Touch of Evil
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2007) |
| Touch of Evil | |
|---|---|
Original film poster |
|
| Directed by | Orson Welles |
| Produced by | Albert Zugsmith Rick Schmidlin (1998 restoration & director's cut) |
| Written by | Whit Masterson (novel, Badge of Evil) Orson Welles (screenplay) Paul Monash (uncredited) Franklin Coen (uncredited) |
| Starring | Orson Welles Charlton Heston Janet Leigh Marlene Dietrich |
| Music by | Henry Mancini |
| Cinematography | Russell Metty, ASC |
| Editing by | Aaron Stell Virgil Vogel Walter Murch |
| Distributed by | Universal Studios |
| Release date(s) | May 21, 1958 |
| Running time | USA 95 Min. Edited 111 Min. Director's Cut |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English Spanish |
| Budget | $829,000 (estimated) |
| Allmovie profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Touch of Evil (1958) is a black-and-white American film, written and directed by Orson Welles, who also acts in the film. Paul Monash and Franklin Coen also wrote scenes for the film. The screenplay was loosely based on the novel Badge of Evil by Whit Masterson (a pseudonym for Robert Wade and William Miller). The cast also included Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Joseph Calleia, Akim Tamiroff, and Marlene Dietrich. This movie is considered one of the last examples of film noir in the genre's classic era (from the early 1940s until the late 1950s).
Contents |
[edit] Cast
- Charlton Heston - Ramon Miguel Vargas
- Janet Leigh - Susan Vargas
- Orson Welles - Hank Quinlan
- Joseph Calleia - Pete Menzies
- Akim Tamiroff - Uncle Joe Grandi
- Joanna Moore - Marcia Linnekar
- Ray Collins - District Attorney Adair
- Dennis Weaver - Motel Manager
- Val de Vargas - Pancho
- Mort Mills - Schwartz
- Victor Millan - Manolo Sanchez
- Lalo Rios - Risto
- Phil Harvey - Blaine
- Joi Lansing - Blonde
- Harry Shannon - Gould
- Rusty Wescoatt - Casey
- Wayne Taylor - Gang Member
- Kenny Miller - Gang Member
- Raymond Rodriguez - Gang Member
- Arlene McQuade - Ginnie
- Zsa Zsa Gabor - Strip-club owner
- Marlene Dietrich - Tana
- Mercedes McCambridge - Hoodlum
- Keenan Wynn - Man
- Joseph Cotten - Detective
[edit] Plot Summary
The movie opens with a famous, three-minute continuous tracking shot that to this day critics still hail as one of the best long shots in cinema. Beginning on the Mexico side of the Mexico/US border, this shot shows a man placing a bomb in a car and then the journey of the car past the US/Mexican border crossing. The scene ends with Mike Vargas (Charlton Heston) and Susie Vargas (Janet Leigh), newlyweds, kissing. The scene then cuts to the car, containing a man and a woman, exploding.
Vargas, a police official within the Mexican government, realizes the implications of a Mexican bomb exploding on US soil and begins to investigate. The police chief Pete Gould (Harry Shannon) and district attorney Adair (Ray Collins) arrive shortly on the scene, as well as police Captain Hank Quinlan (Orson Welles) and Quinlan's friend and partner, Pete Menzies (Joseph Calleia).
Over the course of the movie, Vargas finds that Quinlan may have been planting evidence to help win convictions. Susie Vargas is kidnapped and framed for a murder to ruin her husband.
Vargas confronts Menzies about the suspicious fact that so many murders have been solved by Quinlan and Menzies where the defense claims the primary evidence was fabricated. In all those cases, Menzies discovered the evidence. Menzies dismisses Vargas's claim.
Vargas returns to the motel only to discover that Susie is no longer there. Vargas also realizes that whoever absconded with Susie also stole Vargas's gun.
Vargas travels to the jail to discover Susie barely conscious. Vargas seems to be in a hopeless situation, with no proof that his wife did not commit a murder. Menzies then reveals to Vargas Quinlan's cane, which Menzies had found at the crime scene. Menzies realizes that Quinlan has been in the wrong, and desires to confront Quinlan and set things right. Menzies wears a crude wire and Vargas must follow the moving Quinlan and Menzies with a radio that must be within a certain distance to record Quinlan and Menzie's conversation.
Quinlan admits to Menzies that he did frame people, but that everyone who was framed was "guilty, guilty". Quinlan and Menzies come to a bridge, and Vargas must sneak under the bridge to maintain the recording. Quinlan hears the echo, and according to Quinlan his game leg informs him of Menzies's wire. Quinlan orders Vargas to show himself, and when Vargas does, Quinlan shoots Menzies with Vargas's gun.
As Quinlan is readying to kill Vargas, Menzies fatally shoots Quinlan. The movie ends with Vargas reuniting with Susie and leaving town.
[edit] History
| This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (January 2007) |
There are two stories as to how Welles ended up directing Touch of Evil. Charlton Heston recalled that Welles was originally hired to act in the film, and not as a director or writer. Universal was keen to secure Heston for the lead, but Heston wanted the studio to confirm the film's director before he signed on. After learning that Welles was in the acting cast for the movie, Heston proposed Welles as the director, noting that he would be more interested in starring if Welles was directing. The other story is that Welles had recently worked with producer Albert Zugsmith, known as the "king of the B's", on a film called Pay the Devil and was interested in directing something for him. Zugsmith offered him a pile of scripts with no director attached, and to prove he could make a great film out of a bad script, he asked Zugsmith to give him the worst. This was Badge of Evil, as it was then called. Welles did a rewrite and took it into production. Eager to get back into directing (a Hollywood film), he agreed to take only an acting fee, taking on the role of Quinlan. Although Welles was overweight in later life, Quinlan's girth in the film is mostly padding.[1][2]
A number of notable actors popped up in minor roles. Dennis Weaver plays a mentally unbalanced night clerk at an isolated motel; Welles liked Weaver as Chester on TV's Gunsmoke and worked closely with him on his part, which was shot on a three-day hiatus from the TV show. Zsa Zsa Gabor, who appears briefly as the impresario of a strip club, was a friend of the producer. Welles's old friend Joseph Calleia portrays Quinlan's betrayed partner. Many of the actors worked for lower wages just to make a film with Welles. Marlene Dietrich's role was a surprise to the producers and they raised her fee so they could advertise her involvement. Welles' friend and Mercury Theater colleague, Joseph Cotten, appears uncredited as a police officer.
Janet Leigh recalled how Welles asked for input from the actors in the cast:
"It started with rehearsals. We rehearsed two weeks prior to shooting, which was unusual. We rewrote most of the dialogue, all of us, which was also unusual, and Mr. Welles always wanted our input. It was a collective effort, and there was such a surge of participation, of creativity, of energy. You could feel the pulse growing as we rehearsed. "You felt you were inventing something as you went along. Mr. Welles wanted to seize every moment. He didn't want one bland moment. He made you feel you were involved in a wonderful event that was happening before your eyes."[3]
Welles wrapped production on time, delivered a rough cut to Universal, and was convinced that his Hollywood career was back on the rails. However, the film was then re-edited (and in part re-shot) by Universal International pictures. The editing process was protracted and disputed, and the eventually released version was not the film Universal or Welles had hoped for. The movie was literally a B-movie, released as the lower half of a double feature. The A-movie was The Female Animal, starring Hedy Lamarr, produced by Albert Zugsmith and directed by Harry Keller whom the studio had hired to direct the re-shot material in Touch of Evil. The two films even had the same cameraman: Russell Metty. Welles's film was given little publicity despite the many stars in the cast. Nonetheless, even as originally released it was a film of power and impact: though it had little commercial success in the US, it was nonetheless quite well-received in Europe, particularly by critics like future film-maker François Truffaut.
[edit] Differing versions
Three versions of the film have been released:
- The original 1958 release version
- A longer version, released in 1976
- A 1998 restored version that attempted to follow Welles's 1958 memo as closely as possible.
Welles's rough cut as submitted to the Universal no longer exists. This was worked on and trimmed down by Universal staff, and in late 1957 Universal decided to perform some reshoots. Welles claimed these were done without his knowledge, but Universal claimed that Welles ignored their requests to return and undertake further work. This was when Keller came aboard: some of his material was entirely new, some replaced Welles scenes. Welles viewed the new cut and wrote a 58-page memo to Universal's head of production, Edward Muhl, detailing what he thought needed to be done to make the film work. However, many of his suggestions went unheeded and Touch of Evil was eventually released in a version running 93 minutes.
In the mid-1970s, Universal discovered that it held a 108-minute print of Touch of Evil in its archives. Aware that there was a growing audience of cineastes with a strong interest in Welles' work, the studio released this version to cinemas in 1976 and later issued it on video, billing it as 'complete, uncut and restored'. In fact, this print was not a restoration at all, but a preview version which post-dated the Welles memo but pre-dated the release version. Whilst it did feature some vital Welles scenes which had been cut from the release version, it also featured more Keller material: the new footage had been cut into the film, but much of it ended up being cut out again, resulting in pointless expense for Universal. This 1976 version was not Welles' Touch of Evil either.
In 1998, the film was re-released in a re-edited form, which was based on the Welles memo and edited by Walter Murch, working from all available material, with Bob O'Neil (Universal's director of film restoration) and Bill Varney (sound engineer) participating in the restoration.[4] It should be noted that, as Welles' rough cut no longer exists, no true 'Welles cut' is possible, but Murch was able to assemble a version incorporating most of the existing material, omitting some of the Keller scenes (though some were retained, either because they had replaced Welles scenes which no longer existed and were necessary to the plot, or because Welles had approved of their inclusion). In addition, some of Welles's complaints were concerned with subtle sound and editing choices, and Murch was able to re-edit the material accordingly.[5] The Murch version is the closest we will get to the film Welles wanted, carrying out as many of the memo's instructions as possible. Notable changes include the removal of the credits and music from the three-minute opening shot, crosscutting between the main story and Janet Leigh's subplot and the removal of Harry Keller's hotel lobby scene. Rick Schmidlin was the producer on the 1998 edit, which had a limited but successful theatrical release (again by Universal International) and was subsequently made available on DVD. The DVD includes a reproduction of the 58-page memo.
Originally scheduled to be premiered at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival with Janet Leigh, Walter Murch and Rick Schmidlin attending, the screening was cancelled in the eleventh-hour after threats of litigation from Welles' daughter Beatrice Welles,[6] who has in the past issued similar threats against some parties who try to show or alter her father's work (such as the Touch of Evil restoration or the completion of Welles' last film The Other Side of the Wind.) The reason given for the litigation was that Beatrice Welles was not consulted for the restoration, despite the restoration incorporating changes that Orson Welles had requested after he had the film taken out of his hands.
[edit] Legacy
In 1993, Touch of Evil was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The film was placed #64 on American Film Institute's 100 Years, 100 Thrills.
The film is also jokingly referred to (although not by name) in the Tim Burton film Ed Wood. In a scene near the end of the film, Ed Wood (Johnny Depp) is complaining to Orson Welles about how producers always want the wrong actors to play certain parts in their movies. Welles says, "Tell me about it. I'm supposed to direct a thriller for Universal. They want Charlton Heston to play a Mexican!"
A similar line is used in Get Shorty, where movie fan Chili Palmer invites another character to see a screening of Touch of Evil, saying, "We can see Charlton Heston play a Mexican." We later see Palmer watching the final scene of the movie, mouthing the words together with the characters on screen.
In James Robert Baker's novel, Boy Wonder, fictional movie producer Shark Trager makes it his goal to surpass Touch of Evil's three minute opening tracking shot when filming a movie of his own. Tana's line, "He was some kind of a man. What does it matter what you say about people?" was also quoted extensively in the book.
The opening shot is discussed briefly in the opening of Robert Altman's 1992 film, The Player, by two characters who work for a fictional Hollywood studio. The shot in which the discussion takes place is itself a similar type of extended, uninterrupted tracking shot that spans the first three minutes of Touch of Evil. The opening is also referenced by Rainn Wilson in the DVD commentary of The Office episode entitled "Performance Anxiety".
Singer-songwriter Tom Russell has a song titled "Touch Of Evil" on his 2001 album Borderland that references the movie extensively, including the long opening shot and the dialogue between Dietrich and Welles about his future.
In the 2008 film In Bruges, the opening shots of Touch of Evil can be seen playing in the background during the scene when Harry (Ralph Finnes) instructs Ken (Brendan Gleeson) to kill Ray (Collin Farrell).
[edit] About the film
- "Touch of Evil, of course, was made by one of the great directors. If it is not Citizen Kane, it has been listed not far behind Kane in the list of Welles' films. It was a remarkable experience for me, a great learning experience, one of the most valuable I've had in my whole film career. I probably learned more about acting from Welles than any other film director I've worked for."—Charlton Heston
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Robson, Eddie, Film Noir, Virgin Books, 2005.
- ^ Leaming, Barbara, Orson Welles: A Biography. New York: Viking Penguin Inc., 1985.
- ^ Bernard Weinraub. "Dark Secrets Of Suburbia", New York Times, 18 September 1998. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Charles Taylor. "Ballad of a fat man", Salon.com, 10 September 1998. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Walter Murch. "Restoring the Touch Of Genius to a Classic", New York Times, 6 September 1998. Retrieved on 2008-05-22.
- ^ Geoffrey Macnab. "One of our classics is missing", The Guardian, 29 August 2003. Retrieved on 2006-08-19.
[edit] Further reading
Nericcio, William Anthony. 'Hallucinations of Miscegenation and Murder: Dancing along the Mestiza/o Borders of Proto-Chicana/o Cinema with Orson Welles's Touch of Evil.'The first chapter of Tex(t)-Mex.
[edit] External links
- Touch of Evil at the Internet Movie Database
- Touch of Evil at Allmovie
- Touch of Evil at Rotten Tomatoes
- Touch of Evil at Yahoo! Movies
- Touch of Evil at Filmsite.org
- Touch of Evil at the TCM Movie Database
- Article/review on the 1998 release and Welles' involvement in civil rights as reflected in the film.
- Welles' Memo to Universal
- [1], Charlton Heston's account of the production of Touch of Evil.
- Tex(t)-Mex, a new book from the University of Texas Press, features an article on Orson Welles and Touch of Evil entitled: 'Hallucinations of Miscegenation and Murder: Dancing along the Mestiza/o Borders of Proto-Chicana/o Cinema with Orson Welles's Touch of Evil.'
- Literature on Touch of Evil
- Text of Welles' 58-page memo to Universal Studios
- List of edits of restored version compared to previous versions
|
|||||
|
|||||

