Owen Joseph Kline (born October 14, 1991) is an American filmmaker, actor and cartoonist, best known for his directorial debut Funny Pages (2022)[1] and his performance as Frank Berkman in The Squid and the Whale (2005).
Owen Kline | |
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![]() Kline at the Walter Reade Theater in 2022 | |
Born | Owen Joseph Kline (1991-10-14) October 14, 1991 (age 31) New York City, U.S. |
Years active | 2001–present |
Parents |
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Relatives | Greta Kline (sister) |
Owen Joseph Kline was born and raised in New York City, to theater and film actor Kevin Kline and actress Phoebe Cates. He has one younger sister, Greta Kline, a musician/singer-songwriter. At the age of 7, Kline fell ill, and during a two-week stay in the hospital, he was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. Kline acted in his adolescence in the independent films The Anniversary Party (2001) and Noah Baumbach’s The Squid and The Whale (2005),[2] but did not pursue a subsequent career in acting, instead remaining in junior high school. Kline performed in provocative novelty bands in high school, released prank call CDs, and created xeroxed comics, joke books and zines.[3]
Kline worked as an assistant to the archivist at New York film museum Anthology Film Archives, as well as for musicologists Billy Miller and Miriam Linna at their Norton label and Kicks Books imprint. Kline crewed on early work of filmmakers Josh and Benny Safdie, and acted in their film John's Gone (2010) as well as Michael M. Bilandic[4] on his film Jobe'z World (2018). He attended Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, studying illustration and film.[5]
In 2013 Kline wrote and directed the short comedy Fowl Play, about a group of low-rent criminals fooled into buying a hen for a cockfight in Flushing, Queens. Kline co-wrote and directed the short film Jazzy for Joe (2014), a narrative comedy about and starring New York broadcaster Joe Franklin raising an abandoned baby, which premiered at BAMcinemaFest 2015.[6]
Kline spent six years continually writing, directing and editing his debut feature Funny Pages, a black comedy about a young dropout cartoonist striking out on his own in Trenton, New Jersey. Produced by the Safdie Brothers and distributed by A24, the film premiered in the Director's Fortnight at the 75th Cannes Film Festival in 2022.[7]
Prior to Funny Pages, Kline provided research for books, including Mark Newgarden and Paul Karasik's How to Read Nancy.[8] In 2011, a one-shot comic book Whippers & Snappers by Kline featured early incarnations of Funny Pages characters in a story titled "Robert in the Boiler Room".
In 2021, Kline contributed a two-page comic about Our Gang star Norman "Chubby" Chaney to film critic Nick Pinkerton's premiere issue of Bombast: A Journal of Film & Funnies.[9]
Year | Title | Director | Writer | Actor | Editor | Notes |
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2001 | The Anniversary Party | No | No | Yes | No | dir. Jennifer Jason Leigh and Alan Cumming |
2005 | The Squid and the Whale | No | No | Yes | No | dir. Noah Baumbach |
2010 | John's Gone | No | No | Yes | No | dir. Josh and Benny Safdie |
2010 | Sinners of Kings Highway | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Short film, directorial debut |
2012 | Dave Buddin Drinks at Home | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Documentary |
2013 | Fowl Play | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Short film |
2014 | Jazzy for Joe | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Short film |
2016 | Steve Dalanchinsky | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Documentary |
2018 | Jobe'z World | No | No | Yes | No | dir. Michael M. Bilandic |
2022 | Funny Pages | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | First feature film |
2022 | Mystery Reel | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |