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À cause d'un assassinat

Original title: The Parallax View
  • 1974
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
23K
YOUR RATING
À cause d'un assassinat (1974)
Theatrical Trailer from Paramount
Play trailer2:30
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Conspiracy ThrillerPolitical ThrillerDramaMysteryThriller

An ambitious reporter gets in way-over-his-head trouble while investigating a senator's assassination which leads to a vast conspiracy involving a multinational corporation behind every even... Read allAn ambitious reporter gets in way-over-his-head trouble while investigating a senator's assassination which leads to a vast conspiracy involving a multinational corporation behind every event in the world's headlines.An ambitious reporter gets in way-over-his-head trouble while investigating a senator's assassination which leads to a vast conspiracy involving a multinational corporation behind every event in the world's headlines.

  • Director
    • Alan J. Pakula
  • Writers
    • David Giler
    • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
    • Loren Singer
  • Stars
    • Warren Beatty
    • Paula Prentiss
    • William Daniels
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    23K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alan J. Pakula
    • Writers
      • David Giler
      • Lorenzo Semple Jr.
      • Loren Singer
    • Stars
      • Warren Beatty
      • Paula Prentiss
      • William Daniels
    • 185User reviews
    • 111Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos2

    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"?

    Photos123

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    Top cast53

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    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
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews185

    7.123.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7treywillwest

    nope

    It has become commonplace to identify '70s Hollywood films as their own genre. I'll go one farther and identify this era as a collective, structural autuer.

    If that hypothesis holds any water, this is one of its impressive works. Made shortly after Watergate, and less than a decade after the JFK assassination, this envisions conspiracies and assassinations not as a disruption of, but a cornerstone of the American establishment.

    This is, in a sense, not a POLITICAL conspiracy thriller. The US government, or that of any other country, is presented as merely a dope of a greater power- that of the big corporations of whatever stripe. This is a dystopian capitalist democracy- one in which representatives are elected to "officially" be as clueless as the general populace about the real social reality around them.

    Perhaps the most subversive thing about this very subversive film is that the assassinations don't seem catastrophic, or even troubling. When one takes place, the victim politician is basically a walking sound bite. His sacrifice seems only the continuation of a ritual of banal brutality.

    In one scene, a film is shown that is supposed to condition the viewer to murderous obedience. It is a montage of images of Americana, including those of violence and oppression. In most '70s conspiracy thrillers, the evil that lurked beneath the surface had a predatory relation to the commonly understood reality. People were putting their trust in a machine that was not what it seemed. Here, the evil is the surface. America IS the conspiracy.

    DP Gordon Willis has never impressed me more. In his work with Woody Allen and Francis Coppola his show-offy use of shadow and in-the-frame lighting sources seemed at times to distract from the tone or theme of the film, as if Willis was only interested in defining his "look" regardless of its relation to the film's content. Here, it fits the tone of the film perfectly. The final scenes, largely devoid of dialog, in a hall filled with terrifyingly "patriotic" imagery, is gorgeous. Many of the shots reminded me of de Cherico paintings.
    austin-18

    Political conspiracy thriller par excellence.

    The late Alan J. Pakula's 1974 film about political murders is a superbly crafted thriller that holds the audience in its quiet, unsettling grip.

    Warren Beatty gives his character of Joe Frady, a "third-rate" journalist, just the right balance of recklessness and determination to enable one to have faith in this man to uncover such shady, potentially threatening goings-on.

    Beatty is ably backed up by the supporting cast, most notably Hume Cronyn as Frady's editor, and Paula Prentiss and William Daniels as, respectively, a television reporter and columnist both in fear for their lives.

    Composer Michael Small's main theme (used at strategic points throughout the film and often playing on the traditional patriotic sound of the trumpet) has a quality both mournful and despairing that relates effectively to what we are watching. It is a rather sparse music score, but this seems to add to its power. Gordon Willis's Panavision photography conveys threat in even the most everyday of locations (his rendering of modern architecture is especially strong in suggesting a faceless, omnipotent threat), while the editing rhythms and sound design contribute a great deal in throwing the audience off-balance.

    Pakula has been involved in more widely-known projects such as All The President's Men and Presumed Innocent, but The Parallax View is definitely one of his best and most powerful films.
    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.
    7SnoopyStyle

    good paranoid thriller

    Independent minded Senator Carroll is assassinated on top of the Space Needle. The assumed killer falls to his death and a commission declares him to be a lone gunman. Three years later, Lee Carter pleads with reporter Joe Frady (Warren Beatty) to investigate the Carroll assassination. The people around Carroll on that day are getting killed off. Frady finds something disturbing. He is attacked by Sheriff Wicker. He kills Wicker and discovers the name Parallax Corporation among the sheriff's belongings. His boss is Bill Rintels (Hume Cronyn) doesn't believe him at first. He suspects that they are recruiting psychopaths and he intends to infiltrate the organization.

    The first half is really compelling. There is a good sense of paranoia. It fades a little after the plane bombing. They couldn't film the plane exploding. It's the first sign of the movie's limitations. I wish the movie could find the next gear but it's not really there. I also wasn't impressed with the long montage sequence that Frady sits through. It could be much more compelling but it feels derivative of 'A Clockwork Orange'. It's still a very good paranoid thriller.
    robertconnor

    Mainstream US Cinema at its 70s Best

    A US Senator is assassinated and the official inquiry concludes it was the work of a lone gunman. Three years later, with 6 witnesses dead, a TV reporter present at the killing is frightened for her life. She takes her fears to a journalist ex-boyfriend. At first he is sceptical...

    Brilliant paranoid thriller from Pakula, utilising choppy realism and naturalistic dialogue to create a bleak and uncompromising picture of cynical, corporate conspiracy within US politics. Beatty has never been better as the ambitious journo-hack Joe Frady, and he is superbly supported by Cronyn, Daniels and a deeply compelling cameo from Prentiss. You can bet this wasn't diluted by audience testing prior to release... unmissable.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      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.
    • Goofs
      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.
    • Quotes

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

    • Connections
      Featured in Ralph Super-héros: The Hand-Painted Thai (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Buttons and Bows
      Written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans

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    FAQ19

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    • Is Frady brainwashed during the montage sequence?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 16, 1975 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Asesinos S.A.
    • Filming locations
      • Gorge Dam, Skagit River, Washington, USA
    • Production companies
      • Doubleday Productions
      • Doubleday
      • Gus
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,416
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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