When his hometown author friend Harper Lee (Sandra Bullock) asks him how he gets his New York society friends to open up to him, Truman Capote (Toby Jones) replies that he figures out what they want and gives it to them--comfort, confidence, warmth.

He doesn't skip a beat. In the mind of this great 20th century American author, it is both natural and right to shake from the trees around him the fruit that feeds his novels. The force he applies to these trees is empathy or the illusion of empathy.
This is the initial portrait of Capote created by the 1996 Warner Independent Pictures release Infamous written and produced by Doug McGrath.

Gifted with an insight into the psychology of human desire and longing, Capote plays people. He lies, pretends, exaggerates, does whatever he has to do to get inside the minds of the people who interest him. Watching this film, I found myself wondering when he was being real and when he was not. (more)