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Three Days of the Condor

Three Days of the Condor is a 1975 American political thriller film directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway, Cliff Robertson, and Max von Sydow.[3] The screenplay by Lorenzo Semple Jr. and David Rayfiel was based on the 1974 novel Six Days of the Condor by James Grady.[3]

Three Days of the Condor
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySydney Pollack
Screenplay by
Based onSix Days of the Condor
by James Grady
Produced byStanley Schneider
Starring
CinematographyOwen Roizman
Edited byDon Guidice
Fredric Steinkamp (supervising)
Music byDave Grusin
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • September 24, 1975 (1975-09-24) (US)
Running time
118 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7.8 million[1]
Box office$41,509,797 (US)[2] (rentals: $32.7 million)[1]

Set mainly in New York City and Washington, D.C., the film is about a bookish CIA researcher who comes back from lunch one day to discover his co-workers murdered, then subsequently tries to avoid his own murder and outwit those responsible. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing. Semple and Rayfiel received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Motion Picture Screenplay.[3]

Plot Edit

Joe Turner is a bookish CIA analyst, codenamed "Condor". He works at the American Literary Historical Society in New York City, which is actually a clandestine CIA office. The staff members examine books, newspapers, and magazines from around the world to compare them to actual operations or to find ideas. Turner files a report to CIA headquarters on a thriller novel with strange plot elements; despite poor sales it has been translated into various languages.

Turner leaves through a back door to get staff lunches. Armed men enter the office and murder the other staffers there. Turner returns to find his co-workers dead; frightened, he grabs a gun and exits the building.

He contacts the CIA's New York headquarters in the World Trade Center from a phone booth and is given instructions to meet Wicks, his head of department, who will bring him to safety. Turner insists that Wicks bring somebody familiar, since "Condor" has never met his departmental head. Wicks brings Sam Barber, a college friend of Turner who is also a non-field CIA employee. The rendezvous is a trap and Wicks attempts to kill Turner, who wounds him before escaping. Wicks kills Barber to eliminate a witness and blames Turner for both shootings. Later, Wicks is killed by an intruder in his hospital room.

Turner encounters a woman named Kathy Hale and forces her to take him to her apartment. He holds Hale hostage while he attempts to figure out what is happening. Hale slowly comes to trust Turner, and they become lovers.

However, Joubert, a European who led the massacre of Turner's co-workers, discovers Turner's hiding place. Turner visits Sam Barber's apartment and spends some tense moments in the elevator with Joubert once the other passengers have left. Outside the building, Joubert tries to shoot Turner, but Turner manages to blend into a small crowd. The next morning, a hitman disguised as a mailman arrives at Hale's apartment, but Turner manages to kill him.

No longer trusting anyone within "the Company", Turner plays a cat-and-mouse game with Higgins, the deputy director of the CIA's New York division. With Hale's help, Turner abducts Higgins, who identifies Joubert as a freelance assassin who has undertaken assignments for the CIA. Back at his office, Higgins discovers that the "mailman" who attacked Turner worked with Joubert on a previous operation. Their CIA case officer was Wicks.

Meanwhile, Turner discovers Joubert's location. Utilizing his U.S. Army Signal Corps training, he traces a phone call and learns the name and address of Leonard Atwood, CIA Deputy Director of Operations for the Middle East. Confronting Atwood at gunpoint in the latter's mansion near Washington, D.C., Turner suggests that his own original report filed to CIA headquarters had exposed a rogue CIA operation to seize Middle Eastern oil fields; fearful of its disclosure, Atwood had privately ordered Turner's section eliminated.

As Atwood confirms this, Joubert enters and unexpectedly kills him, faking a suicide. Atwood's superiors had hired Joubert to eliminate someone who was about to become an embarrassment, overriding Atwood's original contract for Joubert to kill Turner. Joubert suggests that the resourceful Turner leave the country and even become an assassin himself. Turner rejects the suggestion but heeds Joubert's warning that the CIA will try to eliminate him as another embarrassment, possibly entrapping him through a trusted acquaintance.

Back in New York, Turner has a rendezvous with Higgins near Times Square. Higgins describes the oilfield plan as a contingency "game" that was planned within the CIA without approval from above. He defends the project, suggesting that when oil shortages cause a major economic crisis, Americans will demand that their comfortable lives be restored by any means necessary. Turner points to The New York Times building and Higgins is confused, asking Turner, "What did you do?" Turner says he has "told them a story." Higgins then tells Turner that he is about to become a very lonely man, and he questions whether Turner's whistleblowing will really be published. "They'll print it," Turner defiantly replies. However, as "Condor" begins to walk away, Higgins calls out "How do you know?".

Cast Edit

Production Edit

The film was shot on location in New York City (including the World Trade Center, 55 East 77th Street, Brooklyn Heights, The Ansonia, and Central Park), New Jersey (including Hoboken Terminal), and Washington, D.C. (including the National Mall).[4][5]

Soundtrack Edit

Three Days of the Condor
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedAugust 1975
LabelCapitol (1975)
DRG (2004 reissue)
ProducerNeely Plumb

All music by Dave Grusin, except where noted.

  1. "Condor! (Theme from 3 Days of the Condor)" 3:35
  2. "Yellow Panic" 2:15
  3. "Flight of the Condor" 2:25
  4. "We'll Bring You Home" 2:24
  5. "Out to Lunch" 2:00
  6. "Goodbye for Kathy (Love Theme from 3 Days of the Condor)" 2:16
  7. "I've Got You Where I Want You" 3:12 (Grusin/Bahler; sung by Jim Gilstrap)
  8. "Flashback to Terror" 2:24
  9. "Sing Along with the C.I.A." 1:34
  10. "Spies of a Feather, Flocking Together (Love Theme from 3 Days of the Condor)" 1:55
  11. "Silver Bells" 2:37 (Livingstone / Evans; Vocal: Marti McCall)
  12. "Medley: a) Condor! (Theme) / b) I've Got You Where I Want You" 1:57

Release Edit

The film was released in September 1975, earning $8,925,000 in theatrical showings in North America.[6]

Reception Edit

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 87% of 52 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review, and the average rating was 7.4/10; the site's consensus is: "This post-Watergate thriller captures the paranoid tenor of the times, thanks to Sydney Pollack's taut direction and excellent performances from Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway."[7]

When first released, the film was reviewed positively by New York Times critic Vincent Canby, who wrote that the film "is no match for stories in your local newspaper", but it benefits from good acting and directing.[8] Variety called it a B movie that was given a big budget despite its lack of substance.[9] Roger Ebert wrote, "Three Days of the Condor is a well-made thriller, tense and involving, and the scary thing, in these months after Watergate, is that it's all too believable."[10]

John Simon wrote how the book, Six Days of the Condor, had been rewritten for the film:

That the action has been relocated from sleepy Washington to furious New York City, almost all names have been changed, that the plot has been vastly over-complicated, is of lesser interest than a straight genre film, has been overloaded into an elegy of private, political, and finally, cosmic pessimism, a kind of national, if not metaphysical, guilt film to enchant the disenchanted.[11]

In closing his review, Simon said the lesson he derived from the film was, "we must be grateful to the CIA: it does what our schools no longer do—engage some people to read books."[11]

French philosopher Jean Baudrillard lists the film as an example of a new genre of "retro cinema" in his essay on history in the now influential book, Simulacra and Simulation (1981):

In the 'real' as in cinema, there was history but there isn't any anymore. Today, the history that is 'given back' to us (precisely because it was taken from us) has no more of a relation to a 'historical real' than neofiguration in painting does to the classical figuration of the real...All, but not only, those historical films whose very perfection is disquieting: Chinatown, Three Days of the Condor, Barry Lyndon, 1900, All the President's Men, etc. One has the impression of it being a question of perfect remakes, of extraordinary montages that emerge more from a combinatory culture (or McLuhanesque mosaic), of large photo-, kino-, historicosynthesis machines, etc., rather than one of veritable films."[12]

Some critics described the film as a piece of political propaganda, as it was released soon after the "Family Jewels" scandal came to light in December 1974, which exposed a variety of CIA 'dirty tricks'. However, in an interview with Jump Cut, Pollack explained that the film was written solely to be a spy thriller and that production on the film was nearly over by the time the Family Jewels revelations were made, so even if they had wanted to take advantage of them, it was far too late in the filmmaking process to do so. He said that despite both Pollack and Redford being well-known political liberals, they were only interested in making the film because an espionage thriller was a genre neither of them had previously explored.[13]

I didn't want this picture to be judged; it’s a movie. I intended it always as a movie. I never had any pretensions about the picture and it’s making me very angry that I'm getting pretensions stuck on me like tails on a donkey. If I wanted to be pretentious, I'd take the CIA seal and advertise this movie and really take advantage of the headlines. Central Intelligence Agency, United States of America, Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway. And don't think it wasn't suggested—obviously, that’s what advertising people do. We really put our foot down—Redford and I—to absolutely stop that.[13]

KGB Edit

According to former Soviet intelligence officer Sergei Tretyakov, the fictional clandestine office shown in Three Days of Condor convinced KGB generals to establish an equivalent office in Moscow, the Scientific Research Institute of Intelligence Problems (Russian: Научно-исследовательский институт разведывательных проблем).[14]

Awards and nominations Edit

Wins
Nominations

Legal action Edit

In 1997, The Association of Danish Film Directors (Danske Filminstruktører), on behalf of the director Sydney Pollack, sued Danmarks Radio on the grounds that cropping the film for television compromised the artistic integrity of the original film and that broadcasting the film in a reduced screen version violated Pollack's copyright. However, the case was unsuccessful because the film rights to Three Days of the Condor were not actually owned by Pollack. The case is believed to have been the first legal challenge to the practice of panning and scanning widescreen films for terrestrial broadcast.[16][17]

Cultural legacy Edit

  • Joubert's musings in the penultimate scene (see under Plot above) on how Turner might be killed by the CIA are reprised almost word-for-word in the Seinfeld episode "The Junk Mail." The speech is used as a warning from Newman to Kramer about how the U.S. Postal Service will retaliate for Kramer's refusal to receive his mail.
  • In Out of Sight, Jack Foley (George Clooney) and Karen Sisco (Jennifer Lopez) discuss the film's romantic subplot, which Sisco describes as dubious.
  • The Marvel Comics superhero film Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) was inspired by this film and other sources as well as by the original comic book source material. The directors, the Russo brothers, admit this and say that Robert Redford's casting in their film was intended as an homage.[18]
  • Perhaps the most famous line in the film is Turner's challenge to Higgins, “You think not getting caught in a lie is the same thing as telling the truth?” Director Sydney Pollack has admitted to using variations of that line in three of his other films: Tootsie (1982), The Firm (1993), and The Interpreter (2005).
  • The famous hacker Kevin Mitnick chose the Condor nickname after watching the movie.[19]
  • R&B Singer Amerie sampled the movie's main theme "Condor!" for her 2002 hit "Why Don't We Fall in Love".

TV series Edit

In March 2015, Skydance Media in partnership with MGM Television and Paramount Television announced that they would produce a TV series remake of the film.[20] In February 2017, Max Irons was cast as Joe Turner in the series entitled Condor for Audience.[21]

This eventually became a series developed by Todd Katzberg, Jason Smilovic, and Ken Robinson. The series premiered on June 6, 2018 on Audience. In July 2018, the series had been renewed for a second season. However, in January 2020, Audience announced it would be ending operations in its current format, effectively cancelling the show. The second season, already filmed at the time of the announcement, premiered on June 9, 2020, on C More and RTÉ2.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Knoedelseder, William K. Jr (August 30, 1987). "De Laurentiis: Producer's Picture Darkens". Los Angeles Times. p. 1. from the original on March 28, 2021. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  2. ^ "Three Days of the Condor". The Numbers. from the original on January 27, 2013. Retrieved January 22, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Lucia Bozzola (2013). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 14, 2013. Retrieved February 8, 2014.
  4. ^ "Three Days of the Condor". On the Set of New York. from the original on May 30, 2013. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  5. ^ Sydney Pollack (director) (1999). Three Days of the Condor (DVD). Los Angeles: Paramount.
  6. ^ "All-time Film Rental Champs", Variety, 7 January 1976 p 44
  7. ^ "Three Days of the Condor (1975)". Rotten Tomatoes. from the original on December 5, 2013. Retrieved October 10, 2023.
  8. ^ Canby, Vincent (September 25, 1975). "Three Days of the Condor (1975)". The New York Times. from the original on March 9, 2014. Retrieved February 29, 2008.
  9. ^ "Review: 'Three Days of the Condor'". Variety. 1975. from the original on September 15, 2020. Retrieved February 8, 2014.
  10. ^ Ebert, Roger (1975). "Three Days of the Condor". Chicago Sun-Times. from the original on December 31, 2020. Retrieved February 8, 2014.
  11. ^ a b Simon, John (1982). Reverse Angle: A Decade of American Film. Crown Publishers Inc. pp. 195-198. ISBN 9780517544716.
  12. ^ Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. Trans. Sheila Faria Glaser. University of Michigan Press, 1994, p. 45. French original, Simulacres et Simulation, published by Éditions Galilée in 1981.
  13. ^ a b McGilligan, Patrick (1976). "Hollywood uncovers the CIA". Jump Cut (10–11). from the original on November 19, 2012. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  14. ^ Earley, Pete (2007). Comrade J: The Untold Secrets of Russia's Master Spy in America After the End of the Cold War. Penguin Books. pp. 37–39.
  15. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills Nominees" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  16. ^ Jacobsen, Morton (May 1997). "Copyright on Trial in Denmark". Image Technology. Vol. 79, no. 5. pp. 16–20.
  17. ^ Jacobsen, Morton (June 1997). "Copyright on Trial in Denmark". Image Technology. Vol. 79, no. 6. pp. 22–24.
  18. ^ Faraci, Devin (March 7, 2014). "The Russo Brothers On Why THE WINTER SOLDIER Is THREE DAYS OF CAPTAIN AMERICA". Birth. Movies. Death. from the original on September 14, 2020. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  19. ^ The Internet : a historical encyclopedia. Hilary W. Poole, Laura Lambert, Chris Woodford, Christos J. P. Moschovitis. Santa Barbara, Calif. 2005. ISBN 1-85109-664-7. OCLC 62211803. from the original on July 20, 2023. Retrieved June 21, 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  20. ^ "Skydance Productions Developing 'Three Days of the Condor' Remake for TV (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. March 11, 2015. from the original on January 9, 2020. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  21. ^ "Max Irons To Star In Audience TV Series Inspired By 'Three Days Of The Condor'". Deadline. February 6, 2017. from the original on July 31, 2020. Retrieved February 7, 2017.

External links Edit

three, days, condor, 1975, american, political, thriller, film, directed, sydney, pollack, starring, robert, redford, faye, dunaway, cliff, robertson, sydow, screenplay, lorenzo, semple, david, rayfiel, based, 1974, novel, days, condor, james, grady, theatrica. Three Days of the Condor is a 1975 American political thriller film directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Robert Redford Faye Dunaway Cliff Robertson and Max von Sydow 3 The screenplay by Lorenzo Semple Jr and David Rayfiel was based on the 1974 novel Six Days of the Condor by James Grady 3 Three Days of the CondorTheatrical release posterDirected bySydney PollackScreenplay byLorenzo Semple Jr David RayfielBased onSix Days of the Condorby James GradyProduced byStanley SchneiderStarringRobert Redford Faye Dunaway Cliff Robertson Max von SydowCinematographyOwen RoizmanEdited byDon GuidiceFredric Steinkamp supervising Music byDave GrusinProductioncompanyDino De Laurentiis CorporationDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateSeptember 24 1975 1975 09 24 US Running time118 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 7 8 million 1 Box office 41 509 797 US 2 rentals 32 7 million 1 Set mainly in New York City and Washington D C the film is about a bookish CIA researcher who comes back from lunch one day to discover his co workers murdered then subsequently tries to avoid his own murder and outwit those responsible The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing Semple and Rayfiel received an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Motion Picture Screenplay 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Soundtrack 5 Release 6 Reception 6 1 KGB 7 Awards and nominations 8 Legal action 9 Cultural legacy 10 TV series 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksPlot EditJoe Turner is a bookish CIA analyst codenamed Condor He works at the American Literary Historical Society in New York City which is actually a clandestine CIA office The staff members examine books newspapers and magazines from around the world to compare them to actual operations or to find ideas Turner files a report to CIA headquarters on a thriller novel with strange plot elements despite poor sales it has been translated into various languages Turner leaves through a back door to get staff lunches Armed men enter the office and murder the other staffers there Turner returns to find his co workers dead frightened he grabs a gun and exits the building He contacts the CIA s New York headquarters in the World Trade Center from a phone booth and is given instructions to meet Wicks his head of department who will bring him to safety Turner insists that Wicks bring somebody familiar since Condor has never met his departmental head Wicks brings Sam Barber a college friend of Turner who is also a non field CIA employee The rendezvous is a trap and Wicks attempts to kill Turner who wounds him before escaping Wicks kills Barber to eliminate a witness and blames Turner for both shootings Later Wicks is killed by an intruder in his hospital room Turner encounters a woman named Kathy Hale and forces her to take him to her apartment He holds Hale hostage while he attempts to figure out what is happening Hale slowly comes to trust Turner and they become lovers However Joubert a European who led the massacre of Turner s co workers discovers Turner s hiding place Turner visits Sam Barber s apartment and spends some tense moments in the elevator with Joubert once the other passengers have left Outside the building Joubert tries to shoot Turner but Turner manages to blend into a small crowd The next morning a hitman disguised as a mailman arrives at Hale s apartment but Turner manages to kill him No longer trusting anyone within the Company Turner plays a cat and mouse game with Higgins the deputy director of the CIA s New York division With Hale s help Turner abducts Higgins who identifies Joubert as a freelance assassin who has undertaken assignments for the CIA Back at his office Higgins discovers that the mailman who attacked Turner worked with Joubert on a previous operation Their CIA case officer was Wicks Meanwhile Turner discovers Joubert s location Utilizing his U S Army Signal Corps training he traces a phone call and learns the name and address of Leonard Atwood CIA Deputy Director of Operations for the Middle East Confronting Atwood at gunpoint in the latter s mansion near Washington D C Turner suggests that his own original report filed to CIA headquarters had exposed a rogue CIA operation to seize Middle Eastern oil fields fearful of its disclosure Atwood had privately ordered Turner s section eliminated As Atwood confirms this Joubert enters and unexpectedly kills him faking a suicide Atwood s superiors had hired Joubert to eliminate someone who was about to become an embarrassment overriding Atwood s original contract for Joubert to kill Turner Joubert suggests that the resourceful Turner leave the country and even become an assassin himself Turner rejects the suggestion but heeds Joubert s warning that the CIA will try to eliminate him as another embarrassment possibly entrapping him through a trusted acquaintance Back in New York Turner has a rendezvous with Higgins near Times Square Higgins describes the oilfield plan as a contingency game that was planned within the CIA without approval from above He defends the project suggesting that when oil shortages cause a major economic crisis Americans will demand that their comfortable lives be restored by any means necessary Turner points to The New York Times building and Higgins is confused asking Turner What did you do Turner says he has told them a story Higgins then tells Turner that he is about to become a very lonely man and he questions whether Turner s whistleblowing will really be published They ll print it Turner defiantly replies However as Condor begins to walk away Higgins calls out How do you know Cast EditRobert Redford as Joseph Joe Turner Condor Faye Dunaway as Kathy Hale Cliff Robertson as Higgins Max von Sydow as Joubert John Houseman as Wabash Addison Powell as Leonard Atwood Walter McGinn as Sam Barber Tina Chen as Janice Chong Michael Kane as S W Wicks Don McHenry as Dr Lappe Michael Miller as Fowler Jess Osuna as The Major Dino Narizzano as Harold Helen Stenborg as Mrs Russell Patrick Gorman as Martin Hansford Rowe as Jennings Carlin Glynn as Mae Barber Hank Garrett as The Mailman James Keane as Store Clerk Sal Schillizzi as himself Sydney Pollack as Ben Kathy s Boyfriend on Phone uncredited Production EditThe film was shot on location in New York City including the World Trade Center 55 East 77th Street Brooklyn Heights The Ansonia and Central Park New Jersey including Hoboken Terminal and Washington D C including the National Mall 4 5 Soundtrack EditThree Days of the CondorSoundtrack album by Dave GrusinReleasedAugust 1975LabelCapitol 1975 DRG 2004 reissue ProducerNeely PlumbAll music by Dave Grusin except where noted Condor Theme from 3 Days of the Condor 3 35 Yellow Panic 2 15 Flight of the Condor 2 25 We ll Bring You Home 2 24 Out to Lunch 2 00 Goodbye for Kathy Love Theme from 3 Days of the Condor 2 16 I ve Got You Where I Want You 3 12 Grusin Bahler sung by Jim Gilstrap Flashback to Terror 2 24 Sing Along with the C I A 1 34 Spies of a Feather Flocking Together Love Theme from 3 Days of the Condor 1 55 Silver Bells 2 37 Livingstone Evans Vocal Marti McCall Medley a Condor Theme b I ve Got You Where I Want You 1 57Release EditThe film was released in September 1975 earning 8 925 000 in theatrical showings in North America 6 Reception EditRotten Tomatoes a review aggregator reports that 87 of 52 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review and the average rating was 7 4 10 the site s consensus is This post Watergate thriller captures the paranoid tenor of the times thanks to Sydney Pollack s taut direction and excellent performances from Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway 7 When first released the film was reviewed positively by New York Times critic Vincent Canby who wrote that the film is no match for stories in your local newspaper but it benefits from good acting and directing 8 Variety called it a B movie that was given a big budget despite its lack of substance 9 Roger Ebert wrote Three Days of the Condor is a well made thriller tense and involving and the scary thing in these months after Watergate is that it s all too believable 10 John Simon wrote how the book Six Days of the Condor had been rewritten for the film That the action has been relocated from sleepy Washington to furious New York City almost all names have been changed that the plot has been vastly over complicated is of lesser interest than a straight genre film has been overloaded into an elegy of private political and finally cosmic pessimism a kind of national if not metaphysical guilt film to enchant the disenchanted 11 In closing his review Simon said the lesson he derived from the film was we must be grateful to the CIA it does what our schools no longer do engage some people to read books 11 French philosopher Jean Baudrillard lists the film as an example of a new genre of retro cinema in his essay on history in the now influential book Simulacra and Simulation 1981 In the real as in cinema there was history but there isn t any anymore Today the history that is given back to us precisely because it was taken from us has no more of a relation to a historical real than neofiguration in painting does to the classical figuration of the real All but not only those historical films whose very perfection is disquieting Chinatown Three Days of the Condor Barry Lyndon 1900 All the President s Men etc One has the impression of it being a question of perfect remakes of extraordinary montages that emerge more from a combinatory culture or McLuhanesque mosaic of large photo kino historicosynthesis machines etc rather than one of veritable films 12 Some critics described the film as a piece of political propaganda as it was released soon after the Family Jewels scandal came to light in December 1974 which exposed a variety of CIA dirty tricks However in an interview with Jump Cut Pollack explained that the film was written solely to be a spy thriller and that production on the film was nearly over by the time the Family Jewels revelations were made so even if they had wanted to take advantage of them it was far too late in the filmmaking process to do so He said that despite both Pollack and Redford being well known political liberals they were only interested in making the film because an espionage thriller was a genre neither of them had previously explored 13 I didn t want this picture to be judged it s a movie I intended it always as a movie I never had any pretensions about the picture and it s making me very angry that I m getting pretensions stuck on me like tails on a donkey If I wanted to be pretentious I d take the CIA seal and advertise this movie and really take advantage of the headlines Central Intelligence Agency United States of America Robert Redford Faye Dunaway And don t think it wasn t suggested obviously that s what advertising people do We really put our foot down Redford and I to absolutely stop that 13 KGB Edit According to former Soviet intelligence officer Sergei Tretyakov the fictional clandestine office shown in Three Days of Condor convinced KGB generals to establish an equivalent office in Moscow the Scientific Research Institute of Intelligence Problems Russian Nauchno issledovatelskij institut razvedyvatelnyh problem 14 Awards and nominations EditWinsCartagena Film Festival Golden India Catalina Best Actor Max von Sydow 1976 David di Donatello Awards Special David Sydney Pollack for the direction 1976 Edgar Allan Poe Awards Edgar Best Motion Picture Lorenzo Semple Jr David Rayfiel 1976 Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards KCFCC Award Best Supporting Actor Max von Sydow 1976 Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Award Best Sound Editing Sound Effects 1976 NominationsAcademy Awards Oscar Film Editing Fredric Steinkamp and Don Guidice 1976 Cartagena Film Festival Golden India Catalina Best Film Sydney Pollack 1976 Golden Globe Awards Golden Globe Best Motion Picture Actress Drama Faye Dunaway 1976 Grammy Awards Grammy Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Special Dave Grusin 1977 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills 2001 15 Legal action EditIn 1997 The Association of Danish Film Directors Danske Filminstruktorer on behalf of the director Sydney Pollack sued Danmarks Radio on the grounds that cropping the film for television compromised the artistic integrity of the original film and that broadcasting the film in a reduced screen version violated Pollack s copyright However the case was unsuccessful because the film rights to Three Days of the Condor were not actually owned by Pollack The case is believed to have been the first legal challenge to the practice of panning and scanning widescreen films for terrestrial broadcast 16 17 Cultural legacy EditJoubert s musings in the penultimate scene see under Plot above on how Turner might be killed by the CIA are reprised almost word for word in the Seinfeld episode The Junk Mail The speech is used as a warning from Newman to Kramer about how the U S Postal Service will retaliate for Kramer s refusal to receive his mail In Out of Sight Jack Foley George Clooney and Karen Sisco Jennifer Lopez discuss the film s romantic subplot which Sisco describes as dubious The Marvel Comics superhero film Captain America The Winter Soldier 2014 was inspired by this film and other sources as well as by the original comic book source material The directors the Russo brothers admit this and say that Robert Redford s casting in their film was intended as an homage 18 Perhaps the most famous line in the film is Turner s challenge to Higgins You think not getting caught in a lie is the same thing as telling the truth Director Sydney Pollack has admitted to using variations of that line in three of his other films Tootsie 1982 The Firm 1993 and The Interpreter 2005 The famous hacker Kevin Mitnick chose the Condor nickname after watching the movie 19 R amp B Singer Amerie sampled the movie s main theme Condor for her 2002 hit Why Don t We Fall in Love TV series EditMain article Condor TV series In March 2015 Skydance Media in partnership with MGM Television and Paramount Television announced that they would produce a TV series remake of the film 20 In February 2017 Max Irons was cast as Joe Turner in the series entitled Condor for Audience 21 This eventually became a series developed by Todd Katzberg Jason Smilovic and Ken Robinson The series premiered on June 6 2018 on Audience In July 2018 the series had been renewed for a second season However in January 2020 Audience announced it would be ending operations in its current format effectively cancelling the show The second season already filmed at the time of the announcement premiered on June 9 2020 on C More and RTE2 See also EditList of American films of 1975 Conspiracy thriller Techno thriller United States Joint Publications Research Service a U S government organization which the American Literary Historical Society was said by whom to have been modeled References Edit a b Knoedelseder William K Jr August 30 1987 De Laurentiis Producer s Picture Darkens Los Angeles Times p 1 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved January 19 2021 Three Days of the Condor The Numbers Archived from the original on January 27 2013 Retrieved January 22 2012 a b c Lucia Bozzola 2013 Three Days of the Condor 1975 Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved February 8 2014 Three Days of the Condor On the Set of New York Archived from the original on May 30 2013 Retrieved May 3 2013 Sydney Pollack director 1999 Three Days of the Condor DVD Los Angeles Paramount All time Film Rental Champs Variety 7 January 1976 p 44 Three Days of the Condor 1975 Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved October 10 2023 Canby Vincent September 25 1975 Three Days of the Condor 1975 The New York Times Archived from the original on March 9 2014 Retrieved February 29 2008 Review Three Days of the Condor Variety 1975 Archived from the original on September 15 2020 Retrieved February 8 2014 Ebert Roger 1975 Three Days of the Condor Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on December 31 2020 Retrieved February 8 2014 a b Simon John 1982 Reverse Angle A Decade of American Film Crown Publishers Inc pp 195 198 ISBN 9780517544716 Baudrillard Jean Simulacra and Simulation Trans Sheila Faria Glaser University of Michigan Press 1994 p 45 French original Simulacres et Simulation published by Editions Galilee in 1981 a b McGilligan Patrick 1976 Hollywood uncovers the CIA Jump Cut 10 11 Archived from the original on November 19 2012 Retrieved December 24 2013 Earley Pete 2007 Comrade J The Untold Secrets of Russia s Master Spy in America After the End of the Cold War Penguin Books pp 37 39 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills Nominees PDF Archived PDF from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved September 16 2014 Jacobsen Morton May 1997 Copyright on Trial in Denmark Image Technology Vol 79 no 5 pp 16 20 Jacobsen Morton June 1997 Copyright on Trial in Denmark Image Technology Vol 79 no 6 pp 22 24 Faraci Devin March 7 2014 The Russo Brothers On Why THE WINTER SOLDIER Is THREE DAYS OF CAPTAIN AMERICA Birth Movies Death Archived from the original on September 14 2020 Retrieved September 1 2020 The Internet a historical encyclopedia Hilary W Poole Laura Lambert Chris Woodford Christos J P Moschovitis Santa Barbara Calif 2005 ISBN 1 85109 664 7 OCLC 62211803 Archived from the original on July 20 2023 Retrieved June 21 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Skydance Productions Developing Three Days of the Condor Remake for TV Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter March 11 2015 Archived from the original on January 9 2020 Retrieved March 15 2015 Max Irons To Star In Audience TV Series Inspired By Three Days Of The Condor Deadline February 6 2017 Archived from the original on July 31 2020 Retrieved February 7 2017 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Three Days of the Condor Three Days of the Condor at IMDb Three Days of the Condor at AllMovie Three Days of the Condor at the TCM Movie Database Three Days of the Condor at the American Film Institute Catalog Three Days of the Condor at Rotten Tomatoes Three Days of the Condor film trailer on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Three Days of the Condor amp oldid 1179579197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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