Movie of the Year

1971 - Klute


Listen Later

Movie of the Year: 1971KluteWhy Klute Still Captivates Audiences

In this episode of Movie of the Year, Ryan, Greg, and Mike examine Klute, Alan J. Pakula’s groundbreaking 1971 thriller that fused noir, feminist character study, and political paranoia into a single atmospheric masterpiece. From its haunting portrayal of loneliness to its razor-sharp critique of power and control, Klute remains one of the most influential films of the 1970s — a tense, stylish, and unsettling work anchored by unforgettable performances.

The Taste Buds explore how Klute uses mood, silence, and perspective to reimagine what a thriller can be, and why its themes still resonate decades later.

Pakula and Willis: Crafting the Look and Fear of Klute

Alan J. Pakula, working with cinematographer Gordon Willis, created in Klute what would become the visual and tonal blueprint for 1970s paranoia cinema. The Taste Buds discuss how the Pakula/Willis partnership shaped not only this film, but future classics as well.

  • Pakula’s direction emphasizes psychological distance, moral ambiguity, and bureaucratic dread.
  • Willis — the legendary “Prince of Darkness” — saturates the film with deep shadows, cold light, and voyeuristic framing that makes the audience feel watched.
  • The collaboration results in a thriller where silence is suspense, space is threat, and every frame hints at danger you can’t quite see.

This visual strategy becomes the DNA of Pakula’s later films, but Klute is where the paranoia begins.


Bree Daniels: Jane Fonda’s Defining Performance

No element of Klute is more celebrated than Jane Fonda’s performance as Bree Daniels, a character whose complexity transformed the possibilities for female roles in crime and thriller cinema.

Ryan, Greg, and Mike explore how Bree’s character:

  • serves as the emotional center of Klute
  • navigates trauma, agency, sexuality, and survival
  • resists the stereotypes typically imposed on sex workers
  • expresses her inner life most vividly in her therapy scenes, where the film slows down and lets Bree define herself in her own words

Fonda delivers a portrait of a woman who is both vulnerable and fiercely self-aware — a character fighting for autonomy in a world designed to control her.


John Klute: Donald Sutherland’s Quiet Detective

While Bree is the heart of the film, Donald Sutherland’s John Klute is the unstable axis around which the mystery turns. His restrained, almost withdrawn performance contrasts sharply with Bree’s vivid emotional life.

The Taste Buds discuss how John Klute:

  • subverts noir detective tropes by being passive rather than dominant
  • reflects the unease and disillusionment of early 1970s masculinity
  • becomes both protector and threat, comfort and menace
  • heightens the film’s tension simply by what he doesn’t say

His quietness becomes the film’s most unsettling element — the fear that danger might come not from action, but from inaction.


Klute's Themes: Power, Paranoia, and the Performance of Identity

The Taste Buds analyze the movie as a story deeply invested in the forces that shape who we become and how we behave:

  • Power — who has it, who wants it, who is crushed by it
  • Paranoia — the constant hum of surveillance that defines the film’s world
  • Identity and performance — especially in Bree’s struggle to choose the self she wants, rather than the one society demands

Klute isn’t just a thriller; it’s a portrait of a society that has lost trust in its institutions, its relationships, and even itself.


Why Klute Still Matters

More than 50 years later, Klute remains a film of stunning relevance — a psychological thriller that interrogates gender, power, surveillance, and the fragile places where personal and political fears overlap. With the visionary collaboration of Pakula and Willis, the unforgettable humanity of Bree, and the chilling restraint of John Klute, the film continues to inspire filmmakers and fascinate viewers.

🎧 Listen now to hear Ryan, Greg, and Mike break down the craft, characters, and cultural legacy of Klute.

📬 Email your reactions to [email protected], and subscribe for more deep dives from the 1971 season of Movie of the Year.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Movie of the YearBy YourPopFilter.com

  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4

4.4

14 ratings


More shows like Movie of the Year

View all
Radiolab by WNYC Studios

Radiolab

43,951 Listeners

Comic Geek Speak Podcast - The Best Comic Book Podcast by Speakers of Geek

Comic Geek Speak Podcast - The Best Comic Book Podcast

616 Listeners

Comic Timing Podcast by Comic Timing Podcast

Comic Timing Podcast

41 Listeners

iFanboy - Comic Books by iFanboy

iFanboy - Comic Books

1,709 Listeners

Spoilers! by Movie Reviews by Spoilers!

Spoilers!

153 Listeners

Blank Check with Griffin & David by Blank Check Productions

Blank Check with Griffin & David

6,150 Listeners

Pod Save America by Crooked Media

Pod Save America

87,737 Listeners

The Daily by The New York Times

The Daily

112,934 Listeners

Lovett or Leave It by Crooked Media

Lovett or Leave It

25,126 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

16,096 Listeners

Unexplainable by Vox

Unexplainable

2,316 Listeners