Klute | |
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File:Klute-Poster.jpg Film poster for Klute |
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Directed by | Alan J. Pakula |
Produced by | Alan J. Pakula |
Written by | Andy Lewis Dave Lewis |
Starring | Jane Fonda Donald Sutherland Charles Cioffi Roy Scheider |
Music by | Michael Small |
Cinematography | Gordon Willis |
Editing by | Carl Lerner |
Studio | Gus Productions |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date(s) | June 25, 1971 (USA) |
Running time | 114 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $12,512,637 (US)[1] |
Klute is a 1971 film which tells the story of a prostitute who assists a detective in solving a missing person's case. It stars Jane Fonda, Donald Sutherland, Charles Cioffi and Roy Scheider. The movie was written by Andy Lewis and Dave Lewis and directed by Alan J. Pakula.
Klute was the first installment of what informally came to be known as Pakula's "paranoia trilogy". The other two films in the trilogy are The Parallax View (1974) and All The President's Men (1976).
The film includes a cameo appearance by Warhol Superstar actress Candy Darling, and another by All in the Family costar Jean Stapleton.[2] The music was composed by Michael Small.
Jane Fonda won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in the film.
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The film begins with the disappearance of Pennsylvania executive Tom Gruneman (played by veteran actor Robert Milli). The police reveal that an obscene letter was found in Gruneman's office, addressed to a prostitute in New York City named Bree Daniels (Fonda), who had received several similar letters from him. After six months of fruitless police work, Peter Cable (Cioffi), an executive at Gruneman's company, hires family friend and police officer John Klute (Sutherland) to investigate Gruneman's disappearance.
Klute rents an apartment in the basement of Daniels' building, taps her phone, and follows her as she turns tricks. Daniels appears to be liberated by the freedom of freelancing as a call girl, but in a series of visits to her psychiatrist, she gradually reveals the emptiness of her life and that she wants to quit. Klute asks Daniels to answer some of his questions, but she refuses. He approaches her again, revealing that he has been watching her. She assumes that he will turn her in if she does not cooperate, but does not recall Gruneman at all. She reveals that she was beaten by one of her johns two years earlier, but after seeing a photo of Gruneman, she says she cannot say for sure one way or the other. She is only certain that the john "was serious" about the attack.
Daniels takes Klute to meet her former pimp, Frank Ligourin (Scheider), who reveals that one of his prostitutes shared the abusive client to Bree, another woman named Arlyn Page (Dorothy Tristan). The original prostitute committed suicide, and Page became a drug addict and disappeared. As they search the city for the woman over several days, Klute and Daniels develop a romance. She admits to a deep paranoia which makes her think that she is being watched. Throughout the film, she is frequently shown from the perspective of a stalker across the street.
When the couple finally track down Page, she says that the customer was not Gruneman but an "older man". Shortly after the meeting, Page's body, turns up in Kill Van Kull, another apparent suicide. Klute deduces a connection between the two suicides of the prostitutes who have been with the mysterious abusive client, surmising that the client probably also killed Gruneman and may kill Daniels next. He revisits Gruneman's contacts anew to try to find connections with the case. By typographic comparison, the supposed obscene letters of Gruneman are traced to Cable, with whom Klute has been meeting regularly to report on his investigation.
Now with a suspect, Klute asks Cable for an additional $500 to buy the "black book" of the first prostitute who committed suicide, telling Cable he is certain the book will reveal the identity of the abusive client. This flushes Cable out. Cable confronts Bree and reveals that he sent her the letters, explaining thet Gruneman had interrupted him when he was attacking a prostitute. Certain that Gruneman would use the incident as leverage against him within the company, Cable attempted to frame Gruneman by planting the letter in his office. He confesses to killing Page and the other prostitute to cover his tracks. After playing an audiotape he made as he murdered Page, he attacks Daniels. Klute rushes in, and Cable jumps out the window to his death.
The film closes with Daniels moving out of her apartment to return to Pennsylvania with Klute.
Jane Fonda won an Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role and the film was nominated for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay Based on Factual Material or Material Not Previously Published or Produced.
Fonda also received awards for her performance from the New York Film Critics Circle, Kansas City Film Critics Circle and the National Society of Film Critics.
In the 2001 satirical comedy film Wet Hot American Summer, camp counselor Gary (A.D. Miles) acknowledges that as he and his friend J.J. (Zak Orth) secretly spy on some swimsuit-clad female camp counselors, their voyeuristic activity is "just like Klute."
Actor | Role |
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Jane Fonda | Bree Daniels |
Donald Sutherland | John Klute |
Charles Cioffi | Peter Cable |
Roy Scheider | Frank Ligourin |
Dorothy Tristan | Arlyn Page |
Rita Gam | Trina |
Nathan George | Trask |
Vivian Nathan | Psychiatrist |
Lee Wallace | Nate Goldfarb (uncredited) |
Sylvester Stallone | Discothèque Patron (uncredited) |
Teri Garr | Psychiatrist's Receptionist (uncredited) |
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Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Klute |
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Klute is a crater on the Moon's far side. It lies to the southeast of the larger walled plain Fowler, and east of the crater Gadomski.
Klute is a heavily worn crater with multiple smaller craters along the outer rim. The satellite crater Klute W impacted to the northwest of Klute, and a large slump or landslide has occurred where material has flowed into the unnamed crater within Klute. The remainder of the floor is an uneven plain marked with several small, eroded craterlets.
This crater was named after Dr. Daniel Klute, a scientist who helped develop engines for the Saturn V rocket before he died in 1964.
By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Klute.
Klute is the primary recording alias of Tom Withers, a drum and bass producer and DJ from London, UK. He is also the drummer, vocalist and songwriter in the English hardcore band The Stupids.
Klute first turned to electronic production in the early 1990s, experimenting with techno before turning to drum and bass. He released two 12" singles under the 'Override' alias in 1995 and 1996, as well as appearing on Ninja Tune compilations. In 1997 he released the 12" single Deep Control under the alias 'The Spectre'. In 1998 the debut Klute LP Casual Bodies was released on the Certificate 18 imprint; Fear of People followed in 2000.
In 2001 he established the label Commercial Suicide. This released his own material, including the albums Lie, Cheat & Steal (2003), No One's Listening Anymore (2005), The Emperor's New Clothes, (2007) and Music for prophet (2010). All of these albums are double CDs with one drum and bass disc and another of downtempo techno and breakbeat and received widespread acclaim in the electronic music community. The track "Time 4 Change" from No One's Listening Anymore was the last tune played on-air by John Peel.