poster

Three Days of the Condor (1975)

7.3 | Sep 24, 1975 (US) | Thriller, Mystery | 01:57
Budget: 7 800 000 | Revenue: 41 509 797

His CIA code name is Condor. In the next seventy-two hours almost everyone he trusts will try to kill him.

When bookish CIA researcher Joe Turner finds all his co-workers dead, he, together with a woman he has kidnapped, must work together to outwit those responsible until he determines who he can really trust.

Featured Crew

Director, Producer
Executive Producer
Screenplay
Screenplay
Casting
Director of Photography
Editor
Makeup Artist
Original Music Composer
Costume Designer

Cast

profile
Robert Redford
Joseph Turner
profile
Faye Dunaway
Kathy Hale
profile
Cliff Robertson
J. Higgins
profile
Max von Sydow
G. Joubert
profile
John Houseman
Mr. Wabash
profile
Addison Powell
Leonard Atwood
profile
Walter McGinn
Sam Barber
profile
Tina Chen
Janice Chon
profile
Michael Kane
S.W. Wicks

Teasers

Three Days of the Condor 1975 High Def 4 TV Spots Trailers Robert Redford Faye Dunaway

Reviews

avatar
JPV852
8 | Dec 28, 2024
Still a well done spy thriller with Robert Redford doing a great job, though the romance between him and Faye Dunaway was... weird. Sure it's dated with the technology but like The Conversation, the storyline still is relevant. **4.25/5**
avatar
GenerationofSwine
10 | Jan 12, 2023
Mission Impossible, the movie, kind of ripped this off didn't it? Right down to the phone booth scene. Of course the ending was different. Yeah, anyway, I first caught this one on AMC on a rainy day with my mom back in the 90s. One of those flicking through the channels and nothing is on kind of days, and looking out the window and you can't really go outside and then..."Oh you'll like this." And the 13 year old me thought it was the coolest most paranoid thing that I'd ever seen. And, now the 40 year old me thinks it's the coolest and most paranoid thing that I've ever seen. Paranoid is really the only way to describe it. And the paranoia is doubled with Redford's character who is a spook, but not the James Bond kind. He's more the every day low level paper pusher kind of spook, not the kiss kiss bang bang spook. He's not sure what he's doing, he's never been in this situation before and you can feel his stress from start to finish. And, for those of you that read the book (also as good) this is spawned departments in both the KGB and then later the CIA that were simply based on Redford's job made up by the author. It literally didn't exist before the film. This is really the perfect spy movie. Everything that came before it and everything that followed it seem like a hollow shell in the genre.