As he is played by Gene Hackman in The Conversation, an expert wiretapper named Harry Caul is one of the most affecting and tragic characters in the movies.
100
EmpireAngie Errigo
EmpireAngie Errigo
Another great, landmark American film of the '70s.
100
TV Guide Magazine
TV Guide Magazine
One of Coppola's very best.
90
Variety
Variety
A major artistic asset to the film - besides script, direction and the top performances - is supervising editor Walter Murch's sound collage and re-recording.
The Conversation is an immaculate thriller, a study in paranoia and loneliness, long in gestation, partly inspired by Antonioni's Blow-Up, and released as the Watergate scandal was unfolding.
90
Time Out
Time Out
A bleak and devastatingly brilliant film.
80
Chicago Reader
Chicago Reader
Gene Hackman excels in Francis Ford Coppola's tasteful, incisive 1974 study of the awakening of conscience in an electronic surveillance technician.
80
CineVue
CineVue
The Conversation, however, feels rather more like watching a an acting masterclass than a true movie masterpiece.
70
The New York TimesVincent Canby
The New York TimesVincent Canby
Mr. Coppola, the writer as well as the director, has nearly succeeded in making a great film but has, instead, made one that is merely very good.
Thanks to Walter Murch’s keen, intuitive sound montage and Hackman’s clammy, subtle performance, the movie captures a more elusive and universal fear—that of losing the power to respond, emotionally and morally, to the evidence of one’s own senses.