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Cool Hand Luke is a 1967 American film starring Paul Newman and directed by Stuart Rosenberg.

Newman stars in the title role as Luke, a prisoner in a Florida prison camp who refuses to submit to the system. His inability to conform drives the plot of the movie, in the same vein as characters such as Winston from .

Luke is sent to the prison camp for cutting the heads off of parking meters one drunken night, and when asked why he would do such a thing the only explanation he gives is "Small town, not much to do in the evenin'." The character of Luke is often interpreted allegorically as a Christ figure, and the film plays on many aspects of the story of Jesus.

The screenplay was adapted by Donn Pearce and Frank Pierson from the novel by Pearce.

Other members of the cast include George Kennedy, J.D. Cannon, Lou Antonio, Robert Drivas, Strother Martin, Jo Van Fleet, Morgan Woodward, Wayne Rogers, Harry Dean Stanton, Dennis Hopper, and Joe Don Baker.

It won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (George Kennedy), and was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Paul Newman), Best Music, Original Music Score and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium.

In 2005 it was added to the list of films preserved in the United States National Film Registry.

What we got here, is ... failure to communicate. Some men you just can't reach. So you get what we had here last week. Which is the way he wants it. Well, he gets it. I don't like it anymore than you men.

This quote is used in the opening to the Guns N' Roses song "Civil War." Part of the previous quote also made it onto the American Film Institute's list of most memorable movie lines.

Another quote during a punishment scene is

dlBoss Paul: That ditch is Boss Kean's ditch. And I told him that dirt in it's your dirt. What's your dirt doin' in his ditch?An edited version of the "Tar Sequence" cue from the musical score, by Lalo Schifrin, has been used for many years as the news music package on several television stations' news programs (mostly those owned and operated by ABC) and was first used in 1968 on WABC-TV in New York for their in Australia currently still uses a modified version of the music. To this day many people do not know the origin of the music, which has become more associated with television news than the film itself.Donn Pearce, the screenwriter, had a bit role in the movie. On the set, he punched out one of the other actors on the last day of filming. (Source: Esquire 1005) Pearce received $80,000 for selling the book rights to Warner Bros. and another $15,000 for writing a draft.In the pilot episode of Cheers, this is named the "Sweatiest Movie Ever" by general consensus of the denizens of the bar.SouthernMedia's NMSA - Listing of American stations that have used the score from the "Tar Sequence" as their news theme music

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