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Touch of Evil
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Item Number:
FLA 20470D |
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Entertainment Weekly - 10/02/1998
"...[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: AUSA Today - 10/09/1998
"...A masterpiece..." -- 4 out of 4 starsPremiere - 12/01/2000
"...Discover what the hullabaloo was about....Great Welles and a surprisingly good Heston..." -- 5 out of 5 stars - One for the LibraryTotal Film - 03/01/2001
"...Classic noir's final shout pits Orson Welles and Charlton Heston as rival investigators..."Premiere - 05/01/2006
"[A] masterful wallow in noir....[Welles] inhabits another outsize monster who somehow evokes the viewer's sympathy."Experience Orson Welles' timeless masterpiece, Touch of Evil, complete and uncut with restored footage for the first time ever! This exceptional film noir portrait of corruption and morally-compromised obsessions stars Welles as Hank Quinlan, a crooked police chief who frames a Mexican youth as part of an intricate criminal plot. Charlton Heston plays an honorable Mexican narcotics investigator who clashes with the bigoted Quinlan after probing into his dark past. A memorable supporting cast including Janet Leigh as Heston's inquisitive wife, Akim Tamiroff as a seedy underworld leader, Zsa Zsa Gabor and Marlene Dietrich as an enigmatic gypsy complete fascinating drama engulfed in haunting cinematography and a magnificently eerie score by Henry Mancini.
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.
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.
Cops | Drama | Drama (General) | Essential Cinema | Film Noir | Framed | Mystery | Mystery / Suspense | Recommended | Suspense | Theatrical Release
"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."
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Lost Touch of Evil
Movie Lover: Hanley Harding from Sunny Isles Beach, FL -- October, 29, 2005
Poor Orson Welles. Citizen kane was his triumph and demise, all rolled into one. Touch of Evil had memorable moments, but really did miscast Heston as a Mexican (yes, Mexican!) Police Detective. This was supposed to be Welles' example of what ultimate film noire ought to be, but never quite made it. That is not to say that the film doesn't have its dark and nail-biting moments... it does, but just doesn't ever seem to come together as a consistent whole. As in Welles' The Magnificent Ambersons, everyone does give credible performances, making the film a classic, but I can't give it top-drawer rating. I much prefer Welles' performance -- and whole film product -- in the really great The Third Man.
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