It’s clearly from White Heat. It’s the last thing James Cagney says: “Made it Ma! Klaatu Barada Nikto!” After which Edmond O’Brien says: “He made it to the top of the world, and it Klaatu Barada Nikto.”
And as a tribute to this film, in Apocalypse Now, Robert Duvall says: “I love the smell of Klaatu Barada Nikto.”
The crack about the lentil soup recipe comes from an episode of “The Simpsons”, where Lisa went on a crusade in support of vegatarianism. She ended up meeting Paul and Linda McCartney up on the roof of Apu’s “Quicki Mart”, where Paul tells Lisa that the lentil soup recipe is masked into Strawberry Fields.
I’m somewhat surprised you didn’t ask for info from a Canadian over 30 on the band Klaatu! Way back around the end of 1976, notice was taken of a rather well done album called “3:47E.S.T.” by Klaatu. They were a Toronto based band that were believed to be the Beatles by another name, speculation fueled by the British trade N.M.E. weekly music newspaper and others. They weren’t, but hey, who were they to waste free publicity. The first single was out in 1973, the last in 1982. They produced five albums and two different compilations, the current one being “Peaks” on Attic (ACD 1374). The biggest hit they had was “Calling Occupants” with the b-side “Sub Rosa Subway” (origionally a '73 release) in 1976, written by Klaatu. Both sides were re-recorded to greater fame by the Carpenters. They were not just a studio band, as suggested by the post from Cabbage, but in fact toured. I myself was at one concert in 1979 at my highschool in Guelph, On., Canada.
Most importantly, yes, the name was taken from The Day The Earth Stood Still. So was the cover photo from Ringo Star’s “Goodnight, Vienna”, with Ringo’s head pasted onto Klaatu’s body. How’s that for a Beatles link?
“Klaatu barada nikto” means “Klaatu wants to have sex with you”. You see, Gort is one SERIOUS sex machine, afterall, he was programmed to f**k the entire planet, was he not? So when he found out Klaatu wanted to have a go with him, he revived Klaatu and they went off to somewhere more private to do the wild thing.
What’s wrong with you people. How could anyone forget the classic scene, a battered Rutger Hauer, facing an even more battered Harrison Ford, on a rooftop in the rain, and he gives his terrific, improvized monologe; “The thing’s I’ve heard . . . Klattu Barada Nicto . . . all will be lost, now, like tears in rain . . .”
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“Maybe I’ve misunderstood what spiders are, all this time. They’re huge, hairy bipeds, with hands.”
I can’t believe you people would spew such filthy lies. I’m really ashamed to consider myself a part of this board now. Anyone in the know could tell you it is from that great song:
“My boyfriend’s back and you’re gonna Klattu Barada Nicto, hey now, hey now, my boyfriend’s back!”
When a question like this gets so many silly answers, it’s a sign that the master must emerge from hiding and decree the truth. Moderators, please send this to Cecil!
And who could forget the Cantina scene in Star Wars where Han Solo quips, “Fast ship? You’ve never heard of the Millennium Falcon? It’s the ship that made the Klaatu Barada Nikto in twelve parsecs!”
In the 1967 classic movie “Clambake” Elvis can be heard to quip to Bill Bixby “Klaatu Barada Nikto”
Clearly it was a premonition refering to the Mr. Bixby’s eventual metamorphisis into the Incredible Hulk. Anyone who speaks Klingon will back me up on this.
I am disapointed in all of you. KLAATU BARADA NIKTO is what the Man from Another Place (the midget) says to Agent Cooper right before he does his funky little dance.
as for The Strawberry Fields/Cranberry Sauce thing, The lentil soup gag aside, In The Summer of Love, the making of Sargent Pepper IIRC, George Martin says that John chanted I’m very Tall, I’m very Small, Cranberry Sauce at the very end, just after Ringo’s backwards Tom-tom and Cymbals part.