

It’s difficult to look back upon films from the 1970s without imbuing them with the country’s political climate – the aftershocks of JFK and MLK’s assassinations, the Vietnam War, Watergate – but few of them actively reinforce their ties to reality. whose latest assignment, exploring the case of a murdered politician, sees him confronting the shady Parallax Institute.
PARALLAX VIEW MOVIE
With the tagline ’As American as apple pie’, The Parallax View makes a promise to the viewer right off the bat: the movie we’re about to see is not just American, but an encapsulation of what it means to be American. It forms the middle part of Pakula’s loose trilogy of paranoid thrillers beginning with Klute in 1971 and ending with All the President’s Men in 1976. Oft considered the mother of conspiracy films, The Parallax View remains Pakula’s greatest achievement, a nightmarish thriller which shines a light into the darker corners of American life, revealing the sinister figures who help shape the modern political landscape.īeyond all of the terrifying modern-day implications and parallels, The Parallax View is just a damn fine paranoid thriller.

Pakula’s Klute and All the President’s Men are also screening in Ragged Glory: Summer in the 70s. Best of all: the Rorscharch / Indoctrination montage which the Parallax Corporation shows Frady, a barrage of iconography situating racism, genocide and war next to mom and apple pie.Īlan J. The movie has a sinister sheen, noir in the sunshine, with several memorably staged set pieces, and Pakula’s attention to sound design runs just as deep as his commitment to the image… its specific, but subtle, like the evocations of the Nation in Michael Small’s fine score. Reporter Joe Frady (Warren Beatty) is on to Them, or so he believes… Pakula and cinematographer Gordon Willis ( Klute The Godfather) elaborate an oblique but unmistakable unease with each and every frame (its appropriate that the title should derive from a technical camera term, the slight difference in an image between the viewfinder and the lens). The most lucid and ingenious, the most deeply, creepily satisfying of paranoia thrillers, The Parallax View posits an assassination corporation behind (one presumes) the murders of John and Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King. “Every time you turned around, some nut was knocking off one of the best men in the country.” Joe Frady
