There is a significant body of films that feature surveillance as a theme or as a plot arc. These are a number of these films produced in the United States and other countries.
List of films
editFilm | Year | Description |
---|---|---|
1971 | 2014 | The documentary features the Citizens' Commission to Investigate the FBI and how it broke into a satellite FBI office. The group discovered and released documents about COINTELPRO, a secret domestic surveillance program that targeted "dissident groups, civil rights leaders and anti-Vietnam War activists".[1] |
2001: A Space Odyssey | 1968 | During the Jupiter Mission chapter of the film, the HAL 9000 artificial intelligence maintains total surveillance of the spacecraft, including visual surveillance, monitoring the psychology of the crew, and lipreading. |
Traffic in Souls | 1913 | Criminals use a wired intercom and a tablet that duplicates what's written on it on a similar device in another room. The film's heroes use a wired remote mic and wax cylinder-based recording device set up in a neighbouring room to incriminate the conspirators. |
1984 | 1956 | The film is set in a totalitarian society in the future where the population may be monitored at any time.[2] |
23 | 1998 | Hackers sell their research to Russians, but because the Russians want military data instead, the hackers have to elude them.[2] |
Aelita: Queen of Mars | 1924 | Surveillance is used by the upper class to oversee the working class.[3] |
American Pie | 1999 | The teenage protagonist setting up his webcam so his friends can see a girl changing clothes. The webcast is shared publicly to his peers.[4] |
The Anderson Tapes | 1971 | Burglars use a luxury apartment's surveillance technology to break in but are unaware of being under surveillance themselves.[3] |
Anon | 2018 | Set in a futuristic world where privacy and anonymity no longer exist, the plot follows a troubled detective who comes across a young woman who has evaded the government's transparency system. |
Another Stakeout | 1993 | Sequel to Stakeout. Two police detectives and an assistant district attorney surveil a home looking for a missing witness in a Mafia case. |
Antitrust | 2001 | The protagonist learns that his company has an extensive surveillance system to observe and steal code.[5] |
Bad Times at the El Royale | 2018 | Circa 1968, several strangers, most with a secret to bury, meet by chance at Lake Tahoe's El Royale, a rundown hotel with a dark past, including a widespread secret surveillance activity of rooms occupied by guests. |
Bedroom Eyes | 1984 | An avid jogger finds a prime voyeurism spot on his nightly route; then witnesses a murder. |
Blow Out | 1981 | A sound technician inadvertently records a murder and learns that it is part of ongoing political corruption.[6] |
Blowup | 1966 | A fashion photographer unwittingly takes photographs of a murder and investigates the circumstances.[6] |
Blue Thunder | 1983 | The film features a military helicopter with high-tech surveillance equipment.[3] |
Body Double | 1984 | The protagonist, staying at a friend's apartment, is able to spy on the neighbor but winds up witnessing her murder.[7] |
The Bourne Identity | 2002 | Amnesiac spy Jason Bourne eludes people from his program trying to track him down.[7] |
The Bourne Supremacy | 2004 | Amnesiac spy Jason Bourne eludes people from his program trying to track him down.[7] |
The Bourne Ultimatum | 2007 | Amnesiac spy Jason Bourne eludes people from his program trying to track him down.[8] |
Brazil | 1985 | The science fiction fantasy film follows a government clerk who works for a totalitarian and bureaucratic government of Orwellian proportions.[9] |
The Cabin in the Woods | 2012 | A group of college students who retreat to a remote forest cabin where they fall victim to backwoods zombies, and two scientists who manipulate the ongoing events from an underground facility. |
Caché | 2005 | A couple finds on their front porch videotapes of them in their home and tries to find out who is recording them.[9] |
Cape Fear | 1962 | A released criminal follows the family of the man who testified against him.[9] |
Captain America: The Winter Soldier | 2014 | The superhero Captain America, resurrected in the 21st century, combats a conspiracy in the surveillance state of his country.[10] |
The Circle | 2017 | A powerful Internet company attempts to create a utopian society by deploying widespread surveillance accessible to all. |
Citizenfour | 2014 | The documentary features Edward Snowden and his initiation of global surveillance disclosures in 2013,[11] documenting events that first took place in Hong Kong at a clandestine meeting between Snowden and journalist Glenn Greenwald. |
Closed Circuit | 2013 | A pair of lawyers in Great Britain discover "an unsavory alliance" between its secret service and the criminal justice system and have to evade the surveillance state.[12] |
Code 46 | 2003 | In the near future, personal travel between countries is limited and controlled by technological means, but counterfeiting allows circumvention of these controls.[13] |
Cold Eyes | 2013 | A South Korean surveillance unit attempts to track down a criminal leader in Seoul.[14] |
Colossus: The Forbin Project | 1970 | A supercomputer created for running the defense systems of the United States becomes sentient and assumes total control. It begins placing all citizens under surveillance, starting with its creator. |
Confessions of a Nazi Spy | 1939 | A Nazi spy ring in the United States is tracked and disrupted by an FBI agent played by Edward G. Robinson in the years just before the outbreak of World War II. |
The Conversation | 1974 | A surveillance expert is hired to combine wiretapped recordings of a couple and tries to interpret their conversations.[6] |
The Dark Knight | 2008 | The vigilante superhero Batman hacks every cell phone in Gotham City to set up a sonar system to find the criminal the Joker.[8] |
Death in the Terminal | 2016 | A reconstruction in so-called Rashomon style, with several eyewitnesses offering their own perspectives on a single tragic event, a terror attack in the Beer Sheva bus station after which a bystander assumed to be the perpetrator was lynched. |
Death Watch | 1980 | In the future, the protagonist has a camera implanted in his brain and is enlisted to probe a dying woman's subconscious.[15] |
Déjà Vu | 2006 | A detective tries to save a woman's life by utilizing advanced surveillance equipment. |
Demolition Man | 1993 | The science fiction film depicts a 2032 "San Angeles" where everyone's behavior is under surveillance.[16] |
The Den | 2013 | In the found-footage horror film, a teenage girl witnesses a murder via webcam, and the killer tracks her down. The film is shown through different screens including that of surveillance cameras.[17] |
Disturbia | 2007 | A teenager under house arrest spies on his neighbor and suspects him of being a killer.[9] |
Eagle Eye | 2008 | Two strangers meet via a strange phone call and are then tracked by someone using everyday technology.[4] |
Echelon Conspiracy | 2009 | An American engineer gets a cell phone that gives him unlimited wealth, but he is then pursued by security agents.[18] |
EDtv | 1999 | Ed is a video store clerk whose daily life is broadcast by a company trying to save its cable channel.[18] |
The End of Violence | 1997 | A film producer is targeted to keep secret a satellite surveillance program to combat crime.[19] |
Enemy of the State | 1998 | The main character is pursued by the National Security Agency, which uses an array of surveillance technologies.[4] |
Equilibrium | 2002 | In a futuristic city where emotions are suppressed through surveillance and control, a law enforcement officer begins experiencing emotions himself.[20] |
Das Experiment | 2001 | A journalist joins a curious psychological experiment and records the experiment in secret.[20] |
Eye in the Sky (2007) | 2007 | In Hong Kong, a police surveillance unit monitors a master criminal without realizing the criminal is watching them as well.[21] |
Eye in the Sky (2016) | 2016 | Complications arise when a British lieutenant general (Alan Rickman) and a colonel (Helen Mirren) order a drone missile strike to take out a group of terrorists in Nairobi, Kenya.[22] |
Eyeborgs | 2009 | In the United States, the "Freedom of Observation Act" is passed allowing for the creation of ODIN (Optical Defense Intelligence Network). This leads to "eyeborgs" being created, a mobile camera drone administered by the Department for Homeland Security.[23] |
The Final Cut | 2004 | An editor cuts together footage from a device implanted in one's body that can record an entire life, and he finds footage that has a connection with his own past.[24] |
Firewall | 2006 | A technology executive is coerced to rob a bank by criminals holding his family hostage.[24] |
Fortress | 1993 | The science fiction film follows a couple with an illegal second child through a panopticonal society.[25] |
The Fortune Cookie | 1966 | A private eye secretly films a man who is feigning an injury in an attempt to collect a large amount of money through a lawsuit.[26] |
Freeze Frame | 2004 | The protagonist is acquitted from the wrongful accusation of killing a woman and her twin daughters, but due to the media's portrayal, he maintains video surveillance of his own life to ensure having an alibi.[27] |
Furious 7 | 2015 | In this Fast and Furious action film series, a team of drivers tracks down a hacker to recover a surveillance device called God's Eye that can locate anyone in the world within seconds.[28] |
Gattaca | 1997 | In the near future, an aspiring astronaut uses a cover identity in training and has to evade genetic screenings used as a surveillance mechanism.[29] |
Giant | 2009 | A security guard at a supermarket watches a cleaning woman through video surveillance and begins stalking her outside work.[30] |
Hackers | 1995 | A group of hackers break into a company's supercomputer and have to evade the U.S. Secret Service.[30] |
Halloween: Resurrection | 2002 | A group of college students are trapped inside a home with a serial killer, and the killer broadcasts the subsequent events online through multiple cameras.[30] |
Headhunters | 2011 | High-tech surveillance is used in a showdown between a headhunter who moonlights as an art thief and a potential recruit with a military background.[31] |
Hey Arnold! The Movie | 2002 | Surveillance cameras are mounted everywhere in the villain's homebase to stop potential intruders from stealing the document, but they come in handy later when the villain is caught by said cameras burning the document in front of Arnold and Gerald. |
Hi, Mom! | 1970 | A Vietnam War veteran attempts to make "peep art" by filming people who live across from his apartment building.[32] |
iHuman | 2019 | A documentary by Tonje Hessen Schei presenting a wide range of views on AI and society. |
I Love You All (Aus Liebe Zum Volk) | 2004 | This is a film about surveillance and blindness, about faith and disillusion.[33] |
Infernal Affairs | 2002 | A cop works undercover in a triad, and a triad member works undercover in the police department. Each is ordered to track down the mole in the very organization he infiltrated.[34] |
Jason Bourne | 2016 | Amnesiac spy Jason Bourne eludes people from his program trying to track him down.[8][7] |
The Listening | 2006 | An art gallery employee discovers a briefcase of classified documents about surveillance technology made by one of the NSA's suppliers, and the supplier goes after her to protect its secrets. A NSA operative blows his cover to protect the woman.[35] |
The Lives of Others | 2006 | In East Germany in the 1980s, a Stasi officer spies on a playwright.[9] |
Logan's Run | 1976 | Citizens of a futuristic city are controlled by the use of a crystal on their right palm |
Lost Highway | 1997 | In part of the film, a couple receives videotapes recording the outside then the inside of their home.[19] |
Look | 2007 | The film shows surveillance camera footage of events surrounding San Fernando Valley denizens.[36] |
Loving | 1970 | George Segal as a philandering husband trysts with a pick-up in a child's playhouse in the back yard of the upscale house where he and his wife are attending a party, unaware that a group of men are watching with interest over a closed circuit TV monitor.[37] |
M | 1931 | A city in pursuit of a child murderer has both cops and criminals engaging in surveillance and snooping on one another.[8] |
The Manchurian Candidate | 2004 | The film is a political thriller about a soldier who has been subjected to manipulation of his mental states and brain functions such that he becomes part of a corporate-backed political conspiracy, featuring themes of intense surveillance and manipulation. |
Meine Daten und ich | 2009 | Mix of feature and documentary film that discusses surveillance policies in Germany in interviews with members of parliament and experts. |
Menace II Society | 1993 | A shopkeeper keeps close surveillance on two young black men.[3] |
Mercury Rising | 1998 | A 9 year old autistic boy is being hunted by the NSA |
Metropolis | 1927 | The master of the city, Fredersen, keeps close surveillance on the city's workers.[3] |
Minority Report | 2002 | The science fiction film depicts a futuristic society under total surveillance.[4] |
Modern Times | 1936 | A factory worker is demented by the sped-up assembly line and the constant video surveillance.[3] |
My Little Eye | 2002 | In the horror film, five twentysomethings live together to win a prize but are subsequently targeted by a serial killer.[38] |
The Net | 1995 | A computer programmer in unknowing possession of secret software is tracked by assailants.[3] |
The Net 2.0 | 2006 | A computer technician who takes a job in Istanbul finds herself in pursuit by criminals who try to erase her identity from the Internet.[39] |
Network | 2019 | The debut film of Saptaswa Basu features the theme of surveillance in this modern world. The first Bengali film to deal with a subject like this. |
Nineteen Eighty-Four | 1984 | The film is set in a totalitarian state where citizens are under complete surveillance.[3] |
Official Secrets | 2019 | Film based on the life of whistleblower Katharine Gun who leaked a memo detailing that the US had eavesdropped on diplomats from countries tasked with passing a second UN resolution on the invasion of Iraq. |
One Hour Photo | 2002 | An employee at a photo processing department processes a family's photos and imagines himself to be their uncle.[39] |
The Osterman Weekend | 1983 | A television host allows the CIA to wire his home for video surveillance since his visiting friends are suspected to be spies.[19] |
Overheard | 2009 | The Hong Kong Police Force's Commercial Crime Bureau uses surveillance to monitor for suspected price fixing.[40] |
Panic Room | 2002 | A woman and her daughter use closed-circuit television to follow the movements of criminals invading their home.[41] |
The Parallax View | 1974 | A journalist investigates the assassination of a United States Senator and infiltrates the responsible corporation.[42] |
Paranoia | 2013 | A technology expert infiltrates a company to spy on it, but the company begins to spy on him.[43] |
Peeping Tom | 1960 | A photographer hunts down women and records their reactions as he kills them.[19] |
The Perfect Dictatorship | 2014 | Recordings made by hidden cameras and microphones are used to both expose and perpetuate political corruption in Mexico.[44] |
Pi | 1998 | A mathematician finds out that a new 216 digit number is the key to the stock market and religion and is targeted by several organizations.[9] |
The President's Analyst | 1967 | In the satire film, an analyst for the President of the United States becomes expendable and teams up with two allies. Meanwhile, a telephone company seeks to implant electronic devices in people's brains.[45] |
Rear Window | 1954 | The main character spies on people in his apartment complex and thinks one of them is a murderer.[9] |
Red Road | 2006 | In Scotland, a woman who is paid to watch a dangerous corner of North Glasgow tracks a former criminal and begins stalking him.[8] |
The Resident | 2011 | A recently single woman rents an apartment in New York City and is stalked by her landlord with surveillance equipment. |
Le Samouraï | 1967 | The film's hit man resides in a flat that is bugged by the police who suspects him of being responsible for a contract killing.[8] |
A Scanner Darkly | 2006 | An undercover cop is ordered to spy on his associates as a paranoid government monitors its citizens.[4] |
The Secret Cinema | 1968 | A woman is manipulated by people around her so a director can film her to screen the results in a theater.[46] |
Sexmission | 1984 | Two men wake up from hibernation to witness a 100% female society and discover they are the last men alive. |
Sharky's Machine | 1981 | A detective spies on a high-end prostitute through her apartment windows, develops an attraction and witnesses her murder. |
The Simpsons Movie | 2007 | The Simpsons are on the run from the law, but the National Security Agency is able to eavesdrop and locate them.[47] |
Sliver | 1993 | The main character is spied on by one of her fellow apartment tenants.[3] |
Snake Eyes | 1998 | A homicide detective investigates an assassination attempt at a boxing match.[19] |
Sneakers | 1992 | A team of computer hackers is contracted by the government to steal a code-breaking machine.[6] |
Snowden | 2016 | Oliver Stone's biographical thriller on NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden. |
Spectre | 2015 | James Bond learns that a villain is responsible for funding the multinational surveillance program for his criminal organization.[48] |
Stakeout | 1987 | Two police detectives are on stakeout watching a waitress whose ex-boyfriend has escaped from prison. |
Surveillance | 2008 | Two FBI agents hunting a serial killer come across a mass shooting in a small town, and they use video surveillance to uncover the truth of the shooting.[49] |
Surveillance 24/7 | 2007 | Filmed through surveillance cameras, a teacher takes home a lover and wakes up to find him murdered.[49] |
Sweet Bunch | 1983 | A group of four misfits live together in a house and, disillusioned with life, experiment in crime. They are put under surveillance by the authorities, who wait for a misstep.[50] |
Takedown (Track Down) | 2000 | The story is based on the search for computer hacker Kevin Mitnick. |
Thegidi | 2014 | A Tamil rookie detective sent to collect daily activities of a set of people, soon realizes that people are being killed using details of the surveillance report he submitted. He tries to save the next targets and eventually tries to trace the killer.[51] |
Thelma & Louise | 1991 | Surveillance cameras record Thelma and Louise as they commit crimes.[3] |
The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse | 1960 | German police investigate unsolved murders at a hotel, which is rigged with a sophisticated TV system.[49] |
Three Days of the Condor | 1975 | The film is about a bookish CIA researcher who comes back from lunch, discovers all his co-workers murdered, and tries to outwit those responsible until he figures out whom he can really trust |
THX 1138 | 1971 | The film is set in a dystopian society where citizens are drugged and under surveillance.[3] |
Timecode | 2000 | The experimental film displays a split screen of four cameras following different people in a film production office.[52] |
The Truman Show | 1998 | The main character is unaware that his small-town life is constructed and is recorded 24 hours a day and aired to TV viewers.[8] |
V for Vendetta | 2005 | The film is set in a future England ruled by a totalitarian regime that uses surveillance to monitor the citizens.[53] |
Vacancy | 2007 | A couple staying at a motel begin watching low-budget horror movies available on tape and realize the movies were filmed in their own motel room.[54] |
We Live in Public | 2009 | A film about the internet pioneer Josh Harris and his experiment: placed more than 100 artists in a human terrarium under New York City, with myriad webcams following and capturing every move the artists made.[55] |
The Woman in the Window | 2021 | An agoraphobic woman begins to spy on her new neighbors and is witness to a crime in their apartment.[56] |
The World Without a Mask | 1934 | An engineer invents technology that can see through walls. The technology is pursued by criminals from the underworld.[3] |
You Were Never Really Here | 2017 | A hired gun rescues a trafficked girl from a brothel which is surrounded by security cameras. |
La Zona | 2007 | A group of disadvantaged teenagers break into a gated community that is heavily under surveillance.[32] |
References
edit- ^ Coyle, Jake (April 18, 2014). "In '1971,' an analog precursor to NSA, Snowden". bigstory.ap.org. Associated Press. Retrieved April 21, 2014.
- ^ a b Kammerer 2010, p. 1
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ball, Haggerty & Lyon 2012, p. 102
- ^ a b c d e Susman, Gary (June 15, 2013). "Spy Games: 10 Memorable Surveillance Movies". Time.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 2
- ^ a b c d Turner 1998, p. 96
- ^ a b c d Kammerer 2010, p. 3
- ^ a b c d e f g Ebiri, Bilge (June 13, 2013). "NSA, CIA, FBI, Everyone — A Timeline of Surveillance in the Movies". Vulture.com. New York Media LLC. Retrieved July 26, 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g Gray, John Seaborn (January 24, 2011). "Top Five: The Lives of Others and More Great Surveillance-Themed Movies". Houston Press. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
- ^ Orr, Christopher (April 4, 2014). "A Somber, Super Captain America: The Winter Soldier". The Atlantic. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
- ^ Cieply, Michael (October 17, 2014). "Snowden Film Tests Hollywood Obama Backers". The New York Times. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
- ^ Taylor, Ella (August 28, 2013). "'Closed Circuit' Targets Big Brother, But Swings Pretty Wide". NPR. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 4
- ^ Bechervaise, Jason (August 1, 2013). "Cold Eyes | Review | Screen". Screen Daily. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 5
- ^ Turner 1998, p. 114
- ^ Scheck, Frank (March 17, 2014). "The Den: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
- ^ a b Kammerer 2010, p. 6
- ^ a b c d e Kammerer 2003, p. 468
- ^ a b Kammerer 2010, p. 7
- ^ Staff (August 9, 2013). "Ten Surveillance Films That Will Have You Looking Over Your Shoulder". focusfeatures.com. Focus Features. Archived from the original on January 16, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2014.
- ^ Staff (October 8, 2016). "Film Series: Art of Surveillance: Eye in the Sky". The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
- ^ Shoyer, Scott (July 20, 2010). "Eyeborgs: DVD Review". Cinefantastique. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
- ^ a b Kammerer 2010, p. 8
- ^ Turner 1998, p. 111
- ^ "Screen in Review: Lemmon Flavors 'Fortune Cookie'" by Francis Raffetto. The Dallas Morning News (subscription), 26 Oct 1966.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 9
- ^ Brody, Richard (April 4, 2015). "The Simple Joy and Sincere Wonder of 'Furious 7'". The New Yorker. Retrieved April 12, 2015.
- ^ Turner 1998, p. 113
- ^ a b c Kammerer 2010, p. 10
- ^ Rapold, Nicolas (April 26, 2012). "A Corporate Big Shot With a Sideline in Art Theft". The New York Times.
- ^ a b Kammerer 2010, p. 11
- ^ "eyalsivan.net". Retrieved 29 October 2016.
- ^ Cameron, Allan; Cubitt, Sean (2009). "Infernal Affairs and the Ethics of Complex Narrative". In Buckland, Warren (ed.). Puzzle Films: Complex Storytelling in Contemporary Cinema. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 153–154. ISBN 978-1-4051-6862-5.
- ^ Mark Deming (2015). "The Listening (2006)". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on August 4, 2015. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 12
- ^ Wikipedia
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 13
- ^ a b Kammerer 2010, p. 14
- ^ Elley, Derek (November 18, 2009). "Review: 'Overheard'". Variety. Retrieved December 18, 2014.
- ^ Kammerer 2003, p. 469
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 15
- ^ Zeitchik, Steven (August 19, 2013). "Are films like 'Paranoia' the start of a post-Snowden movie moment?". The Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on January 7, 2014. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
- ^ Schlefer, Jonathan (2019-08-14). "Mexico's Perfect Dictatorship". Foreign Affairs.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 16
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 17
- ^ Nicks, Denver (August 10, 2014). "Surveillance in the Movies: Fact vs. Fiction". Time. Retrieved August 29, 2014.
- ^ Rosenberg, Alyssa (November 14, 2015). "Spectre of surveillance". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved November 15, 2015.
- ^ a b c Kammerer 2010, p. 19
- ^ Karalis, Vrasidas (2012). A History of Greek Cinema. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-4411-9447-3.
- ^ Rangan, Baradwaj (March 1, 2014). "Thegidi: Licence to thrill". The Hindu. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
- ^ Kammerer 2003, p. 466
- ^ "About the Story". warnerbros.co.uk. Warner Bros. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
- ^ Kammerer 2010, p. 21
- ^ We Live in Public
- ^ Fleming, Mike Jr. (25 April 2018). "Amy Adams In 'The Woman In The Window' For Joe Wright & Fox 2000". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
Bibliography
edit- Ball, Kirstie; Haggerty, Kevin; Lyon, David (2012). Routledge Handbook of Surveillance Studies. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-58883-6.
- Kammerer, Dietmar (July 2010). "Surveillance Feature Films" (PDF). The Surveillance Studies Network. pp. 1–21. Retrieved January 4, 2013.
- Kammerer, Dietmar (2003). "Video Surveillance in Hollywood Movies" (PDF). Surveillance & Society. 2 (2/3). ISSN 1477-7487. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-17. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
- Lefait, Sébastian (2013). Surveillance on screen: Monitoring contemporary films and television programs. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-810-88590-5.
- Stewart, Garrett (2015). Closed circuits: Screening narrative surveillance. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-20149-8.
- Turner, John S. (October 1998). "Collapsing the Interior/Exterior Distinction: Surveillance, Spectacle, and Suspense in Popular Cinema". Wide Angle. 20 (4): 93–123. doi:10.1353/wan.1998.0042. S2CID 167968298.
- Zimmer, Catherine (2015). Surveillance cinema. New York University Press. ISBN 978-1-479-83667-3.