Un ricercatore della CIA amante dei libri trova tutti i suoi colleghi di lavoro morti e deve vincere in astuzia i responsabili fin quando non avrà scoperto di chi potersi fidare realmente.Un ricercatore della CIA amante dei libri trova tutti i suoi colleghi di lavoro morti e deve vincere in astuzia i responsabili fin quando non avrà scoperto di chi potersi fidare realmente.Un ricercatore della CIA amante dei libri trova tutti i suoi colleghi di lavoro morti e deve vincere in astuzia i responsabili fin quando non avrà scoperto di chi potersi fidare realmente.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 6 vittorie e 4 candidature totali
- Joubert
- (as Max Von Sydow)
- Mrs. Russell
- (as Helen Stenbure)
- Jennings
- (as Hansford H. Rowe Jr., Hansford Rolle)
- Mae Barber
- (as Carlin Gylnn)
Recensioni in evidenza
The West has long looked to the east and its oil fields as potential targets and this film just reinforces the fact that what we think of as a new war has in fact been a raging cold war for decades. It is not and never has been about freedom it is now and always has been a war of economic necessity. Although this film is not as renowned as many of the other paranoid spy thrillers of the 70's such as the Conversation or the Parallax View it is still a very watchable and intriguing film.
Redford is well cast as a fish out of water having to adapt his talents from the page to real life. The central relationship between Dunaway and Redford doesn't work as well as it should. She is too keen to fall for his charms and were it not Redford but a more charmless man like Hackman for example I doubt it would have worked at all.
The film is not as complex as has suggested. It is neat and easy enough to follow. It has a beguiling character that is better for my money than harder hitting films like Parallax. Redfords fight in the middle of the film is copied in a many ways by the new Bourne movie fight scenes. Indeed the double talk spy will appeal to fans of this genre. Bourne today is the nearest thing to Condor in the movies.
And Von Sydow is as always untouchable. Worth a remake but I still have a very dear place in my big movie heart for well made 70s films like this.
This is looking more and more like a period piece, dated and curious like one of those great Cold War films looks today (Failsafe or Seven Days in May). And yet it also feels like the beginnings of spy/counterspy films that are going on today, way beyond the pizazz of the early Bond films of the 1960s, and presaging the dozens since, including recent ones like the Bourne films or Syriana. It plays straight up as a suspense film, one where an almost innocent man is caught up in something huge and perplexing and awful, and we all identify with the individual against the powers of evil. Robert Redford plays the role of Joe Turner well, with the usual Redford stiffness, but believably--he reads books, after all--and sympathetically.
Putting yourself back to 1975 you have to remember that everyone was talking about, and reacting to, Watergate, and a U.S. president who had to resign from office because of it. Watergate, more than anything, started the current public roar (blossoming on the internet) about government conspiracy. Three Days of the Condor makes the government, and the CIA in particular, an almost unassailable and invisible force of spying and mistrust. Turner, by circumstance at first and then by admirable determination, fights back. He's clever as much as he is worried. He falls in love. He feels isolated but never gives up. He has close calls, and lucky escapes, and unlikely friends. He thinks of other people first.
In other words, he's a hero against the machine, and if the movie is sometimes slow, it creates a nice pace for the end, which is beautifully thought out. Director Sydney Pollack is hampered by a screenplay that alternates between awkward (Faye Dunaway's scenes) and brilliant (Redford's anti-spy character has a conversation with a hit man played by Max Von Sydow that shines), but he patches it together with an editing job that was nominated for an Oscar. And the cinematography by Owen Roizman is really nice (he shot a dozen great films from the French Connection to the Exorcist to Network). Condor is not just an entertainment, which is a saving grace, but it does also, slowly and beautifully, entertain.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFormer CIA director Richard Helms acted as a personal consultant to Robert Redford for his role as the Condor.
- BlooperAny ballistics analysis of the shootings in the alley would show that Sam was not shot by the "assailant" (Turner) who shot the CIA assassin.
However, ballistics analysis is irrelevant because the event is covered up rather than investigated.
- Citazioni
Joe Turner: I'd like to go back to New York.
Joubert: You have not much future there. It will happen this way. You may be walking. Maybe the first sunny day of the spring. And a car will slow beside you, and a door will open, and someone you know, maybe even trust, will get out of the car. And he will smile, a becoming smile. But he will leave open the door of the car and offer to give you a lift.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Flicks: Episodio #1.17 (1975)
- Colonne sonoreI've Got You Where I Want You
(uncredited)
Music by Dave Grusin
Lyrics by Tom Bähler
Performed by James Gilstrap
I più visti
Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Los tres días del cóndor
- Luoghi delle riprese
- 55 East 77th Street, Manhattan, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(American Literary Historical Society)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 20.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 27.476.252 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 27.476.837 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 57 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1