A paranoid, secretive surveillance expert has a crisis of conscience when he suspects that the couple he is spying on will be murdered.

Gene Hackman
as Harry Caul

John Cazale
as Stan

Allen Garfield
as William P. 'Bernie' Moran

Frederic Forrest
as Mark

Cindy Williams
as Ann

Michael Higgins
as Paul

Elizabeth MacRae
as Meredith

Teri Garr
as Amy Fredericks

Harrison Ford
as Martin Stett

Mark Wheeler
as Receptionist
talisencrw
Unfortunately, it appears with every passing day that the great American paranoid political thrillers of the 60's and 70's, with its strongest work bookended by 'The Manchurian Candidate' (eerily foreseeing the JFK assassination) and 'All the President's Men' (placing a coda of closure on the Waterg...
tensharpe
"The Conversation" is a tense thriller that explores how paranoia can take over all aspects of everyday life once something disturbing is discovered. Paid to eavesdrop on two people in a public place, Harry Caul ( Gene Hackman ) records the conversation and after some work produces a tape with c...
CinemaSerf
Gene Hackman is superb here as "Harry" - a super-efficient surveillance expert who discovers in the line of duty that a couple he is monitoring might well be about to be murdered. It becomes clear that the couple - Cindy Williams & Frederic Forrest are having an affair but that is just the tip of th...
Muypfbogbchidv
“The Conversation” is not what you’d expect - but, it must be said, is fantastic and nearly flawless in its own right. It is more similar to Antonioni’s “Blow” than DePalma’s, and a sense of eeriness flows throughout the work, bolstered by Gene Hackman’s solemn and brooding performance. The b...