Jade
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
William Friedkin
David Caruso
Linda Fiorentino
Chazz Palminteri
Barbara Munch
Victor Wong
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
David Corelli is an ambitious assistant district attorney in San Francisco. While attending a black tie affair as the guest of his college friends Matt Gavin, a prominent lawyer, and his wife Trina Gavin, a clinical psychologist, David is called to the scene of a murder: the San Francisco home of a prominent millionaire. While investigating the crime, which leads all the way to the office of the governor of California, David is confronted by the realization that Trina is a prime suspect in the murder and her husband is planning to defend her.
Director
William Friedkin
Cast
David Caruso
Linda Fiorentino
Chazz Palminteri
Barbara Munch
Victor Wong
Rene Charles Laprevotte
Garett Griffin
Arthur Johnson
Isaac Spivey
Ken King
Nellie Cravens
Jay Jacobus
Kurt Hulett
Ron Yuan
Buddy Joe Hooker
Angie Everhart
Tina J Spangler
Bud Bostwick
John Loftus
Dick Ziker
Victor Talmadge
Julian Hill
David Hunt
Paul Schlotfeldt
Jeff Kushon
Allen Gebhardt
Victoria Smith
Harold Morrison
Bobby Bass
Donna Murphy
Kevin Whitfield
Ron Ulstad
Holt Mccallany
Graham Cowley
Tom Walsh
Olimpia Saravia
James Edwards Veurink
Bill Tolliver
Drew Snyder
Nicholas Tarvid
William Piletic
Darryl Chan
Howard Weathersby
Sandy Berumen
Richard Crenna
Michael Biehn
Kevin Tighe
Mini Mehra
Crew
Steve Adcock
Gary Adelson
John Altschuler
Scott M. Anderson
Pete Antico
Donald Arnold
Newton Arnold
Steve Badillo
Kelley L Baker
Andrzej Bartkowiak
Craig Baumgarten
Barry Bedig
Pamela Bentkowski
Sandy Berman
James Beshears
Levon Besnalian
Bj Bjorkman
Christopher Blauvelt
David F. Bornstein
Eddie Braun
Charles Breen
Jeff Brockton
Chuck Brown
Michele Burkett
Ashley Burnham
Bill Burton
Rocky Capella
Christopher Carlson
Jack Carpenter
Lawrence James Cavanaugh
Steve Chambers
Lily Chan
Lauro Chartrand
Jesse Chavez
John Chichester
Alisa Christensen
Jody Christian
Debra Coleman
Kay Colvin
Richard Corwin
Victor Costa
Jeffrey Cranford
Wally Crowder
Rachel Curl
Gloria D'alessandro
Jeff Dashnaw
Steve M Davison
Margo Day
Sandy De Crescent
Dicky Deats
Lisa Dempsey
Pamela Dennis
Richard Desantis
Dale Destefani
Dan Dobson
Jonathan Doff
David Dougherty
Dean Drabin
Robert Dudley
Ken Dufva
Annie Ellis
Joseph G Emanuele
Joe Eszterhas
Robert Evans
David Fein
Larry Felix
Gary Fettis
Patrick Figueroa
Ruby Fleming
Christopher Flick
Kirk Francis
Cameron Frankley
Stephen J Gardner
Robert C Goldstein
George Goodman
George Goodman
Galen Goodpaster
Linda Gordon
Charlotte Gravenor
Gregg Guellow
Ray Guerra
Mark Hagar
Hilbert Hakim
Barbara Harris
Greg Harris
Richard Hartley
Michael Hartman
Eric Fox Hays
Dana Hee
Jim Henrikson
Michael Herbick
Augie Hess
Freddie Hice
Richard Hicks
Tim Hill
Philip Ho
Stacey Holmes
Connie Holt
K Montgomery Hom
Buddy Joe Hooker
Richard Hooker
William H Hooker
Sherri Hopeman
James Horner
Denise Horta
Randall Huber
Thomas J Huff
Jeff Imada
Stephen Janisz
Eric P Jones
Robert Kaiser
David Katz
Mitchell Kenney
Ken King
Ron Kinwald
Eric Klosterman
Robin Knight
Jeffrey D. Knott
Joel Kramer
Brad Lackey
Michael Laudati
Michael Laws
Greg Lazzaro
Danny Lee
Will Leong
Kami Lerner
Jo Levison
James Likowski
John Lister
Lisa Lovass
Billy Lucas
Greg Lundsgaard
Greg Lundsgaard
William J Macdonald
Tamara Maellaro
Kurt William Marshall
Pat Marshall
Dave Martholomew
Ellen C Martin
Johnny M Martin
Frank Mathews
Jeff Mathews
Michael Matteson
Bob Mccan
Gary Mcclendon
Gary Mclarty
John C. Meier
Wendy Menara
Sam Mendoza
Melissa Merwin
Donald O Mitchell
Theresa Repola Mohammed
Frank Montano
James J Murakami
Shawn Murphy
Darrin Navarro
Darin Necessary
Scott Newell
Chung Ngai
Jim Nickerson
Vern Nobles
Ralph Odum
Shawn Odum
Gerald Okamura
Robin Oliver
Fred M Paulsen
Tim Perovitch
Lisa M Peters
Michael Pettygrove
Steve Picerni
Stefanie Lee Pleet
Burt Poehlman
Kelly Porter
Francesca Prade
Don Pulford
Joe E. Rand
Carin Rogers
Pat Romano
R.a. Rondell
John J Rutchland
John J Rutchland
Gail Ryan
Robert Ryan
Gary Rydstrom
Tom Schellenberg
Michael Scott
Jim Selzer
Randy Singer
Charles Skouras
Frank Smathers
Mychal Smith
Tom Southwell
Ken Spruill
Greg Stacy
Benjamin Steingart
Bruce Steinheimer
Margaret Stevens
Terry Sullivan
Ray Summers
Michael Szakmeister
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Richard Crenna, 1927-2002
Born on November 30, 1927 in Los Angeles, California, Crenna was the son of a pharmacist father and a mother who managed a number of small hotels in the Los Angles area the family owned, where Crenna was raised. At the tender age of 11, he was encouraged by a teacher to audition for a radio show, "Boy Scout Jamboree" at the nearby KFI-AM radio studio. Little did he realize that it would be the start of a very long and prosperous career.
Crenna found steady radio work for the next several years, culminating in 1948 with his breakthrough role of the goofy, squeaky-voiced Walter Denton in the hit radio series Our Miss Brooks. Crenna carried the momentum of his success to television when he spent four more seasons as Walter on Our Miss Brooks (1952-1956). Almost immediately after the run of that show, Crenna scored another hit series as Luke McCoy in the rustic comedy The Real McCoys (1957-1963) co-starring Walter Brennan.
Although he had been acting in films since the early '50s Crenna roles didn't come to critical notice until the mid '60s, appearing in Robert Wise's acclaimed The Sand Pebbles (1966) as the stalwart gunboat captain co-starring Steve McQueen; Terence Young's intense thriller, Wait Until Dark (1967), as a criminal who terrorizes a blind Audrey Hepburn; and another Robert Wise film, the Gertrude Lawrence biopic Star! (1968) playing the high profile role of Richard Aldrich opposite Julie Andrews.
Crenna's profile slowed down in the '70s, despite a brief return to television comedy in Norman Lear's political satire All's Fair (1976-1977) with Bernadette Peters. That show may not have lasted long, but Crenna bounced back with a resurgence in the '80s with a string of hit character parts: Lawrence Kasden's stylish film noir Body Heat (1981), as Kathleen Turner's ill-fated husband; Ted Kotchoff's hit Rambo: First Blood (1982), as Colonel Samuel Trautman, Sylvester Stallone's former Commander; Gary Marshall's excellent coming-of-age tale The Flamingo Kid (1984), one of his best performances (for which he received a Golden Globe nomination) as a smooth, charismatic gin-rummy champ who takes Matt Dillon under his tutelage; and many other quality roles in theatrical and made for television movies.
At the time of his death, Crenna was a member of the Screen Actors Guild board of directors and had a recurring role in the hit CBS dramatic series Judging Amy. In addition to Penni, his wife of 47 years, Crenna is survived by a son, Richard, two daughters, Seana and Maria, and three granddaughters.
by Michael T. Toole
Richard Crenna, 1927-2002
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1995
Released in United States Fall October 13, 1995
Released in United States on Video January 23, 1996
Shown at Venice Film Festival (Venetian Night) August 30 - September 9, 1995.
Began shooting January 14, 1995.
Completed shooting May 10, 1995.
Project was originally at Weintraub Entertainment Group.
The third installment, following "Jagged Edge" (USA/1985) and "Basic Instinct" (USA/1992), in screenwriter Joe Eszterhas's trilogy of thrillers set in San Francisco. Eszterhas's two-page outline was reportedly purchased for $2.5 million.
Released in United States 1995 (Shown at Venice Film Festival (Venetian Night) August 30 - September 9, 1995.)
Released in United States on Video January 23, 1996
Released in United States Fall October 13, 1995