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  1. The Parallax View

    The Parallax View

    R1974 · Thriller · 1h 42m

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  1. The Parallax View. The Parallax View is a 1974 American political thriller film starring Warren Beatty, with Hume Cronyn, William Daniels and Paula Prentiss in support. Produced and directed by Alan J. Pakula, its screenplay is by David Giler and Lorenzo Semple Jr., based on the 1970 novel by Loren Singer. [1]

    • Alan J. Pakula
    • The Parallax View, by Loren Singer
  2. Jun 19, 1974 · The Parallax View: Directed by Alan J. Pakula. With Warren Beatty, Paula Prentiss, William Daniels, Walter McGinn. 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.

    • (21K)
    • Drama, Thriller
    • Alan J. Pakula
    • 1974-06-19
  3. A couple of years earlier, the hero of "The Parallax View" would probably have been a cop or a private eye. But what with Woodward and Bernstein and all, Warren Beatty plays a newspaper reporter instead. Like all good movie reporters, he never has to meet a deadline or write a story; his function is to show up a the office late at night so his kindly old editor can hand over the petty-cash ...

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  5. The Parallax View blends deft direction from Alan J. Pakula and a charismatic Warren Beatty performance to create a paranoid political thriller that stands with the genre's best.

    • (41)
    • Alan J. Pakula
    • R
    • Warren Beatty
  6. Feb 23, 2021 · The movie is “ The Parallax View ” (1974), a welcome new addition to the Criterion Collection. It is paranoia personified. That assassination of a U.S. Senator, in the bravura opening sequence set at Seattle’s towering Space Needle, was witnessed by many. Now those people are dying steadily under fishy circumstances.

  7. Nov 19, 2013 · The Parallax View, written by David Giler, Lorenzo Semple Jr and an uncredited Robert Towne, describes how such patsies are created. Pakula was, like David Miller, a mainstream director whose ...

  8. Perhaps no director tapped into the pervasive sense of dread and mistrust that defined the 1970s more effectively than Alan J. Pakula, who, in the second installment of his celebrated Paranoia Trilogy, offers a chilling vision of America in the wake of the assassinations of the Kennedys and Martin Luther King Jr., and about to be shocked by Watergate. Three years after witnessing the murder of ...

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