s
2 vidéos
99+ photos
Conspiracy ThrillerPolitical ThrillerDramaMysteryThriller

Un journaliste ambitieux enquêtant sur l'assassinat d'un sénateur le conduit à une vaste conspiration impliquant une multinationale derrière chaque événement.Un journaliste ambitieux enquêtant sur l'assassinat d'un sénateur le conduit à une vaste conspiration impliquant une multinationale derrière chaque événement.Un journaliste ambitieux enquêtant sur l'assassinat d'un sénateur le conduit à une vaste conspiration impliquant une multinationale derrière chaque événement.

  • Director
    • Alan J. Pakula
  • Writers
    • David Giler
    • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
    • Loren Singer
  • Stars
    • Warren Beatty
    • Paula Prentiss
    • William Daniels
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,1/10
    23 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Alan J. Pakula
    • Writers
      • David Giler
      • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
      • Loren Singer
    • Stars
      • Warren Beatty
      • Paula Prentiss
      • William Daniels
    • 185Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 109Commentaires de critiques
    • 65Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 2 victoires et 3 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    The Parallax View
    Trailer 2:30
    The Parallax View
    What Movies Make Up the DNA of "Utopia"?
    Interview 2:50
    What Movies Make Up the DNA of "Utopia"?
    What Movies Make Up the DNA of "Utopia"?
    Interview 2:50
    What Movies Make Up the DNA of "Utopia"?

    Photos122

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    + 114
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    Rôles principaux53

    Modifier
    Warren Beatty
    Warren Beatty
    • Joseph Frady
    Paula Prentiss
    Paula Prentiss
    • Lee Carter
    William Daniels
    William Daniels
    • Austin Tucker
    Walter McGinn
    Walter McGinn
    • Jack Younger
    Hume Cronyn
    Hume Cronyn
    • Bill Rintels
    Kelly Thordsen
    Kelly Thordsen
    • Sheriff L.D. Wicker
    Chuck Waters
    Chuck Waters
    • Thomas Richard Linder
    Earl Hindman
    Earl Hindman
    • Deputy Red
    William Joyce
    William Joyce
    • Senator Charles Carroll
    • (as Bill Joyce)
    Betty Murray
    • Mrs. Charles Carroll
    • (as Bettie Johnson)
    Bill McKinney
    Bill McKinney
    • Parallax Assassin
    Jo Ann Harris
    Jo Ann Harris
    • Chrissy - Frady's Girl
    • (as JoAnne Harris)
    Ted Gehring
    Ted Gehring
    • Schecter - Hotel Clerk
    Lee Pulford
    • Shirley - Salmontail Bar Girl
    Doria Cook-Nelson
    Doria Cook-Nelson
    • Gale from Salmontail
    • (as Doria Cook)
    Jim Davis
    Jim Davis
    • George Hammond
    Joan Lemmo
    • Organist
    Kenneth Mars
    Kenneth Mars
    • Former FBI Agent Will
    • Director
      • Alan J. Pakula
    • Writers
      • David Giler
      • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
      • Loren Singer
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs185

    7,123.3K
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    Avis en vedette

    8JuguAbraham

    Existentialism with a political twist

    I saw this film first some twenty years ago and loved it. I saw it again this week and found the film superior to most other films of director Pakula and found it to be another gem from cinematographer Gordon Willis.

    "Parallax View" never won Oscars or other major awards for Pakula but this film along with "Klute" and "Sophie's Choice" are his finest works. Articles on Pakula often focus on his award-winning work and neglect this fine movie.

    What was great in this film that was missing in "All the president's men" or "The pelican brief"? Here the element of existentialism sucked in the viewer to participate in the whirlpool of deceit, exemplified most by the test given to the lead character in the offices of Parallax Corporation, the staccato editing (John Wheeler) that exemplifies the individual's helplessness, and the imaginative photography (Willis) that stunts the individual (not crowds) against the himalayan landscapes of glass and steel.

    The film was made at a time when Hollywood was brimming with great films with a similar line of thought (Spielberg's "Duel", Coppola's "The Conversation", Penn's "Night Moves", Polanski's "Chinatown", Antonionni's "Zabriskie Point", Altman's "Nashville", Boorman's "Point Blank", etc.) internalizing the external, as Camus would have best described it. "Parallax View" among all these films touched the subject of politics using the least obscure metaphors and similies.

    Can one forget the dead calm in the sea before the explosion/assasination? Or the assassination viewed from the roof top of the victim's cart colliding with empty tables and chairs towards the end of the film? None of Pakula's other films have such hardhitting scenes as these, even if one were to discount the unconvincing cool response of the lead character in the airplane when he realizes that there is a live bomb on it.

    This is a film that grips you nearly 30 years after it was made, when US politics seems to be at a point very close to what the film depicted three decades ago.
    7evanston_dad

    One of My Favorite Movie Genres

    "The Parallax View" belongs to one of my favorite movie genres -- the paranoid 1970s political thriller. Cashing in on a decade of assassinations and government corruption, the film stars Warren Beatty as a journalist who infiltrates a shadowy organization that's training people who fit certain psychological profiles to become assassins of political figures. It's got a satisfying, eerie vibe and pretty accomplished direction from Alan J. Pakula, who certainly knew his way around a thriller with political overtones. Gordon Willis's deservedly lauded cinematography goes a long way to making the film work, using lighting and framing to create oppressive and sinister compositions. The editing is a bit ragged in spots, resulting in abrupt transitions that can be disorienting. And I'll admit that toward the end I sort of lost the thread of what was going on. But overall this was an entertaining if maybe minor contribution to the world of disaffected 1970s cinema.

    Grade: A-
    8Cinemadharma

    Groundbreaking and brave genre definer.

    You won't get any answers from this film. Because giving us definitive answers would be contrary to the entire point of the film. If you have a single definitive answer (or view), then you don't have a parallax (view).

    Everyone will come out of this film with a different idea of what it was about or what really happened -- their own interpretations of the information presented to them -- kind of like how conspiracy theorists generally operate.

    For example, Zapruder shot his JFK film from one angle -- and 12 other people also shot films or photos at the moments of the assassination, all from different angles (or points of view). Not to mention the many other people who were present that day to witness it, who also saw things from their own point of view. Some folks saw movement in the grassy knoll, others didn't.

    In the end, we'll probably never truly know the answers to these sorts of things. And the search for the answers can be a slippery path to travel... Which is what we can only assume Warren Beatty's character learns in the final moments of the film. But really, that's just from my point of view.
    10secragt

    Terrifying Masterpiece

    PARALLAX VIEW is an impressive political thriller with an unusually specific and scary viewpoint. It posits that many conspiracies work because relatively few people are in on the whole joke; some are involved in the set up, some in the telling, and some in the punchline, but only a precious few are given the whole picture, making detection almost impossible. The argument is compellingly made.

    It is the perfectly machine-tooled "punchline" role the Powers That Be assign to an unwitting Warren Beatty that makes PARALLAX VIEW such a frightening movie. There seems to be a thread running through many of the bigger conspiracy movies (see ARLINGTON ROAD, ROLLERBALL, NETWORK, THE INSIDER, etc.) that suggests unless the individual can find an inroad to make themselves useful to the system, the system finds a role for individual (often not to his liking). In the case of NETWORK, individual Howard Beal is initially spared by one geopolitical phase of the corporate system and allowed continue to rant on TV once he is properly slotted by Ned Beatty, but he is ultimately murdered when the corporate television arm of the system no longer has a use for his declining ratings. He becomes a punchline.

    In THE INSIDER, Russell Crowe is initially hung out to dry by the system until Al Pacino is able to find a way to manipulate the television arm of the system to find a value for Crowe. Crowe becomes the instrument of the telling.

    In ROLLERBALL, James Caan is beloved by part of the system as the greatest celebrity sports figure of his time, but ultimately sabotaged by another part of the corporate world which is trying to espouse the notion in the game that the individual can never beat the system, something Caan has been indirectly doing by being too successful in the game. Caan successfully defeats the setup, telling and punchline (though he's probably not long for this world.)

    In the case of Warren Beatty in the PARALLAX VIEW, he is elected to take the fall for a political assassination which will simultaneously discredit his own conspiracy investigations. The task is accomplished with such cold blooded efficiency and clever precision, one has to seriously doubt whether our own Federal government could do it. But then, is that perceived incompetence of our officials just another con being perpetrated on us by "Them"? Beatty's mistake is that he underestimates "the set-up" and becomes the posterchild of the system's "punchline."

    It is in this battle between individual and system that THE PARALLAX VIEW really distinguishes itself. What initially appears to be the ambiguous paranoia of a decidedly neurotic woman is gradually allowed to organically grow such that we can begin to see tips of the iceberg along the way, but don't want to believe what we're seeing even when the truth is apparent. That iceberg subtly floats by in different forms every time Beatty investigates further or reexamines his own position, yet remains nearly invisible possibly because it is so big it cannot be seen or contemplated?

    Certainly there are aspects which lurch toward absurdity. For instance, the non-fallout from the cartoonish bomb explosion of Beatty's plane (containing an important political official no less) certainly should have aroused greater attention and suspicion. A car chase about 2/3rds of the way through feels particularly tacked-on. However, the overall focus of this movie, which is the slow peeling back of the layers to get to the irresistible mystery, is highly effective. People can judge for themselves whether any of the dirty tricks this movie documents really go on, but that's really not the point.

    This is a story full of intriguing moves and clever counter-moves. Scams and ploys and scams inside of ploys. Most of these details are fascinating and we feel like Pakula is letting us in on some of the dirty little subversive things we've always feared may occur behind the doors of the seat of government. But ultimately, this is a story about a man who looks too long at the sun and is so intrigued yet blinded by what he sees, he ignores the nature of the sun, which is to both illuminate and to burn. Whether any of the conspiracy suggested is true, it remains one of the most compelling efforts of the seventies, and is a must-see. See it and judge for yourself.
    Infofreak

    THE definitive 1970s paranoid thriller. Intelligent, tense and effective.

    When I hear mention of Warren Beatty these days I almost begin to snore, but before Beatty became a boring old fart he made a handful of very interesting and adventurous movies like 'Mickey One', 'McCabe & Mrs Miller' and 'The Parallax View', hardly safe Hollywood movie star material. 'The Parallax View' is THE definitive 1970s paranoid thriller, beaten only by Coppola's 'The Conversation', released incidentally the same year. The movie has to be watched in the context of when it was made. It's shot through with post-Watergate cynicism and the Kennedy assassinations cast a long shadow over the plot. Beatty gives a very subtle, relaxed performance, and for me is totally believable. The supporting cast is first rate. Veteran Hume Cronyn ('Shadow Of A Doubt') plays Beatty's editor, Paula Prentiss ('The Stepford Wives') a hysterical fellow journalist, and William Daniels (Dustin Hoffman's father in 'The Graduate') has a brief but memorable bit as another witness who fears for his life. Also keep an eye out for the legendary Bill McKinney (who nobody who's ever seen 'Deliverance' will forget!) as an assassin, Anthony Zerbe ('The Omega Man') as a psychologist (playing Pong with a chimp!), and Earl Hindman ('The Taking Of Pelham One Two Three') in the bar fight scene. Much of 'The Parallax View' was later used in 'Arlington Road', an unconvincing movie which was much too contrived for me to be believable. It just didn't have the subtlety that this one has, and spelled everything out, seeming assuming its audience wasn't bright enough to get it. 'The Parallax View' is still one of the most intelligent, tense and effective conspiracy thrillers ever made, and the direction by the late Alan J. Pakula is just about flawless. Highly recommended.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      At the suggestion of actor Warren Beatty and screenwriter David Giler, the profession of Beatty's character of Joseph Frady was changed from a police officer to a newspaper journalist.
    • Gaffes
      In the opening Independence Day parade sequence, there are no leaves on the tree branches visible as the senator and his wife pass by, but the leaves would be full and green on July 4th in Seattle.
    • Citations

      Joseph Frady: [to Deputy Sheriff] Don't touch me unless you love me.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Greatest American Hero: The Hand-Painted Thai (1982)
    • Bandes originales
      Buttons and Bows
      Written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans

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    FAQ19

    • How long is The Parallax View?Propulsé par Alexa
    • Is Frady brainwashed during the montage sequence?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 juin 1974 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Parallax View
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Gorge Dam, Skagit River, Washington, États-Unis
    • sociétés de production
      • Doubleday Productions
      • Doubleday
      • Gus
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 3 416 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 42 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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