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Welles' long shot is famous not so much for its length. At 3 minutes and 28 seconds, a great many films exceed it (one recent film, Russian Ark, is 99 minutes of one shot!). Rather, Welles' shot is admired for its artistry, intricacy, and tension. Here it is:
I love the explosive climax.[1]
Touch of Evil's qualities as a film were, at the start, radically underestimated. After many editing controversies, Universal International came to view the film as having low (profit-making) potential. Wikipedia succinctly explains what happened next:
It was released as a B-movie, 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. Though it had little commercial success in the US, it was well-received in Europe, particularly by critics like future filmmaker François Truffaut.
The context of the film's release and reception mirror, in some ways, prominent noir themes: cynicism, skepticism, and the film as a victim of circumstance. Even Welles, despite his unlikeable role in the film itself, emerges as a kind of doomed hero in relation to his art.
From where does the film's story come? Touch of Evil is loosely based on Badge of Evil (1956), a novel written by "Whit Masterson"---a compact pseudonym for the authors Robert Wade and William Miller.
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Got it?
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I have seen Touch of Evil only once, but the film's aesthetic, acting, and general cynicism impressed me as few others films before or since. As usual, scenes and performances leave the deepest marks.[3] First, Orson Welles was fantastic. He effectively played one the most unlikeable, fascinating, monstrous, and despicable figures I've seen on screen. The manipulative Quinlan has been described elsewhere as a "tragic figure who has a 'touch of evil' in his enforcement of the law." I also recall the tension of the Grandi family gang members coming to abduct Janet Leigh. I remember vividly the hotel scene where it appears that that the Grandi family gang is going to rape Leigh---again for the tension. I was impressed with the dark mood of the film—particularly the final scenes in an oil production facility (like the one below) near the film's climax.
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The film's side characters are memorable. AMC's Filmsite sums up their mood-altering diversity:
Other unusual and seedy characters include a nervous and sex-crazed motel manager, a blind shopkeeper, a drug smuggler, a sweaty drug dealer with a poorly-fitting wig, a terrorizing gang of juvenile delinquents,
Zsa Zsa Gabor (right) makes a short appearance as the owner and madame of a strip club.
As a start toward bringing my impressions together, I offer first this sweeping contextual assessment---also from AMC's Filmsite:
It was regarded as a rebellious, unorthodox, bizarre, and outrageously exaggerated film, affronting respectable 1950's sensibilities, with controversial themes including racism, betrayal of friends, sexual ambiguity, frameups, drugs, and police corruption of power.
Indeed, to expand on this, I think something of the significance of film noir, at least in the 1950s, is in the way that the genre captures that slice of the repressed dissatisfaction, always roiling below the surface, of the decade.
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The cross-border aspects of the film's plot, as well as the dirty nature of Hank Quinlan's means, speaks to America's growing realpolitik in dealing with its imperial interests in the 1950s. The imperative of the time was that Communism must be contained abroad, whether via idealistic public pronouncements like the Truman Doctrine, or by quietly sending "advisors" to Vietnam and secretly placing missiles in Turkey. Covert operations are planned in this period, if not enacted. Quinlan's character embodies a growing sense of controlling our enemies, communist or no, "by any means necessary." America uses what George Cotkin (channeling Jean-Paul Satre) calls "dirty hands," or what Welles labels the "touch of evil," to keep order.
The anti-imperialist message, I confess, is my gloss. In The Cultural Front, Michael Denning's brilliant 1997 book about the laboring of American culture, Welles emerges as the pre-eminent anti-fascist of American theater and cinema.
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Though marketed as a B-Film and underappreciated in its own time, Touch of Evil gained critical appreciation by the century's end. In 1993, the Library of Congress selected it for the National Film Registry, citing the film as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." Along with Gigi, however, Touch of Evil did not place in the top 100 of the American Film Institute's latest list (published in 2007, though Touch did make a 2001 list of the top 100 thrillers).
Unlike Ben Alpers, I have no direct experience either screening a noir in class or discussing a singular example with my students. I show a lot film in my U.S. surveys as a way to enliven material the text presents dryly. I primarily use documentaries (e.g. The Weather Underground, The Fog of War, Roger and Me) or films that dramatically represent materials from an interesting angle (e.g. Band of Brothers episodes, The Birth of a Nation). But observing the discussion of noir this week makes me think that I should reconsider fiction-based film as emblematic of the dark undercurrents of the late 1940s and 1950s. In so doing, I will also have to get over the fear that an outsider observer (e.g. dean, senior professor) or a cranky student will accuse me of wasting valuable history class time with a feature film unrelated to an explicit historical topic.
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Which noir most efficiently conveys the greatest number of noir themes in the least amount of time? - TL
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[1] Directors Martin Scorcese and Paul Thomas Anderson have the distinction of being famous for two long shots each: Scorcese for Goodfellas and Raging Bull, and Anderson for Boogie Nights and Magnolia.
[2] AMC Filmsite summaries are awesome. I use the summary for The Birth of a Nation (a film that needs all the aids it can get) with students, and they seem to appreciate it universally.
[3] I'm pretty sure I saw the 1998 version, edited by Walter Murch and produced by Rick Schmidlin.
[4] Michael Denning, The Cultural Front: The Laboring of American Culture in the Twentieth Century (New York: Verso, 1997): 365, 375, 395, 400, 533n29.
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