Wednesday, April 15, 2026

The Anderson Tapes (1971)

The Anderson Tapes is a 1971 Sidney Lumet movie and the fact that I generally dislike Lumet’s movies put me off seeing it for years.

On the other hand it’s a heist movie. And it’s a 70s paranoia movie. And it’s all about surveillance. These are all things I like a lot.

Robert Anderson (Sean Connery), known as Duke, has been in prison for ten years. That will prove be significant. He’s known as a very skilled and professional safe-cracker but the world has changed in ten years. Duke doesn’t really understand the ramifications of new technology for his kind of old school criminal.

He has a plan to rob an apartment building. There are six apartments, all inhabited by very rich people with all sorts of valuables - cash, negotiable bonds, jewels, paintings, objets d’art, coin collections.

He needs financing to set his scheme up and he gets it from the Mob. A very big Mob boss owes him a debt of honour.

There’s another ticklish complication. A little task that the Mob wants him to do for them.

Anderson puts together a team. The heist is intricately planned and it’s a good plan. There’s one problem. The authorities have Anderson and everyone else involved under surveillance. Not just one government agency, but a whole bunch of them - the narcotics bureau, the FBI, even the IRS. They’ve been under surveillance right from the start. Every movie they’ve made has been taped, photographed and filmed.

This is a movie in which everyone is being watched all the time. This was 1971, when the surveillance state was still in its infancy, but this movie is already taking a deep dive into tech paranoia.

The usual formula for a heist movie is that a master criminal comes up with a plan, we see the detailed planning and the rehearsals and then when the plan is finally put into operation something inevitably goes wrong. In this movie everything has already gone wrong right from the start.

When we come to the heist Lumet gets a tad tricky, with the narrative jumping back and forward between the present and the future. It’s a bit risky but he pulls it off rather well.

One very cool thing about this movie is that it features so much incredibly cool analog technology that was absolutely cutting edge in 1971. The Feds even have a super-computer, with punch cards and flashing lights just like a proper computer. And ham radio plays a key role, which is amazingly cool.

Connery gives a standard Connery performance but that’s OK because that standard Connery performance is always fun to watch. And he did tweak that standard performance for different films. In this one he lacks Bond’s charm and humour.

Dyan Cannon is quite good as his girlfriend. Christopher Walken, in his first significant feature film role, is good as a young crim befriended by Anderson in prison. Martin Balsam is there as well, as reliable as ever. Ralph Meeker is a riot as an uber-tough cop.

The heist itself occupies a very large chunk of the running time and it’s superbly done. There are only occasional moments of violence and that’s why they work and why they hit hard. Suddenly it’s not a game. And suddenly the guys who thought they had everything under control realise they’ve been fooling themselves.

The Anderson Tapes is a fine exercise in suspense and paranoia. This is easily the best move I’ve ever seen from Lumet. Highly recommended.

This movie is paired with Physical Evidence on a double-header Blu-Ray from Mill Creek. There are no extras but it looks terrific.

4 comments:

  1. Haven't seen this for a while, but it's a terrific movie. I think this may have been the first adult (mature) heist movie, as well as the first paranoid 1970s movie that I ever saw.

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    1. I'd heard a lot about it but had never seen it. I was very very pleasantly surprised.

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  2. Dee, I enyoyed reading your enthusiastic write-up of THE ANDERSON TAPES(filmed 1970, released 1971). This caper movie brings back nostalgic memories of a mind opening year of my youngsterhood. I first viewed this prophetic "Big Brother" foreseeing the future of a surveillance state movie on TV's the NBC SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES in 1973. This movie was really an eye-opener for it's time. This is one of those movies that stuck in my mind's eye over the years. I think it's excellent and just think how far the surveillance state has come the last 55 years.

    I haven't read Lawrence Sanders' 1970 novel of the same name, but it's probably different from the movie, and that's okay.

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    1. I think THE ANDERSON TAPES is the most effective 70s Hollywood paranoia movie because it doesn’t get too bogged down in ideological messaging. THE ANDERSON TAPES makes the point that it’s the all-pervasive surveillance itself that is the problem. It doesn’t matter who is doing the surveillance. Even if it’s the good guys doing it it’s still scary. It’s the technology itself that is scary.

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