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IMDbPro

Mr. Klein

  • 1976
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 3m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Alain Delon in Mr. Klein (1976)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:41
2 Videos
96 Photos
CrimeDramaMysteryThrillerWar

In German-occupied Paris, an immoral art dealer, Robert Klein, leads a life of luxury, until a copy of a Jewish newspaper brings him to the attention of the police, linking him with a myster... Read allIn German-occupied Paris, an immoral art dealer, Robert Klein, leads a life of luxury, until a copy of a Jewish newspaper brings him to the attention of the police, linking him with a mysterious doppelgänger. Will Mr. Klein clear his name?In German-occupied Paris, an immoral art dealer, Robert Klein, leads a life of luxury, until a copy of a Jewish newspaper brings him to the attention of the police, linking him with a mysterious doppelgänger. Will Mr. Klein clear his name?

  • Director
    • Joseph Losey
  • Writers
    • Franco Solinas
    • Fernando Morandi
    • Costa-Gavras
  • Stars
    • Alain Delon
    • Jeanne Moreau
    • Francine Bergé
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Franco Solinas
      • Fernando Morandi
      • Costa-Gavras
    • Stars
      • Alain Delon
      • Jeanne Moreau
      • Francine Bergé
    • 39User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos2

    Mr. Klein
    Trailer 1:41
    Mr. Klein
    Mr. Klein - Restoration Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    Mr. Klein - Restoration Trailer
    Mr. Klein - Restoration Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    Mr. Klein - Restoration Trailer

    Photos96

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Alain Delon
    Alain Delon
    • Mr. Klein
    Jeanne Moreau
    Jeanne Moreau
    • Florence
    Francine Bergé
    Francine Bergé
    • Nicole
    • (as Francine Berge)
    Juliet Berto
    Juliet Berto
    • Jeanine
    Jean Bouise
    Jean Bouise
    • Le vendeur du tableau
    Suzanne Flon
    Suzanne Flon
    • La concierge
    Massimo Girotti
    Massimo Girotti
    • Charles - le mari de Florence
    Michael Lonsdale
    Michael Lonsdale
    • Pierre
    • (as Michel Lonsdale)
    Michel Aumont
    Michel Aumont
    • Le commissaire de la préfecture
    Roland Bertin
    • L'administrateur du journal
    Jean Champion
    Jean Champion
    • Le gardien de la morgue
    Etienne Chicot
    Etienne Chicot
    • Le premier policier
    Magali Clément
    • Lola - la danseuse
    • (as Magali Clement)
    Gérard Jugnot
    Gérard Jugnot
    • Le photographe
    Hermine Karagheuz
    • La jeune ouvrière
    Elisabeth Kaza
    Elisabeth Kaza
    Dany Kogan
    • Michelle
    Carole Achache
      • Director
        • Joseph Losey
      • Writers
        • Franco Solinas
        • Fernando Morandi
        • Costa-Gavras
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews39

      7.510.1K
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      Featured reviews

      8Galina_movie_fan

      A man and his double

      Joseph Losey's dark moody drama of a man and his double or his shadow takes place in Paris of 1942 during the Nazi Occupation. Mr. Klein, in excellent performance by Alain Delon (if anybody ever tells you that Delon is nothing but a pretty face, NEVER believe it. Delon is a great actor with amazing screen presence who happened to be one of the most beautiful people ever lived), is a French Catholic antique dealer, successful with his business and adored by the ladies. At first, he does not care much about the occupation and the fate of Jews who had to sell their pricey pieces of Art and personal belongings for a song just to be able to leave France and to save their lives. On the contrary, he only becomes richer but everything changes when he is confused with another Robert Klein, his namesake, a wanted by the authorities' member of the underground resistance and a Jew. In the atmosphere of the total fear, bigotry, hatred, and paranoia, the "presumption of innocence" ceases to exist and Mr. Klein must prove that he is not a Jew or to face the fate of millions whose fault was to belong to the "inferior race". While trying to claim his comfortable life back, Mr. Klein begins looking for the man he never met but who by the bitter irony of fate had played such a significant role in his life. The desire to look him in the eye becomes so overwhelming that it will take Robert to where he may not be able to ever come back.

      "Mr. Klein" is a complex, subtle, scary, and nightmarish film made by a very talented director who had to leave his country, the USA, in the beginning of the 50s and who knew a thing or two about paranoia and hatred multiplied by the power and turned into indifferent killing machine. Once you are inside this machine, "Abandon hope all ye who enter here". Losey's film is often described as a blend of Hitchcock's thrillers where the heroes must deal with the mistaken identity and Kafka's nightmares of "The Trial" and I agree with the description. I only want to add that the film brings to mind Edgar Poe's short story "William Wilson" which was adapted to the screen by Luis Malle as a part of the trilogy "Histoires extraordinaires" (1968) and Alain Delon played both William Wilson and the mysterious man, his double, his conscience, his dark and hidden side. "Mr. Klein" also reminds another underrated, rarely seen but very interesting Ingmar Bergman's film "The Serpent's Egg" (1977) as well as Bob Fosse's masterpiece "Cabaret". The themes of the Feast during the Time of Plague, the helplessness and distress of the terrorized members of society that face the merciless and inevitable force of history and would perish without a trace, are similar in all three movies. Despite these similarities, "Mr. Klein" is an outstanding film on its own merits. What saddens me is the fact that is little known, rarely seen and almost never mentioned even among the film buffs.
      9dromasca

      mistaken identity

      Somehow, I got to see only now, 45 years after its release, 'Mr. Klein', Joseph Losey's 1976 film, one of the most interesting movies about the Holocaust and Paris during the Nazi occupation. The film is produced by Alain Delon, who also plays the lead role, one of the best acting creations of his career. It is also one of the last films in the career of Joseph Losey, a remarkable American film and theater director, who spent many decades of his life in Europe, self-exiled because of his communist beliefs. He made several successful films, mostly in England in the 1960s. 'Mr. Klein', made in France, is both significant as one of the first films that addresses lucidly and critically the problematic history of French collaborationism and also fits into the themes and atmosphere of Losey's previous films with heroes who question their identity and the description of ambiguous relationships, often leaving the viewers to decide the meaning of what they see on the screen. I don't think I'm wrong in saying this is Losey's last great movie.

      The story takes place in German-occupied Paris in the winter of 1942. Robert Klein (Alain Delon) is an art dealer who leads a comfortable life by taking advantage of the opportunity to buy at low prices paintings from the collections of Jews who were forbidden to practice their professions or trades and who had to sell household objects, including art, in order to survive. The ambiguity of his Alsatian name puts him in an awkward position when he is mistaken for another, Jewish, Robert Klein and begins to receive the newspaper of the Jewish community. Being a Jew in occupied Paris was more than a social stigma, and in trying to clarify the situation, Mr. Klein became entangled in the intricacies of the Petain regime's bureaucracy. The search for his alter-ego becomes a kind of police intrigue in a world that has become absurd according to the criteria of logic and legality that he had known until then. Gradually, he begins to open his eyes to the extent of the discrimination suffered by the Jews and which he had taken advantage of until then nonchalantly. Trying to prove his own 'national purity', Mr Klein starts to get closer the other Robert Klein, who had endangered, intentionally or unintentionally, his easy existence until then. The two Robert Kleins never meet but their destinies are linked.

      The quality of Joseph Losey's film-making is remarkable. Paris under occupation, decadent and indifferent, in which part of the population had adopted the slogans, policies and racial legislation of the occupiers and had become complicit in persecutions and deportations denying the democratic principles of France, is brought to the screen with authenticity and carelessness. Attentive as always to detail, Losey creates various interior sets, from the hero's sophisticated apartment or residence in a castle of the probable mistress of the other Robert Klein to his rented, miserable and rat-infested house or the corridors of the police prefectures. The streets are deserted, cold, hostile and if vehicles appear they are police or Gestapo cars. Music plays an important role in two key scenes, one taking place in the castle, the other in a cabaret. The sound of the phones is as threatening as in Hitchcock's movies. Last but not least, the final scene is probably the first on-screen rendition in a feature film of the arrests and deportations of the Paris Jews from the Winter Velodrome, a historical episode kept under silence until then, which many French would have preferred to forget. Alain Delon builds his role between nonchalance and defiance, between trying to ignore realities and assuming them. Among the actors in the cast, I must also mention Jeanne Moreau and Michael Lonsdale, two formidable actors who are cast here in consistent supporting roles. The ending is debatable and was debated, open to many interpretations that have not, I think, been definitively settled by this day. IMDB mentions that Costa-Gavras also contributed to the script, although he is not listed in the credits. 'Mr. Klein' is a must-see film about occupied France and the attitude of the French towards the Holocaust, a film worth seeing, thinking about and discussing.
      8stuka24

      Into the abyss.

      Delon as the classic "individualist" who profiteers until finally the Brechtian idea of "first they came for 'x', you weren't concerned..." simply happened is a paranoiac, gloomy view of France during the war. A bit heavy-handed from the start, nevertheless is thrilling and keeps you wondering what is really happening till the end. Harder to follow than any Hitchcock or Christie, probably on purpose, as if to say: Life is not always so clear cut.

      Lady Moreau and Francine Bergé could have had more "character development", while beautiful leggy Juliet Berto's long figure and erratic behaviour is all we can see from Bob's fiancé. Robert is cold, intelligent, self assured, able to answer like a French writer while his house is being requisitioned by the police. Lonsdale, from many Buñuel films, gives us the eerie feeling so necessary for this film to succeed. Jugnot and Aumont deliver in their smaller roles. Suzanne Flon, from "Un crime au paradis" among others, is convincing in her obfuscated part.

      Gerry Fisher's cinematography and Egisto Macchi's score make this film stand apart, you've get the feeling of "really being there". In the grim and everyday aspects, not fictionalized for being palatable. mackjay from IMDb writes: "Klein's mixture of desperation and arrogance with so much conviction, it's easy to forget he is, after all, acting". C. Tashiro adds that the Nazi horrors are taken for granted, making them more real. Like J. L. Borges usually quipped: "There are no camels in the 1001 nights" meaning those involved don't notice what we, the viewers, probably would.

      Franco Solinas's script conveys paranoia as faced by somebody who seems never to have suffered for anything, nor anybody for that matter.

      Great film, but obviously, not "light viewing". Maybe a tad slow for nowadays's viewers.

      Gripping!!
      10blanche-2

      Top-notch Losey, top-notch Delon

      Alain Delon is "Mr. Klein," a man profiting off the misfortune of French Jews during World War II in this 1976 film directed by Joseph Losey.

      Robert Klein is man buying art work at severely reduced prices from desperate Jews, and for him, it's just business. When he receives a Jewish newspaper addressed to him, however, he becomes concerned, less he be suspected of being Jewish himself. His investigation leads him to another Robert Klein, who lived in reduced circumstances, supposedly resembles him, and whose new address has been given as Klein's own.

      This is a fascinating film about how, in the end, we all become victims of prevailing injustice. There is a great deal of symbolism throughout; Delon's Klein becomes obsessed with the other Klein, and their lives become inextricably entangled.

      After this film, you'll be left with many questions, for which there are probably several answers. Thus is the beauty of "Mr. Klein," a wonderfully directed and acted film. Delon, as an arrogant and confused man, has rarely been better. He is one actor who, due partially to a nice long life, has been able to extend his range beyond staggering good looks and play interesting, challenging characters; he is a producer of this film.

      This is highly recommended and certainly a credit to the filmmaking skills of Joseph Losey as well as the taste and talent of Alain Delon.
      Vincentiu

      cold

      a beautiful cold film. ice atmosphere. strange pieces. fragments from Kafka. labyrinth of a character, search of answer and a terrible end. a film like an experience and one of the most remarkable roles of Alain Delon. Mr. Klein is , in same measure, a film about certitudes, Shoach and solitude. about fear and importance of choices. about the Borges universe of appearances and strange answers. more than a good film, it is an useful one. because could be extraordinary translation of one of greatest tragedies of XX century. because it gives new dimension to the doubt. because it is a seductive image of an empty life who becomes profound different. and, sure, because it has a real good cast. see it !

      Alain Delon's Top 10 Films, Ranked

      Alain Delon's Top 10 Films, Ranked

      To celebrate the life and career of Alain Delon, the actor often credited with starring in some of the greatest European films of the 1960s and '70s, we rounded up his top 10 movies, ranked by IMDb fan ratings.
      See the list
      Poster
      List

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        This was originally going ahead as a Costa Gavras project in 1974.
      • Quotes

        Le vendeur: Six hundred louis.

        Mr. Robert Klein: Three hundred.

        Le vendeur: You must be joking. At that price, I'd rather keep it.

        Mr. Robert Klein: As you wish.

        Le vendeur: It's easy for you, when a man is forced to sell.

        Mr. Robert Klein: But I'm not forced to buy. I'm not a collector. For me it's just a job.

        Le vendeur: Make me a reasonable offer.

        Mr. Robert Klein: Three hundred.

      • Connections
        Featured in Les rendez-vous du dimanche: Episode dated 6 March 1977 (1977)
      • Soundtracks
        L'Internationale
        Music by Pierre Degeyter

        Lyrics by Eugène Pottier

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      FAQ

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • October 27, 1976 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • France
        • Italy
      • Language
        • French
      • Also known as
        • Monsieur Klein
      • Filming locations
        • Brasserie La Coupole - 102 Boulevard Montparnasse, Paris 14, Paris, France(Mr Klein called by the bellboy)
      • Production companies
        • Lira Films
        • Adel Productions
        • Nova Films
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • $3,500,000 (estimated)
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $213,769
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $15,915
        • Sep 8, 2019
      • Gross worldwide
        • $219,070
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        2 hours 3 minutes
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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