The Conversation (1974) | |
Background
The Conversation (1974) is the slowly-gripping, bleak study of electronic surveillance and threat of new technologies that is examined through the private, internalized life of a lonely and detached expert 'bugger.' The conspiracy thriller is an effective character study that exposes the emerging conscience of an estranged eavesdropper whose work once resulted in the death of three people:
The timely, low-budget cinematic masterpiece of the 1970s was written, produced and released by director Francis Ford Coppola before and during the Wategate era (and between his two Godfather films) - a time of heightened concern over the violation of civil liberties. Its claustrophobic themes of the destruction of privacy, alienation, guilt, voyeurism, justified paranoia, unprincipled corporate power and personal responsibility effectively responded to growing, ominous 20th century threats of eavesdropping to personal liberties. The haunted surveillance expert, who pursues a case (seemingly of marital infidelity) that demonstrates his rarified human emotion, discovers that he has become the victim of his own technological profession and intrigue by film's end. [His last name, 'caul', literally means the protective, embryonic membrane that sometimes covers the head of a child at birth.] After his phenomenal success with The Godfather (1972), Coppola's technically-brilliant, absorbing film was a critically-acclaimed work, but it failed at the box-office. In the 1974 Oscar competition, The Conversation competed for Best Picture with Coppola's own sequel The Godfather, Part II (1974). It had a total of three award nominations (without any wins): Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Sound (Walter Murch and Arthur Rochester). Notably, there were two against-type roles of young stars from Lucas' American Graffiti (1973): the philandering/murderous role of a socialite by Cindy Williams, and the duplicitous role of a corporate executive assistant by Harrison Ford. The marvelous sound work on the film was deserving of an Oscar for Best Sound for its effective sound-mixing of interdependent elements: taped conversations, muffled voices, background and other mechanically-generated noises, musical/piano accompaniment (Harry Caul's signature theme) and other ambient sounds. The film has some similarities to director Michelangelo Antonioni's provocative Blow-Up (1966), Brian DePalma's thriller Blow Out (1981), Tony Scott's Enemy of the State (1998), and Gore Verbinski's The Ring (2002). And the bloody scene in the bathroom paid homage to Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). Plot SynopsisDay One (Wednesday): The film opens, under the credits, with a bird's-eye view of Union Square in downtown San Francisco during a busy lunch time on a sunny day in December [later identified as December 2nd, 1 PM]. Pedestrians, office workers on lunch break, and Christmas shoppers mingle together in the long view. Slowly, the camera zooms closer and picks out a young, white-faced Mime (Robert Shields), dressed in a black-and-white drum major's costume, who imitates and parodies unsuspecting bypassers. A band of street musicians entertains in the park, playing "When the Red, Red Robin Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along" - the tune is mingled with other strange mechanical noises. The Mime selects a mid-40s aged, balding gentleman in the crowd who's sipping coffee and wearing a grayish, transparent rain slicker. The man - soon identified as the protagonist - is Harry Caul (Gene Hackman), a bespectacled, slightly balding, mustached, mid-forties leader of a professional team of snoopers-for-hire who are monitoring something in the park. Below a neon-lit sign for the CITY PARIS (on top of an image of the Eiffel Tower) high atop a building is a bundled-up individual wearing headphones holding an extended shot-gun microphone pointed into the square. It becomes increasingly clear that the target of surveillance, where the telescopic gunsight is aimed, is a young couple, later identified as Ann (Cindy Williams), a young pretty woman in her twenties, and a clean-cut, well-dressed company executive Mark (Frederic Forrest). Innocuously, Harry stands close to the couple as they join the group of spectators around the band. Another man named Paul (Michael Higgins), part of the eavesdropping team, with a hearing-aid wire and carrying a shopping bag with electronic recording devices inside a disguised gift package, also discreetly follows them to 'record' their conversation. Bits and pieces of their disjointed, fragmented talk are heard as it cuts in and out while they are walking and talking. They approach a bench where a drunk derelict is sprawled - offscreen, they discuss what they observe, as Harry runs across the street and enters a small panel truck with a large sign reading PIONEER GLASS AND SIGN COMPANY:
Inside the van with tinted windows, the undercover group's command center, Harry's assistant Stanley (John Cazale in only his second film) is seated at a workbench over a row of reel-to-reel tape recorders - monitoring the couple's transmitted conversation from two opposing positions - one next to the CITY PARIS sign and another with a parabolic reflector from an open office window. Catching a glimpse of the man with the hearing aide and shopping bag, Ann becomes momentarily suspicious that they are being followed. She moves closer to the street musicians on bongos, hoping that their chatter will be inaudible to anyone else. In the van, Paul speculates: "I got some good pieces, maybe 25 percent." When Stanley asks Harry about their operation, he flatly responds that he doesn't show curiosity, or care about and question what he is doing:
After the couple in the park kiss and depart, Harry leaves the van, removes his raincoat, and walks silently along the busy street to his apartment building. A neighbor passes him on the stairs, turns and wishes him "HAPPY BIRTHDAY." The front door of his apartment indicates that Harry is an intensely private, withdrawn, exclusionary, unmarried man who lives alone - his door has multiple locks. He lives a life totally devoid of human interaction. When he pushes open the door to his sparsely-furnished, scrupulously-anonymous abode, an alarm sounds. Behind the door is a wrapped wine bottle - a birthday present. He mutters to himself: "Happy Birthday." [During this scene, he walks off-screen. The camera acts strangely like a video surveillance device - it doesn't track his movement immediately, but later pans left and locates him on the sofa.] He dials his landlady, Mrs. Evangelista, thanking her for the gift and complaining about the invasion of his privacy:
While talking to her, he both removes his trousers and opens up a greeting card sent in the mail from his bank: "TO OUR VALUED CUSTOMER, Harry (handwritten), HAPPY BIRTHDAY....HERE'S TO ANOTHER, 44 (handwritten), THE SECURITY PACIFIC BANK." [Behind him visible through his window, a construction crew is demolishing a building.] After realizing she has snooped into his mail, he is painstaking about remaining private: "As of today, my mail will go to a post-office box with a combination on it and no keys. Goodbye." Harry's sole means of relaxation that evening comes when he sits on a straight-backed chair in the center of his living room, a bland place dominated by phonograph equipment and loudspeakers, and plays his saxophone to the accompaniment of his hi-fi. After playing furiously along with a live jazz recording, he slumps in his chair, closes his eyes and looks inward, and bows his head to the recording's applause. Day Two (Thursday): The next morning, Harry crosses railroad tracks to his caged-in, 'office' workshop - an isolated section on the second floor of an abandoned warehouse in an industrial area of the city. Benches with electronic equipment, cabinets, and shelves line the screened-off area. While lounging on a sofa with a magazine, Stanley reads to Harry from an article advertising the upcoming convention for professional surveillance experts, reminding him of his notoriety:
Bored with Stanley's talk, Harry begins methodically sorting through the materials from the previous day's work. In a mesmerizing scene, he threads and synchronizes three tape recorders with the tapes from the three locales (Unit A: shopping bag, Unit B: parabolic, Unit C: City of Paris). By playing all three recorders at the same time and varying their volumes on a mixer, Harry is able to construct, synthesize and splice together a fourth clearer recording onto another Ampex tape-recording machine. Painstakingly, he rewinds and replays fragments of dialogue - slowly piecing together Ann and Mark's audible conversation. Flashbacks cut back and forth to the footage from the previous afternoon.
Later that day, Harry rides an electric bus to a pay phone on a street corner. Clutching a blue vinyl pouch, he places a call and asks for Extension 746, "the Director's office." He tells the male secretary: "I have the material and I'm calling for an appointment." Lying, Harry rejects the idea of a callback: "I'm at a pay phone and I don't have a home telephone." An appointment is made for 2:30 pm the following afternoon, when he expects "payment in full" from the Director for the tapes. That evening, as a sole traveler in the night with his wrapped birthday bottle of wine, he pays a functional visit to his mistress' apartment. At the base of the lit staircase inside the front lobby of the apartment building, he waits and listens - almost hiding like he is on a voyeuristic spy case, and then descends one flight of stairs to her apartment door. He stealthily approaches, quietly inserts his key, and opens her door. A young woman in her mid-twenties, Amy (Teri Garr) has been waiting for him in her bed. She wears white socks and a blue bathrobe: "I didn't think you were coming." Throughout the scene, Amy remains in the light, while Harry is shrouded in a cloak of shadows - and still wearing his translucent raincoat. She doesn't know very much about him (giggling "I didn't know it was your birthday") and asks him his age. He replies with a lie: "Forty-two." Expectantly, she wants to love him, care for him, and know more about him. She tells him that despite his efforts to be unseen and unheard at her door, she hears him listening outside. His intensely-lonely life and paranoid, rigid resistance to being observed or known represses and blocks any hope of a long-term, intimate relationship between them:
When she begins to sing the Red Red Robin song: "Wake up, wake up you sleepy head. Get up, get up...", he becomes suspicious and tells her that "somebody else was singing that today." She asks questions about his job, where he lives, and how she can locate him - his uncomfortableness and irritation levels rise noticeably:
He leaves her bed, ventures out to her kitchenette, puts her rent money on the counter, and ends their clandestine association forever. He can't tolerate her peeking into his private life with probing questions. She can no longer wait for him to share his sparse, detached, limited, secretive, and fiercely-independent life that he protects with the same expertise that he uses in his occupation:
In solitude, he leaves and sadly rides the bus back to his own apartment. In his mind, he replays the memory of eavesdropping on the young couple Ann and Mark, projecting his own isolation onto their encounter in the park. |