Film Review
With this, his second and most highly regarded film, producer-director
Alan J. Pakula effectively reinvented film noir for a 1970s cinema
audience and delivered what is arguably the most chilling and most
stylish psycho-thriller of the decade.
Klute was the first of Pakula's
great paranoia thrillers - to be followed by the equally praiseworthy
The Parallax View (1974) and
All The President's Men (1976) - a
film that was to prove highly influential in the development of the
neo-noir aesthetic. In collaboration with Gordon Willis, one of the
finest American cinematographers of the period, Pakula creates a
distinctive thriller which has an aura of sustained menace that few
films can match. Despite its languorous pace and threadbare
narrative,
Klute manages to
be one of the most compelling and disturbing thrillers ever made, and
one that was endlessly imitated in subsequent decades.
This is the film that won Jane Fonda her first Oscar, for a performance
that is easily one of her best, one that not only expresses the
emptiness of the life of a professional call girl but also takes us
deep into the soul of a woman whose craving for freedom is constantly
frustrated by circumstances over which she has no control. The
sequences in which her character opens up to her psychiatrist reveal
most about her true nature and allow Fonda to demonstrate her talent as
an actress (these scenes appear to be totally improvised and are
striking in their authenticity). For someone who was at the time
regarded as a torch bearer for female emancipation, the part of Bree
Daniels was a gift, a chance to explore, analyse and project the rich
complexities and contradictions of the female psyche, and Fonda makes
the most of the opportunity she is given.
Donald Sutherland is the perfect complement to Jane Fonda, an actor who
could hardly be more different in his on-screen persona and acting
style. In contrast to Fonda's vitality and openness, Sutherland
appears almost like a victim of autism, his performance is more
contained, more introspective and far more troubling. There is an
unmistakable inversion of gender roles - whereas Fonda appears ballsy,
confident and (for the most part) in control, Sutherland looks as if he
is constantly out of his depth, a far more fragile and sensitive
individual. There is also something inordinately sinister about
Sutherland's taciturn, brooding portrayal - is it possible that his
character is not what he seems, that he is the mysterious stalker
lurking ominously just out of camera shot? Sutherland's penchant
for playing ambiguous, tenebrous characters makes him ideal for his
part in
Klute.
Watching the film is a deeply unsettling experience, not just because
of its grim subject matter, but because of the way in which Pakula
locks us in the shadowy dream-world that he so masterfully creates, one
that switches seamlessly between everyday normality and expressionistic
fantasy. It is as if the spectator is trapped in a gloomy
labyrinth and has no choice but to keep going, deeper and deeper into
the maze, towards the fearsome monstrosity that lies at at its
heart. When the resolution finally comes after an excruciatingly
slow build-up, it leaps out at us like Jack the Ripper pouncing on one
of his unfortunate victims. The nightmare concludes as it must,
in the darkest and most twisted part of the human soul. How can
we not feel, and viscerally feel, the terror and revulsion that take
over the heroine when she is finally confronted by her sick
tormenter? Human nature can be an ugly thing, but, mercifully,
the film shows that there is also a flipside, that there is light as
well as darkness.
Klute may
take us into some very dark places, but it is essentially just an
old-fashioned fairytale and virtue prevails in the end, or so it would
seem...
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
When Tom Gruneman, an important research engineer, goes missing his
friend John Klute agrees to go looking for him, at the behest of Peter
Cable, a senior executive in Gruneman's company. The only lead
Klute has to go on is a series of racy letters that the missing man
apparently wrote to a New York prostitute, Bree Daniels. Having
set up camp in a basement room in Daniels' New York apartment block,
Klute begins to trail the prostitute and she finally agrees to talk to
him. Although she does not recognise Gruneman from his
photograph, she can recall being badly beaten by a client who may have
been him. Bree also reveals that she has been receiving anonymous
phone calls and feels that she is constantly being followed. As
Klute continues his investigation he and Bree begin to form an
emotional attachment, but the prostitute's fears that she may be in
danger are soon borne out...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.