In one of the most frequently repeated
film-director tutorials of all time, Alfred Hitchcock explained his method of
generating suspense. Picture a scene of two people talking in a room, and then
suddenly a bomb explodes. That’s shock. Now picture the same scene, but insert
a shot at the beginning revealing the presence of the bomb—information the
audience possesses, but the characters do not. That’s suspense. Hitchcock’s
theory helps explain at least one of the reasons why The Salzburg Connection is among the least suspenseful thrillers of
the ’70s. During the first half of the movie, characters chase after something,
but the audience has no idea what they’re pursuing. Therefore, it’s impossible
for us to determine whether we should care about the outcome of the search.
Exacerbating this problem is one of the blandest leading characters ever
featured in a mystery movie, American lawyer Bill Mathison. As played by Barry
Newman, best known for playing the cipher-like protagonist of Vanishing Point (1971) and the title
character of the TV series Petrocelli
(1974-1976), Mathison is an average dude with average intelligence and average
manners—he seems more like a passerby who wandered into the movie than a
leading man.
Adapted from a popular novel by Helen MacInnes, The Salzburg Connection depicts the
international search for World War II-era documents containing the names of Nazi
spies, which is interesting-ish, but the filmmakers waste far too much screen
time on lifeless dialogue scenes. Making matters worse is the competent but
uninspired work of leading lady Anna Karina, the French beauty who was jean-Luc
Godard’s on- and offscreen muse during the ’60s. (In her defense, the only
requirements of her anemic role are looking appealing and frightened.)
Not that
it makes much difference, The Salzburg
Connection was the English-language debut of Austrian actor Klaus Maria
Brandauer, who enjoyed significant international success in the ’80s. He’s fine
here, but the movie is such a dud it’s no surprise he failed to secure another
major role in an English-language picture until playing the villain in the
“unofficial” 007 flick Never Say Never
Again (1983).
The
Salzburg Connection: LAME
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