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The Conversation
(1974)
In Francis Ford Coppola's thriller:
- the technical brilliance and mystery presented in
the opening sequence in which an alleged adulterous couple (Ann
(Cindy Williams) and Mark (Frederic Forrest)) (heard saying "He's
not hurting anyone" - "Neither are we") in a crowded
Union Square in San Francisco were under surveillance by wire-tapping
expert Harry Caul (Gene Hackman)
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Tracking Adulterous Couple: Ann and Mark
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- the mesmerizing sequence in which Harry repeatedly
replayed and disclosed the hidden dialogue on the audio tapes (Mark: "He'd
kill us if he got the chance") - similar to a photographic
scene in Antonioni's Blow-Up (1966) -
and 'thought' he knew what would transpire
- Harry's guilt-plagued obsession to follow the couple
to the Jack Tar Hotel on Sunday at 3 o'clock (Room 773) for a startling
murderous revelation, when he rented the next-door room, and then
illegally entered the room and discovered evidence of a bloody confrontation
- the murder of the "Director" (Robert Duvall), Ann's husband,
who had originally ordered Caul to do surveillance on Ann
Revelations in Room 773 During Surveillance
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- the devastating ending as Harry sat amidst his
destroyed apartment after receiving a phone call:
"We'll be listening to you" - playing his melancholy-sounding
saxophone with the camera encircling him
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Surveillance Expert Harry Caul (Gene Hackman)
Murder in Room 773 at the Jack Tar Hotel in SF
Harry in His Ruined Apartment: Conclusion
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