Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Caul is intensely private, obsessively guarding his own personal life, haunted by guilt from a past job that resulted in three deaths. Despite Caul's insistence that he is not responsible for how his clients use the surveillance, he is troubled by guilt and his Catholic faith.

  3. Feb 4, 2001 · This movie is a sadly observant character study, about a man who has removed himself from life, thinks he can observe it dispassionately at an electronic remove, and finds that all of his barriers are worthless.

  4. Apr 19, 2020 · The Conversation (1974) is a cult psychological thriller that mixes old-fashioned noir with modern fears of technology. The cinematography, lighting and soundtrack are especially memorable, and – together with the sense of urban isolation – reminiscent of the mood of an Edward Hopper painting.

  5. The movie is a thriller with a shocking twist at the end, but it is also a character study. Hackman plays a craftsman who has perfected his skill at the expense of all other human qualities; he lives in paranoia in a triple-locked apartment, and is terrified when it turns out his landlady has a key.

  6. At the end of the movie he tears his apartment down looking for a bug, but can't find one. That is because the bug is the camera that is shooting him, the microphone that is recording him, two elements that physically do not exist in his world.

  7. Summaries. A paranoid, secretive surveillance expert has a crisis of conscience when he suspects that the couple he is spying on will be murdered. Harry Caul is a devout Catholic and a lover of jazz music who plays his saxophone while listening to his jazz records.

  8. Mar 22, 2022 · Harry Caul (Gene Hackman) checks his telephone for an eavesdropping device at the end of Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation. The Conversation, Paramount Pictures, 1974. Coppola’s final shots capture Harry in desolation.

  1. People also search for