Rating: NR
Genre:
Crime
Theatrical Release: 09/11/1998(USA)
Release Date: 10/07/2008
SubTitles: English/Espanol/French
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD2
Run Time: 108 min
Flags: Violence, Adult Situations, Drug Content
Distributor/Studio: Universal Studios
This baroque nightmare of a south-of-the-border
mystery is considered to be one of the great movies of
Orson Welles, who both directed and starred in it. On honeymoon with his new bride,
Susan (
Janet Leigh), Mexican-born policeman
Mike Vargas (
Charlton Heston) agrees to investigate a bomb explosion. In so doing, he incurs the wrath of local police chief
Hank Quinlan (
Welles), a corrupt, bullying behemoth with a perfect arrest record.
Vargas suspects that
Quinlan has planted evidence to win his past convictions, and he isn't about to let the suspect in the current case be railroaded.
Quinlan, whose obsession with his own brand of justice is motivated by the long-ago murder of his wife, is equally determined to get
Vargas out of his hair, and he makes a deal with local crime boss
Uncle Joe Grandi (
Akim Tamiroff) to frame
Susan on a drug rap, leading to one of the movie's many truly harrowing sequences.
Touch of Evil dissects the nature of good and evil in a hallucinatory, nightmarish ambience, helped by the shadow-laden cinematography of
Russell Metty and by the cast, which, along with
Tamiroff and
Welles includes
Charlton Heston as a Mexican;
Marlene Dietrich, in a brunette wig, as a brittle madam who delivers the movie's unforgettable closing words;
Mercedes McCambridge as a junkie; and
Dennis Weaver as a tremulous motel clerk.
Touch of Evil has been released with four different running times -- 95 minutes for the 1958 original, which was taken away from
Welles and brutally cut by the studio; 108 minutes and 114 minutes in later versions; and 111 minutes in the 1998 restoration. Based on a 58-page memo written by
Welles after he was barred from the editing room during the film's original post-production, this restoration, among numerous other changes, removed the opening titles and
Henry Mancini's music from the opening crane shot, which in either version ranks as one of the most remarkably extended long takes in movie history.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide