Event Information
THE CONVERSATION
Screenings include a new introduction by Francis Ford Coppola, only available in theaters
Monday, Sep 16, 2024 8:00 PM
Dir. Francis Ford Coppola | USA | 1974 | 113 min. | PG | 4K DCP
Event Pricing
General Admission General Admission - $13.50
General Admission Senior - $11.50
General Admission Child - $11.50
General Admission Military/K-12 Teacher (w/ID) - $11.50
General Admission Group Sale - $12.50

 
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Part of Essential Coppola

“He’d kill us if he had the chance.”

THE CONVERSATION is Francis Ford Coppola’s masterpiece of sustained suspense and paranoia, starring Gene Hackman as a loner surveillance expert. Hackman’s Harry Caul bugs a couple in San Francisco’s teeming Union Square. But why?  A recluse living alone in an empty apartment, Caul plays saxophone to jazz records and broods over the deaths he may have been responsible for. And as he keeps tinkering with the recordings, he gets bugged himself, his tapes are stolen, his landlord effortlessly penetrates his security to leave a note — and then, to his horror, he figures it out. THE CONVERSATION’s stellar cast also includes John Cazale (Fredo of the first two GODFATHER films) as Harry’s dim-witted assistant, and a supporting cast of soon-to-be-stars, including Frederic Forrest (APOCALYPSE NOW), Cindy Williams (“Laverne & Shirley”), Teri Garr (YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN), and a ridiculously young Harrison Ford (three years before STAR WARS). (Synopsis courtesy of Film Forum)

"An immaculate thriller, a study in paranoia and loneliness, partly inspired by Antonioni's BLOW-UP, and released as the Watergate scandal was unfolding, [with] one of Gene Hackman's greatest performances." —Philip French, The Guardian

“Under Coppola's direction it succeeds on a variety of levels; as sheer thriller, as psychological study, as social analysis, and as political comment.” —Judith Crist, Vulture (April 1974)

“The heart of THE CONVERSATION’s appeal, then and now, is the way it combines an exceptional character study, a thriller plot and an ability to superbly convey the unease of a society where blanket surveillance is getting to be the norm.” —Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times