Film Review
Not only was
The Anderson Tapes
one of the slickest heist movies of the 1970s, directed by Sidney Lumet
with his customary aplomb and mania for detail, it was also highly
prescient, for it presents a chilling vision of a world in which
surveillance of the individual by government agencies and other, less
reputable, bodies has become pandemic. Made before the Watergate
scandal broke in 1972, the film lit the coals of the paranoia that
would flare up in the mid-1970s as President Nixon came under fire for
alleged involvement in wiretapping activities. Francis Ford
Coppola's
The Conversation
(1974) was just one of many other films that fed on public anxiety over
this frightening manifestation of the Big Brother society, where
everything you said could potentially be heard or recorded without your
knowledge. Forty years on, the film is depressingly topical - how
long will it be before all phone lines and internet activity is
monitored by the security services, supposedly in our best interest..?
Whilst it has political undertones,
The
Anderson Tapes is first and foremost a heist movie, and a
well-constructed and enjoyable one at that. Having severed his
ties once and for all with James Bond (or so he thought at the
time...), Sean Connery appears revitalised as he throws himself into
the role of a no-nonsense small-time hoodlum with big-time
ambitions. It could be argued that this is where Connery's real
career began - the actor certainly showed far more confidence and a far
greater range once he had put the 007 campery behind him. The
film was also an important milestone for Christopher Walken, who gets
his first major role here, subtly sinister as Connery's young
safe-cracking accomplice.
A precursor to Lumet's subsequent films
Serpico (1973) and
Dog Day Afternoon (1975),
The Anderson Tapes doesn't quite
have the muscle of these later crime dramas but it is a polished and
absorbing production, its main distinguishing feature being Quincy
Jones's eerie electronic score (which sounds like nothing on
earth). The film's ending is a multiple pile-up of anticipated
ironies, the (inevitable) failure of the heist overshadowed by the
failure of the myriad of surveillance activities taking place in the
background. The limited practical value of surveillance is
brought home with a vengeance by the film's central irony, which is
that, for all the monitoring to which Anderson is subjected, no one is
able to pick up on the fact that he is preparing a major criminal
operation. Listening is one thing;
hearing is an altogether finer art.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Once he has completed a ten year stretch in prison for burglary, John
Anderson returns to his girlfriend Ingrid, who now resides in an
upmarket New York apartment block, at the expense of her latest
admirer. Anderson realises that by mounting a massive heist on the
entire building he can make himself a very rich man, rich enough to
retire in style. He wastes no time hooking up with his former
criminal associates and calls in a favour from a former Mafia boss to
supply the outlay for the operation. As he mounts the perfect
robbery, Anderson is blissfully unaware that various government
agencies are assiduously monitoring his activities to establish his
links to organised crime syndicates...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.