Three Days of the Condor - communications protocols. Script vs movie adaptation

Three Days of the Condor - communications protocols. Script vs movie adaptation - Black Laptop Computer Turned on Showing Computer Codes

Sydney Pollack's Three Days of the Condor has always been one of my favourite movies, not only in regards to the spy movie genre but in general. I have known for a long time that the novel on which the film is based presented many differences with the movie (beginning with the title - Six Days of the Condor) and I have always been curious about founding them out.

Warning: spoilers ahead

A few days ago I finally started reading the book and I've reached the part in which Condor (played by Robert Redford in the movie), after finding out that all of his CIA colleagues have been slaughtered in their office while he was out getting lunch, runs to a public phone and dials the "panic" number. I clearly remembered the scene I saw in the movie many times since I was a kid. After receiving instructions from the experienced agent on the other end of the line, Condor is told to:

"Walk away from the phone; don't hang it up"

This can be read at page 30 of the final draft of the original screenplay and can also be seen in the clip below at 15 minutes circa (I couldn't find the scene I was looking for in english):

In the book instead, Condor is told to:

"hang up now, and remember, don't lose your head"

The screenplay of the movie was written by Lorenzo Semple Jr. and David Rayfiel. I'm not aware if James Grady, the author of the novel, participated to it or if he was consulted at all. As anticipated, many changes were made to the original plot, but I was wondering about this particular change. Why Condor would have had to go away from the phone without hanging it?



Best Answer

I suspect the scriptwriters wanted to make it clear to viewers that Redford's character was getting suspicious that they might be after him. The slow zoom on the abandoned phone swinging from its cord as Redford walks away parallels Redford's dawning realization that he is a target. ("Why would they want me to leave the phone off the hook? Did they trace the call because they're after me?") Clumsy and hamfisted by today's standards, maybe, considering that they already knew where he was, but probably effective.




Pictures about "Three Days of the Condor - communications protocols. Script vs movie adaptation"

Three Days of the Condor - communications protocols. Script vs movie adaptation - Positive woman using earphones and laptop at home during free time
Three Days of the Condor - communications protocols. Script vs movie adaptation - Woman Discussing With Her Colleagues
Three Days of the Condor - communications protocols. Script vs movie adaptation - Joyful millennial female in casual clothes with bowl of snack using remote controller while sitting on floor leaning on sofa and watching movie in cozy light living room with luxury interior



What was Three Days of the Condor based on?

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. The screenplay by Lorenzo Semple Jr. and David Rayfiel was based on the 1974 novel Six Days of the Condor by James Grady.

Who wrote 3 Days of the Condor?

Kathy Hale's Apartment, 9 Cranberry Street and Columbia Heights, Brooklyn. Brooklyn Heights stretches from Old Fulton Street near the Brooklyn Bridge south to Atlantic Avenue and from the East River east to Court Street and Cadman Plaza. Adjacent neighborhoods are: DUMBO, Downtown Brooklyn, Cobble Hill and Boerum Hill.



Three Days Of The Condor - Film, Literature \u0026 The New World Order




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Markus Spiske, Vlada Karpovich, Christina Morillo, Andrea Piacquadio