DVD : Touch of Evil (Restored to Orson Welles' Vision)

Touch of Evil (Restored to Orson Welles' Vision)

starring: Joe Basulto, Joseph Calleia, Ray Collins, Marlene Dietrich, Zsa Zsa Gabor




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Average Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 7983







Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
Brand: Universal
EAN: 9786305999874
Format: Black & White, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 6305999872
Label: Universal Studios
Manufacturer: Universal Studios
Number Of Items: 1
Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen
Publisher: Universal Studios
Region Code: 1
Release Date: October 31, 2000
Running Time: 95 minutes
Sales Rank: 7983
Studio: Universal Studios
Theatrical Release Date: 1958









Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Heston and leigh are newlyweds framed for murder by a corrupt police chief. Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 07/06/2004 Starring: Charlton Heston Janet Leigh Run time: 111 minutes Rating: Nr Director: Orson Welles

Amazon.com essential video:
Considered by many to be the greatest B movie ever made, the original-release version of Orson Welles's film noir masterpiece Touch of Evil was, ironically, never intended as a B movie at all--it merely suffered that fate after it was taken away from writer-director Welles, then reedited and released in 1958 as the second half of a double feature. Time and critical acclaim would eventually elevate the film to classic status (and Welles's original vision was meticulously followed for the film's 1998 restoration), but for four decades this original version stood as a testament to Welles's directorial genius. From its astonishing, miraculously choreographed opening shot (lasting over three minutes) to Marlene Dietrich's classic final line of dialogue, this sordid tale of murder and police corruption is like a valentine for the cinematic medium, with Welles as its love-struck suitor. As the corpulent cop who may be involved in a border-town murder, Welles faces opposition from a narcotics officer (Charlton Heston) whose wife (Janet Leigh) is abducted and held as the pawn in a struggle between Heston's quest for truth and Welles's control of carefully hidden secrets. The twisting plot is wildly entertaining (even though it's harder to follow in this original version), but even greater pleasure is found in the pulpy dialogue and the sheer exuberance of the dazzling directorial style. --Jeff Shannon









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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Another Sorry Mess. Highly regrettable. Bad storytelling.
A big "Citizen Kane" fan in my youth, I saw Touch of Evil in 1981 and thought it was simply awful. Then recently I heard of this reissue, and thought I'd buy it and watch it again. I discovered that in our youth we often know what's right, but often doubt ourselves. The movie is still awful. It may be more true to Welle's vision, but it's still awful. His talent had gone, quite obviously, by this time.

Many of us want so desperately to find Welles' later work important that we'll do almost anything to trick ourselves into thinking it is. Most often men do this... women know it may quack like a duck but it ain't no duck. This movie is hard to watch, not credible, the writing is unnatural and stilted, the premise preposterous.

Yes, the opening crane shot is elaborate and done in one take. But a bit unnecessary. Lots of work to show a car bombing. And overly long and trying - like the entire picture.

This movie is really Welles doing an impersonation of himself. The pacing is deadening, it's hard to follow. It was written apparently for Welles to impress us with his filmmaking, not to tell us a story. There is no regard for the audience here. Like all his later films, this is like an overwritten book that is hard to read, rather than lucid storytelling. The film has no balance - each scene is trying to be a mini-epic, rather than an element to tell the story.

A movie, after all, exists to communicate a story. Some scenes do need to be visually loud and impressive, but they need to be contrasted with quieter scenes. Some scenes are just there for information - like the car bomb. In Touch of Evil, there is no thought to that at all. Every scene is a visual, bombastic overreach. It's as though Welles is trying to tell us, "This is art. Get it? Get it? This is art." Meanwhile the film leaves us angry, like we've been cheated. And we have been. Any Perry Mason TV episode is heads and shoulders above this, because the craft of storytelling is done well.

That's the form - now the content. Hank Quinlan isn't a very compelling character. We don't care much for him at the start, and could care less at the end when he falls backward into the water. Heston as the hero doesn't really behave in a believable fashion, he looks like someone playing a character in a film. Why is Quinlan blubbering over all the time, and for what reason? Who is the Marlene Dietrich character, and why is Quinlan sitting there at her house? (who cares? - what the hell is going on with the story?) All of you, if you're objective, will agree that there is nothing to care about in this film. And it's poorly crafted. The end quote: "He was some kind of man, etc..." Ridiculous. No one cares.

Welles was a hot fire who had burned into a smoking dead heap by the time he made this, and the movie is much like him at this time: overly indulgent, self centered, ineffective. For "Kane", those self centered qualities had meshed well with the story; Kane was fresh, bold storytelling. That's why it's so enjoyable, it does a very good job of telling the story. Touch of Evil is moribund, tired, wheezing for breath. Much like Hemingway's "Islands in the Stream", Touch of Evil gives us a sad reminder of what once shone as a great talent.

See "The Grand Illusion" or "Rules of the Game" by Renoir if you'd like to see truly great films. Even "Swamp Water" is a wonderful film. Not this.

The Italians say the best way to get praise is to die. Well, this film was almost immediately recognized as a classic once Orson Welles died. But it isn't. It was a mess when he was alive and it's still a mess. We all want Welles work after Kane to be good, and important because we want his accomplishments to fit this image we have of him: the grand, all-knowing, gregarious, misunderstood genius filmmaker. But almost all of his later work isn't good, almost all of it is terrible. Welles best work was him talking about his career. The actual films, after Kane, are really just pretty lousy.






Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - unleashes an electrical charge!
A bomb goes off in a car across the Mexican border and a man is chosen to take the rap. Meanwhile another man of the law who's on his way to his honeymoon with his bride, suspects a police frame-up. Forced by his conscience, he takes on the corrupt and the criminal and puts himself and his newlywed wife in grave danger. Welles' Touch Of Evil is a cruel-realized poem of corruption, greed and murder. It's a dark, vicious, chaotic world and from the first scene to the last, Welles holds it together, pulls it apart and unleashes it with an electrical charge! The great musical score supports the stunning action and photography!




Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - "He was some kind of a man." "Adios."
I love this set,definitely worth the wait. If your a fan of classic cinema,or love Orson Welles. Get it. "You know he's pretty good."



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - One of the best murder scenes
The great underappreciated actor here is Akim Tamiroff. Next time you watch it try to picture how much less great it would be if an inferior actor had played his role. "Make 'em nice an' big!"



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Welles and film noir: a winning combination
Simply put, Touch of Evil (as Orson Welles wrote and shot it) ranks as one of the best film noirs in Hollywood history. Touch of Evil attains this classic status through the brilliant directing of Orson Welles, a script that remains true to the spirit of film noir, and exceptional acting.

Welles' finesse behind the camera quickly sucks the reader into the seedy underbelly of a city straddling the US/Mexico border. The first three minutes or so simply set the stage for the movie by following Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh as they cruise around town. As the camera follows the car, it also shows the surrounding city and it's lively atmosphere, perfectly accompanied by music that sets the town. Simply describing this opening shot barely scrapes the surface of Welles' vision. You have to see this scene in order to truly understand that it is one of the best opening scenes in cinematic history. Although there are not as many memorable scenes after this, Welles maintains his daring directing style throughout the movie to maintain the film noir atmosphere.

Welles also writes a script that is so enveloped in film noir atmosphere that shadowy fogs issue from the TV screen. There are very few characters as memorable as Welles' Det. Quinlan, a man who has a tortured past and a continually corrupt present and future. This character alone represents the anti-hero found in most noir, making other film noir elements such as the actually mystery behind Quinlan and his illegal actions icing on the cake.

Quinlan (Welles) drives the whole movie with acting so superb that the audience almost feels bad for his character. Quite simply, as great as Welles was behind the camera, he was equally as amazing in front of the camera. If this movie ran solely off of the steam generated by Welles it would still be a classic. As it is though, Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh add more exceptional performances as the victims of Quinlan's schemes. One side note-although Charlton Heston is cast as Hispanic cop Vargas, a long shot from reality, he still gives a performance that makes you forgot this large inconsistency. Additionally, Janet Leigh plays the perfect mixture of strength and loyalty for her husband with the right amount of fear needed to bolster the suspense when Quinlan goes after her to get to Vargas. The scene where she is under siege in a hotel matches her performance in Psycho for sheer suspense.

For these reasons and many more, Touch of Evil remains one of the best film noirs that is finally allowed to shine now that Welles' original vision is restored and honored.

Vision) Welles' Orson to (Restored Evil of Touch




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