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The Client

The Client

  • Status: Released
  • 20-07-1994
  • Runtime: 119 min
  • Score: 6.701
  • Vote count: 1195

A street-wise kid, Mark Sway, sees the suicide of Jerome Clifford, a prominent Louisiana lawyer, whose current client is Barry 'The Blade' Muldano, a Mafia hit-man. Before Jerome shoots himself, he tells Mark where the body of a Senator is buried. Clifford shoots himself and Mark is found at the scene, and both the FBI and the Mafia quickly realize that Mark probably knows more than he says.

Brad Renfro

Mark Sway

Susan Sarandon

Reggie Love

Tommy Lee Jones

Roy Foltrigg

Mary-Louise Parker

Dianne Sway

Anthony LaPaglia

Barry Muldano

Bradley Whitford

Thomas Fink

Will Patton

Sergeant Hardy

Anthony Edwards

Clint Von Hooser

J. T. Walsh

Jason McThune

Anthony Heald

Larry Trumann

Kim Coates

Paul Gronke

Kimberly Scott

Doreen

Ossie Davis

Harry Roosevelt

William H. Macy

Dr. Greenway

David Speck

Ricky Sway

Rebecca Jernigan

Emergency Room Nurse

William Sanderson

Wally Boxx

Micole Mercurio

Momma Love

Walter Olkewicz

Jerome 'Romey' Clifford

Amy Hathaway

Karen

Jo Harvey Allen

Claudette

Ron Dean

Johnny Sulari

William Richert

Harry Bono

Will Zahrn

Gill Beale

Mark Cabus

Detective Nassar

Dan Castellaneta

Slick Moeller

John Diehl

Jack Nance

Tom Kagy

Wheelchair Patient

Alex Coleman

Newscaster

Linn Sitler

Newscaster

Stephanie Weaver

Newscaster

Todd Demers

Newscaster

Ashtyn Tyler

Amber

Ruby Wilson

Receptionist

Andy Stahl

Agent Scherff

Macon McCalman

Ballatine

Mimmye Goode

Night Nurse

John Fink

Lieutenant

Ronnie Landry

Waiter at Antoine's

Jeffrey Buckner Ford

Bailiff

Michael Detroit

Jail Medic

Robert Hatchett

Paramedic

Connye Florance

Telda

Sandra Bray

Reporter

Yvonne Sanders

Reporter

Norm Woodel

Reporter

Karen Walker

Reporter

Tommy Cresswell

Third FBI Agent

Nat Robinson

Special Agent Boch

Mary McCusker

Pretty Girl

Bettina Rose

Woman at Desire

Joey Hadley

Officer

Michael Sanders

Officer

Angelo R. Sales

Orderly

Jesse L. Dunlap

Security Guard

Joe Kent

Elvis Impersonator

Robbie Billings

Ballentine's Wife

John Mason

Musician

Robert H. Wiliams

Musician

Darrell D. Johnson

Musician

Mark Pyles

Helicopter Pilot

Clay Lacy

Jet Pilot

Gerry Loew

Pizza Man

Anthony C. Hall

Pizza Man

George Klein

Announcer

Christopher Gray

Security Guard

CinemaSerf

Brad Renfro delivers well here as the young lad caught up in bizarre suicide/murder/gangster drama that also gives Susan Sarandon a decent kick at the ball too. He is “Mark”, who is playing with his brother near their trailer home when he encounters a would-be suicide who has plugged the exhaust into his car. He is spotted and thinks that maybe he is due for the same fate, but when the fella just blows his brains out the young “Mark” manages to escape - only to find his brother has gone into shock. Next thing, he is in the hospital and neither the clinicians nor the ever-present FBI are inclined to believe his story, especially when a missing US Senator might be involved in this mystery, too. Luckily for him, though, “Mark”recruits the services of “Reggie” (Sarandon) who makes it clear to the rather blasé agent “Roy” (Tommy Lee Jones) that her young charge is entitled to the protections of due process just like everyone else - even if she, too, reckons the lad is being just a touch judicious about the real turn of events that day. What we also learn is that the deceased was a lawyer who counted a local kingpin amongst his clients, and they too want to make sure the boy knows nothing - or certainly that he doesn’t tell anyone else one way or the other! Things soon become quite perilous for this youngster and his family and with the feds getting even more frustrated with him, who can he turn to? The story is energetically directed and moves along pretty quickly as the frying pan-to-fire scenarios accumulate, dozens of pizzas are ordered and the mortuary’s walk-in freezer finds a timely new use. The conclusion is all a bit rushed, but as a standard cat and mouse thriller, it works well enough.