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Extreme Close Up (film)

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Director
  
Jeannot Szwarc

Music director
  
Basil Poledouris

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Screenplay
  
Michael Crichton

Writer
  
Michael Crichton

Language
  
English

Extreme Close Up (film) movie poster

Release date
  
May 16, 1973 (1973-05-16)

Cast
  
Jim McMullan
(John Norman (as James McMullan)),
Katherine Woodville
(Sally Norman),
James A. Watson, Jr
(Cameraman),
Bara Byrnes
(Sylvia Marina),
Al Checco
(Surveillance Salesman),
Jacqueline Giroux
(Barbie (as Jackie Giroux))

Similar movies
  
Kingsman: The Secret Service
,
Dr. No
,
Salt
,
Tomorrow Never Dies
,
From Russia With Love
,
The Living Daylights

Tagline
  
Now the 28 million people who read about it, are definitely going to see it. Don't you want to know why?

Extreme Close-Up is a 1973 film directed by Jeannot Szwarc and written by Michael Crichton. It deals with privacy in an ever growing technological age.

Contents

Extreme Close Up (film) movie scenes

It was also known as Sex Through a Window.

Extreme Close-Up (film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters39796p39796

Plot

A television reporter rents surveillance equipment for a story on the intrusion of surreptitious surveillance in peoples' private lives. He spies on his neighbors and eventually a broader range of citizens, finding himself caught up in the dark world of voyeurism.

Cast

  • Jim McMullan as John Norman
  • Katherine Woodville as Sally Norman
  • James A. Watson Jr. as Cameraman
  • Bara Byrnes as Sylvia Marina
  • Al Checco as Surveillance Salesman
  • Jacqueline Giroux as Barbie
  • Curtis Credel as Reporter
  • Production

    Producer Paul Lazarus III says the film was inspired in part by the success of I Am Curious - Yellow. He approached Michael Crichton with whom he made Westworld (1973) and suggested they make a film which got some nudity on screen "without creating some kind of uproar that ruins people." They came up with the story and Crichton wrote the script. "This was an era of grainy 8mm stag films," said Lazarus III, "Our thinking was we could put what nudity we wanted... into a kind of action thriller format."

    Lazarus sold the film to a financier called Ted Mann on the basis of Crichton's reputation. He offered to make the whole movie for $209,000.

    Swarzz was hired in part because he was French "and we thought he'd known how to do this," according to Lazarus III.

    Ted Mann arranged a distribution deal with National General, who changed the title to Sex Through a Window. The film failed commercially and Crichton took it off his filmography.

    Crichton says he "wanted to make a X rated film that was also a good movie. What happened was that it got shot as a soft R and that just destroyed it. I mean, it really a hard edge that I thought was kind of interesting, and it was a good script, but it just had to be an X. The minute it was not an X it was just all over. I wasn't involved in the production... it was a low budget picture that didn't turn out as I hoped."

    References

    Extreme Close-Up (film) Wikipedia
    Extreme Close-Up (film) IMDb Extreme Close Up (film) themoviedb.org