| | Touch Of Evil DVD
| Category | Horror DVDs, Dramas Movies, Thriller Videos, Mystery, Suspense, Gift Set, Recommended, Essential Cinema, Cops, Film Noir, AFI Top 100 Thrills, Framed | | Starring | Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Orson Welles, Akim Tamiroff, Ray Collins, Joseph Calleia, Marlene Dietrich, Zsa Zsa Gabor | | Director | Orson Welles | | Composer | Henry Mancini | | Director | Harry Keller | | Director of Photography | Russell Metty | | Editor | Aaron Stell, Virgil W. Vogel | | Producer | Albert Zugsmith | | Production Designer | Alexander Golitzen, Robert Clatworthy | | Screenwriter | Orson Welles |
Black & White; Additional Footage; Soundtrack English; English Subtitles; Director's Comments TOUCH OF EVIL is Orson Welles's gripping study of corruption and morality, set in a small town just across the Mexican-American border. A powerful police captain, who has framed a young Mexican for the bombing murder of a prominent American businessman, finds his authority challenged by an upright Mexican narcotics detective. But the detective soon learns that some things are not as obvious as they appear at first viewing. Welles's fabulous melodrama is a film noir treasure. Orson Welles's TOUCH OF EVIL is nothing short of a masterpiece. Beginning with a three-minute-plus tracking crane shot, the film explodes onto the screen, literally--the marvelously expressive opening shot ends with a car blowing up, and that detonation sets into motion a classic noir tale of betrayal and murder. In a complex exploration of character and morality, Welles plays the racist Captain Hank Quinlan, a grotesque, troubled, and powerful figure who runs his small U.S. border town according to his own version of the law. Quinlan's brutishness and vulgarity contrast starkly with the idealism and playboy good looks of Charlton Heston as Mike Vargas, a Mexican detective trying to put away the leader of a dangerous family of drug dealers--the Grandis. In the U.S. with his new bride, Susie (Janet Leigh), Vargas becomes consumed with exposing Quinlan and his highly questionable methods--too busy to see that his own beautiful blonde bride is in serious danger from both Quinlan and the Grandis.
In 1998, Welles's film was restored closer to its creator's original vision, and it is a joy to behold. Every shot is impeccably crafted, every word of dialogue concise and pointed. The camerawork (by Russell Metty and John Russell) is stunning, particularly in the opening scene and the long single take in which Vargas believes he has caught Quinlan planting evidence. The supporting cast, led by Marlene Dietrich, Dennis Weaver, Akim Tamiroff, and Joseph Calleia, gives exhilarating performances. TOUCH OF EVIL, Welles's last studio film, is a near-perfect examination of the dark underbelly of society and the tragic downfall of a once proud man. Theatrical release: February 1958, without being previewed for critics.
Filmed in Venice, California, which doubled for Los Robles.
Rehearsals began on February 9, 1957; shooting began on February 18 and wrapped on April 2.
TOUCH OF EVIL was added to the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1993.
TOUCH OF EVIL was reedited in 1998 based on a 58-page memo that Orson Welles had written to studio head Ed Muhl after Welles's initial displeasure with the original release. The new version was put together by producer Rick Schmidlin and editor Walter Murch, based on the memo that was first written about in a Film Quarterly article by Jonathan Rosenbaum. In the memo, Welles wrote, "I am passing on to you a reaction based on my conviction as to what my picture ought to be, but only what here strikes me as significantly mistaken in your picture."
The long tracking shot that starts the movie was mimicked in Robert Altman's THE PLAYER. Welles was even prouder of the long take in the scene in Sanchez's apartment--which was completed on the first day of shooting.
Orson Welles was not supposed to be the director, but as a result of a misunderstanding on the part of Charlton Heston, the producer put him at the helm--but paid him no more money.
Marlene Dietrich gives a terrifically subtle performance as Tanya. Her character was not in the original script, but Welles added her at the last moment, telling her she should look "dark," as she did in GOLDEN EARRINGS. When the studio saw the rushes that included her, they were shocked.
Zsa Zsa Gabor also makes a brief cameo as the nightclub owner. She is called a "Special Guest Star" in the credits, along with Dietrich.
Regarding his heavy makeup, Welles said, "...padded stomach and back, sixty pounds of it, old-age stuff. When I came into the house, before I had a chance to explain that I had to get upstairs and take my makeup off, all these people came up and said, 'Hi, Orson! Gee, you're looking great!'"
Welles, who rewrote the script in just a matter of days, did not read the novel on which it was based until after he had completed the film.
A number of Mercury Theatre veterans appear in the film. A virtually unrecognizable Joseph Cotten plays the medical examiner. Gus Schilling, who played Goldie in THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, makes a brief appearance as Eddie Farnum. And Ray Collins, Jim Gettys from CITIZEN KANE, plays District Attorney Adair.
Welles wrote the character of Menzies for Lloyd Bridges, but the studio rejected that choice. He was ultimately thrilled with the work of Joseph Calleia, who played Menzies in the film.
After Welles believed the film was complete, the studio brought in Harry Keller to shoot some more scenes that the studio felt were necessary. The retakes were shot on November 19. Hearing about the new shoot, Welles wrote two letters to Heston nearly demanding he not participate. In the first letter he wrote, "UNLESS THE STUDIO IS STOPPED THEY ARE GOING TO WRECK OUR PICTURE--AND I MEAN WRECK IT....THE RESULT WILL BE GENUINELY BAD." Heston was in a tough spot because he had invested money in the production. Meanwhile, Welles was not even allowed back on the Universal lot. He said, "I was so sure I was going to go on making a lot of pictures at Universal, when suddenly I was fired from the lot." When TOUCH OF EVIL premiered as the second half of a double bill, the main feature was THE FEMALE ANIMAL, directed by Harry Keller.
Regarding the original released version of the film, Welles told Peter Bogdanovich, "[T]hey didn't absolutely murder it. I was very sorry about the things they did, but the story was still roughly intact when they finished. That wasn't true of ARKADIN, which was just made meaningless by the cutting."
The film screened at the Brussels World's Fair on June 8, 1958, and won the top prize from a jury that included Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut. Touch Of Evil Quotes/Excerpts: "I'm no lawyer. All a lawyer cares about is the law."--Captain Hank Quinlan (Orson Welles) to Mike Vargas (Charlton Heston)
"Who's the boss--the policeman or the law?"--Vargas to Quinlan
"I want to watch."--Gang leader (Mercedes McCambridge) to "Pancho" (Valentin de Vargas)
"I didn't recognize you....You should lay off those candy bars."--Tanya (Marlene Dietrich) to Quinlan
"I don't speak Mexican."--Quinlan to Sanchez (Victor Millan)
"Just because he speaks a little guilty, that don't make him innocent, you know."--Quinlan to Vargas
"You're a mess, honey."--Tanya to Quinlan
"Your future is all used up."--Tanya to Quinlan
"Hank was a great detective, all right."--Tanya
"And a lousy cop."--Al Schwartz (Mort Mills)
"He was some kind of a man."--Tanya
About working with Heston, Welles said, "He's the nicest man to work with that ever lived in movies. I supposed the two nicest actors I've ever worked with in my life are Gielgud and Heston." Touch Of Evil Reviews: "...[A] splendid, definitive reedit of Orson Welles' noir great....Unspools with all the complex, unnerving menace its writer-director had in mind all along..." -- Rating: A
-- Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly "...A masterpiece..." -- 4 out of 4 stars
-- Andy Seiler, USA Today "...Discover what the hullabaloo was about....Great Welles and a surprisingly good Heston..." -- 5 out of 5 stars - One for the Library
-- Marion Hart, Premiere "...Classic noir's final shout pits Orson Welles and Charlton Heston as rival investigators..."
-- George Kiritopoulos, Total Film "[A] masterful wallow in noir....[Welles] inhabits another outsize monster who somehow evokes the viewer's sympathy."
-- Andy Webster, Premiere "Orson Welles's 1958 TOUCH OF EVIL is a work of slippery precision, a picture whose seductiveness is only enhanced by its refusal to surrender fully to our grasp."-- Stephanie Zacharek, New York Times Touch Of Evil | List Price | $26.98 (You save $5.63) | | Studio | Universal Studios Home Video | | Orig Year | 1958 | | DVD Encoding | Region 1 | | All Time Sales Rank | 23889  | | CD Universe Part number | 7713461 | | Catalog number | 61103474 | | Discs | 2 | | Release Date | Oct 07, 2008 | | Rating | Not Rated | | Additional Info | Widescreen; Anniversary Edition; Remastered; Black & White | | Movie Details | B&W; Widescreen; Anniversary Edition; Remastered; Black & White; 50th Anniversary Edition; 2-Disc Set |
Touch Of Evil Movie Review The Greatest B Movie Ever Made. On its face, "Touch of Evil" is a second-rate detective story, with some absurd moments that give it the quality of a horror picture. But beneath the veneer it is a brilliant work of expressionist effects, and containing a tour de force of acting. (What besides tour de force can describe a situation in which the director of a film additionally plays a principal role?) This is film noir at its finest.
Stanley Kubrick once said that the first shot of a film should be the most interesting thing the audience sees after entering the theater. Certainly, the astonishing, lengthy one-take opening shot of "Touch of Evil" meets the test. It may be the most dazzling first shot to appear in any film, and Welles complained of having to explain to people how it was done. In addition to its fabulous opening, "Touch of Evil" contains many other brilliant sequences including an extraordinary shot in which the camera dollies back as a group of characters cross a street, tracks them across a hotel lobby, leads them into a cramped elevator, and rides them up five floors until Mexican detective Vargas (Charlton Heston), who has left them in the lobby, reappears at the very moment the elevator door reopens.
Welles shoots his story as if it were a nightmare. The isolated-motel sequence prefigures "Psycho": Janet Leigh's sexy Susie Vargas meets a skinny "night man" (Dennis Weaver) who is an infantile sex degenerate. There is also great irony in the fact that the duel between the straight incorruptible Vargas and the tainted, decadent Hank Quinlan (Welles) only ends when Vargas is forced to use Quinlan's dirty tricks to defeat him. Like most of Welles's movies, from "Citizen Kane" to "Chimes at Midnight", "Touch of Evil" deals with loyalty and betrayal between friends. When his idolizing partner Pete Menzies (Joseph Calleia) rejects Quinlan for Vargas, Quinlan correctly feels betrayed by the one man he loves and trusts, and whose adoration he thrives on.
One of the best things about "Touch of Evil" is the strange, decaying atmosphere of its night city, a fictional space created by Welles out of bizarre locations in Venice, California. It is a weird world of flashing neon, tawdry hotels and night clubs, crumbling arches, peeling walls, twisting alleys, and everywhere, always, heaps of trash
It was essential, therefore, that the accompanying music score by Henry Mancini to the movie not only complimented the action, but actually became part of the film itself. Indeed, Welles and Mancini inserted the music into the plot of the film by having the majority of the score emanate from a screen source, be it a jukebox, a loudspeaker, or a cheap radio. Welles knew the value of music in film, and decided that the music for this film would be different. "What we want is musical color," said Welles, "rather than movement--sustained washes of sound rather than tempestuous, melodramatic, or operatic style of scoring." Mancini delivered and then some. His music is uniformly strong and able to stand on its own merits away from the confines of 24 frames per second--an astounding feat considering the constraints given to Mancini by the director.
While "Touch of Evil" may not be as significant as "Citizen Kane", which taught other directors how to tell a story through film, and taught viewers how to watch and listen to a film and get the complete story, but it has imagery that is as startling as anything in "Kane", and identical themes, and is even more entertaining. In fact, it emerges as the most enjoyable of Welles's films. The result? "Touch of Evil" is a masterpiece. [filmfactsman] Submitted by filmfactsman (Beverly Hills, CA, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful. This review is for a different format.
Masterpiece I do agree with the guy that said this is better than Kane, I mean I enjoyed it so much. This is truly a masterpiece, Orson was a genius. Submitted by zl177 (Italy) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
Better than Kane Always thought this was a better film on an
emotional level than Citizen Kane. You can
smell the sweat and odor right off the screen. Welles was deeper into his character in this one than Kane. However,
the original studio cut is actually better I
think than the restored version. Have seen them both on a theater screen. Submitted by a reviewer (Houston, Texas) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
| Have you seen this movie? |  |
Touch Of Evil DVD Region 1 2-Disc Snap Case with Outer Box Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85 Audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono - English Subtitles - English (SDH), French, Spanish - Optional Additional Products: Replication of Orson Welles' Legendary 58-Page Memo to the Studio Disc 1: Side A: Restored Version Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary - 1. Charlton Heston - Star; Janet Leigh - Star; Rick Schmidlin - Restoration Producer 2. Rick Schmidlin - Restoration Producer Featurette - 1. Bringing Evil to Life 2. Evil Lost & Found Disc 2: Side A: Theatrical Version Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary - F.X. Feeny - Writer/Filmmaker Disc 2: Side A: Preview Version Additional Release Material: Audio Commentary - Jonathan Rosenbaum & James Naremore - Welles Historians
Touch Of Evil Video Big Heat, Blue Velvet, Borderline, Chinatown, Cronicas, Dean Martin Double Feature - How To Save A Marriage (And Ruin Your Life)/Who Was That Lady, Heat, Kiss Me Deadly, Naked Kiss, Out of the Past, Third Man Purchase Touch Of Evil Movie To buy, Click on price to add to cart
|