The Parallax View | 
| Director: Alan J. Pakula Actors: Warren Beatty, Paula Prentiss, William Daniels, Walter Mcginn, Hume Cronyn Studio: Paramount Category: DVD
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Rating: 57 reviews Sales Rank: 11568
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 DVD Layers: 1 DVD Sides: 1 Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 102 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5 x 0.6
MPN: D086707D ISBN: 0792155505 UPC: 097360867077 EAN: 9780792155508 ASIN: B00000IRE9
Theatrical Release Date: June 14, 1974 Release Date: June 22, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Watched very few times - like new
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential video Directed by Alan J. Pakula (All the President's Men, Sophie's Choice), this is an excellent, paranoid thriller and a benchmark for films of this type from the 1970s. Warren Beatty (Bonnie and Clyde) plays Joseph Frady, an arrogant investigative reporter who witnesses the assassination of a United States senator and then discovers that other reporters who were on the scene are dying under mysterious circumstances. With the help of his editor (Hume Cronyn), Frady goes underground to infiltrate the Parallax Corporation, which uses mind control to train assassins. And Frady might be the next one in line to take a fall. Featuring a classic brainwashing sequence and laced with intensity from start to finish, The Parallax View is essential viewing for fans of the political thriller genre. --Robert Lane
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| Customer Reviews: Read 52 more reviews...
Poor quality November 29, 2008 Linda J. Minton (Soquel CA USA) The sound track was horrible - could barely hear the dialog while the special effects and music were extremely loud. A lot of the scenes were very dark. Did not hold up as well as I remember the original.
"Extermination Incorporated" October 27, 2008 Phoebe Stogstill (Forsyth, Mo USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
A good retro movie to watch if you like conspiracy theories as a storyline. The Parallax Corporation is a fictional organization that trains assassins. Warren Beatty as Frady, (as in Fraidy-Cat, maybe?) seemingly paranoid journalistic investigator, gets on to their schemes, putting himself in grave danger and knowing he will not be believed by anyone. I really enjoyed this movie when I viewed it on the big screen in the Seventies. Warren is very, very good as is Hume Cronyn.
A 35 years old film--still watchable, just not a classic October 18, 2008 James D. Best 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Parallax View is a 70s paranoia/conspiracy film. This movie is not in a class with Three Days of the Condor, but it stand up well against the test of time. (Even if the fashions don't.) The story and theme are a bit threadbare, but the acting and cinematography keep The Parallax View interesting. My biggest problem is that the film sacrifices storytelling because it strives too hard to be art. (An artistic film does not need to be static or mind-numbingly slow.) Storytelling is especially important in a mystery or thriller--and at times, The Parallax view wants to be both. The story jumps ahead unpredictably, so the viewer must fill in numerous gaps. This can work, but in this film it seems random, not thoughtful. It's almost like there was such an enormous focus on creative cinematography that the director forgot or could no longer afford to film important scenes. Despite it's flaws, this is an engaging film ... and one that every film student should have in their library. The Shut Mouth Society The Shopkeeper
Potential squandered by sloppy storytelling April 16, 2008 Brian W. (Chicago, IL USA) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This revered '70s paranoia thriller strikes me as a major disappointment. It starts out promisingly with an intriguing conspiracy plot, but director Alan J. Pakula is simply a lousy storyteller. His sense of pacing is terrible--scenes go on for far too long, often while we don't really understand what is happening in them, and then cut abruptly to something new. Parts of the film that are intended to be suspenseful register as dull and confusing. This does have its compensations; Pakula and the great DP Gordon Willis create some striking visual compositions, Warren Beatty does a nice job with his underwritten role, and the famous brainwashing montage is terrific. But the story is too incoherent to deliver the goods as a thriller, and the movie never recovers from Pakula's narrative indifference.
Remains Topical April 15, 2008 Douglas Doepke (Claremont CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
From the moment reporter Frady (Beatty) decides to investigate, he's caught in an anonymous web whose only face is that of the sinister Jack Younger (McGinn). How far does the web extend-- we can only guess. For Frady, it stretches from a tiny hamlet in the Pacific Northwest to a soaring glass monolith somewhere in urban America. Probably no film captures the paranoid unease of the years between the JFK assassination and the Nixon resignation better than this one. Apprehension flowed like a dark undercurrent throughout the land. Something had happened in Dallas, Memphis, and LA's Ambassador Hotel, but no one could be sure what. And every night on TV screens, were the gathering horrors of Vietnam. It was like the country had suddenly woken up to a different America, one whose destiny was no longer in familiar hands. You didn't have to be a liberal or an activist to feel a gnawing sense of dislocation. Frady's complascent little world of "third-rate" journalism, is also interrupted the moment his jilted lover Lee Carter (Prentiss) is wheeled into the autopsy room, dead by her own forecast. From then on it's a Kafkaesque pursuit of diabolical forces only dimly perceived. Conversations become muted. We hear only tantalizing bits and pieces, such as the senator aboard the flight to Denver. Note how often telling scenes are filmed elliptically, either through glass panes, gauzy curtains, or at a distance, all of which impart not only a conspiratorial air, but a sense of viewer powerlessness much the way larger national events had suddenly escaped public grasp. This is not a movie to look away from for even a moment. The story is conveyed as much by camera as by dialogue, as when editor Rintels' (Hume Cronyn) lock-box disappears in a flash. Note also the expert use of silent intervals when characters such as Austin Tucker (William Daniels) simply stare off into space. Suddenly, events are thrown back on us to confront the tensions that have been mounting. The sense of dislocation-- of things being not quite what they seem-- is pervasive, and is no better conveyed than in the justly celebrated test sequence. There stark images follow one another in rapid-fire succession like an on-rushing train. At first the images unfold logically after the title cards, pictures of mother, wife, etc. following upon the word "Love". But then the images begin to jumble-- love with hate, war with peace-- and the sense of normality begins to crumble, collapsing finally into a chaos of contradictions until a blond hero figure returns the associations to proper balance. Nonetheless, the world has been turned upside down, if only for a few moments, yet the impression of dislocation remains. It's a powerfully disturbing sequence. The metaphor for what Frady faces lies in the massive slab of glass from whose bowels tiny figures emerge. It's a blank wall devoid of any identity of its own. Try to see inside and only an outside image is cast back. It's a giant mirror. Thus the public ends up seeing nothing beyond a reflection of itself. Yet the power of the shrouded interior is as undeniable as that gushing force of nature loosed upon the channel beneath the Salmon Creek dam. Beatty underplays throughout, at times barely registering at all. But that's how it should be, since the story carries the film. It's really McGinn as the sinister Jack Younger who makes the impression. His voice and manner convey just the right edge, a subtle hint of concealed networks lurking in the background. The movie really turns on his performance, and he brings it off beautifully. My one complaint is the barroom brawl. It seems unduly melodramatic for a movie whose style appears deliberately understated. Thirty years later and most Americans have only textbook knowledge of that explosive period and a world turned upside down. Parallax View may be a work of fiction, but it remains a telling insight into what much of the public was feeling. At movie's end, Frady rushes from the darkness toward the light of an open doorway only to be gunned down before he can reach the source. In 1978, the House Committee on Assassinations issued its findings. Contrary to the hurried Warren Report, the Committee found that JFK "was probably assassinated as the result of a conspiracy". But there was never any follow-up to that finding. It was as if committee members suddenly saw a light from an opening door but were unwilling to pass through. One doesn't have to agree to appreciate the historical or entertainment value of the movie. Parallax View remains a testament to its makers and to a period that in many ways is still with us. My copy is a new tape which is fine. However, the movie has enough merit to look into an expanded DVD version if such is available.
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