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Touch
Of Evil (1958)
In writer-director-actor
Orson Welles' off-beat, twisted, dark and sweaty, frantic
film noirish crime thriller, dark mystery, and expressionistic, complex
cult classic (considered the last official film noir, and also Welles'
last Hollywood film) - it was a great American technical masterpiece
with the controversial themes of racism, murder, police corruption,
kidnapping, betrayal of friends, sexual ambiguity, perversion, frame-ups,
drugs, and police corruption of power.
The central character in a sleazy border town was played
by Welles himself - an obsessed, driven, and bloated police captain
("a lousy cop") - a basically tragic, disheveled figure
who had a "touch of evil" in his enforcement of the
law during a car bombing incident. Its other
unusual, grotesque and seedy characters included a sweaty Mexican
drug dealer with a poorly-fitting wig, a nervous and sex-crazed motel
manager, a terrorizing gang of juvenile delinquents, and an intensely
upright and good cop - an international narcotics officer who was
on his honeymoon but continually ignored his besieged newlywed wife.
Although unappreciated
in its time in the US, a box-office failure, and criticized as artsy,
campy, grubby pulp-fiction trash, the low-budget and over-the-top film
- in retrospect - has been ranked as the classic B-movie of
the silver screen. It was aided by Henry Mancini’s blistering
musical score - mostly diagetic and provided by radios,
street musicians, and a player piano. The
film's script, written in about two weeks, was loosely based upon
Whit Masterson's (a pseudonym for Wade Miller - aka Robert Wade and
William Miller) 1956 pulp novel, Badge
of Evil.
- the film's celebrated credits-opening was a continuous-action,
spectacular 3-minute and 30 second tracking and panning crane shot
- an audacious, incredible, breathtaking, uninterrupted view following
a 1956 Chrysler New Yorker convertible with Texas plates (after
a timed explosive dynamite device had been placed in its trunk
as it was parked across the border in Mexico)
Closeup of Bomb with Timer Set to Explode in Minutes
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Bomb Placed in Trunk of Convertible (with Texas
plates)
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- the vehicle crossed the US/Mexico border into
the squalid Mexican-American border town
of Los Robles (TX); the car was driven by wealthy local American
industrialist-businessman involved in construction
- Rudy Linnekar (Jeffrey Green) who was with his blonde mistress-girlfriend
Zita (Joi Lansing) - a striptease dancer who he had just picked up
in a strip-club
The Convertible With a Bomb in Trunk Driving Toward
Border
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Convertible Passing Couple
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The Car and the Couple Simultaneously At the Border
Crossing
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- the vehicle's route was intertwined with views of
a newly-married couple: Mexico City narcotics investigator Ramon
Miguel "Mike" Vargas (Charlton Heston) and his blonde American
bride Susan (Janet Leigh) walking to the border crossing; as the
inter-racial newlyweds kissed, the sound of the sudden and violent
explosion of the detonated car overlapped on the soundtrack, and
they turned their faces toward the blast; the couple reacted by
running toward the burning wreckage, joined by police, and other
witnesses; Mike remarked to Susie that the incident was alarming:
"This could be very bad for us....For Mexico, I mean"
- to keep Susan from any harm related to the car bombing,
Vargas sent her back to their Mexican honeymoon hotel, the St.
Marks Hotel, to wait for him, while he joined in the investigation; Linnekar's charred body was identified by his despising daughter
Marcia Linnekar (Joanna Moore): "I guess that's my father"
- alone as she navigated the dark
street toward her hotel, Susan attracted the attentions of Mexican
males, including a young, leather-jacketed Mexican thug that she
nicknamed "Pancho" (Valentin de Vargas); he delivered
a note to her: ("Follow
this boy at once. He has something very important for Mr. Vargas")
and she unwisely agreed to follow after him - "Well, what
have I got to lose?...Don't answer that!"
- back at the scene of the car bombing, a grotesque,
cigar-smoking, candy-chewing bloated and obese local detective
Hank Quinlan (Orson Welles) first appeared as he rolled out of
his car, shown with a low-angled shot; as
a narcotics commission expert, Vargas became snarled in the local
investigation with the racist Quinlan, accompanied by Quinlan's
loyal partner Police Sgt. Pete Menzies (Joseph Calleia), DA
Adair (Ray Collins), and the DA's assistant Al Schwartz (Mort Mills)
- meanwhile, Vargas' young honeymooning
bride, in a continuing series of sexual terrorizations, was first
harrassed in a sleazy, dark Ritz Hotel by the brother of the corrupt
drug-lord "Grandi" mentioned earlier
- "Uncle Joe" Grandi (Akim Tamiroff); Susan wasn't intimidated
by him and called him out: "You ridiculous, old-fashioned, jug-eared,
lop-sided Little Caesar!"; Grandi pressured and advised
that her husband should lay off the case against his brother in Mexico
City who was awaiting trial, before he let her go; soon after, Vargas
met up with Susan in the lobby of their Mexican honeymoon hotel,
the St. Marks Hotel; to her dismay, he suggested sending her ahead
to Mexico City, where he would soon follow for the Grandi drug trial
- meanwhile, Quinlan and other officers visited the
Mexican strip joint where Linnekar had earlier picked up the blonde striptease dancer
- his murdered companion; as Vargas ran to join them, one of Grandi's
young gang members named Risto (Lalo Rios) (the son of Vic, the
Grandi leader "in the pen") attacked him with a bottle of acid
and then fled; the chemical acid missed Vargas' face
and instead exploded and splashed onto a peeling poster on the
crumbling wall of the victim-stripper performer Zita (an echo of
her death in the burning car explosion); inside the strip club,
Quinlan had a few words with the Madam/Owner (Zsa Zsa Gabor), who
told him Zita had only been hired a few days earlier
Acid - Aimed at Vargas - Spashed Onto Zita's Poster
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Quinlan Questioning Strip Club Madam/Owner (Zsa
Zsa Gabor) About Zita
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- after leaving the strip club, while Quinlan was
on the Mexican side of the border during the case, he briefly visited
with cigar-smoking, Mexican gypsy and brothel manager Tanya (Marlene
Dietrich in a memorable cameo), a former lover-mistress and femme
fatale; he was attracted by the tinkling sounds of a pianola coming
from her familiar, local brothel; as he entered, she told him:
"We're closed," but then she engaged in verbal foreplay with him: "I
didn't recognize you. You should lay off those candy bars"; he
responded: "Uh, it's either the candy or the hooch. I must
say, I wish it was your chili I was gettin' fat on. Anyway, you're
sure lookin' good"; she replied: "You're a mess, honey"
- as Vargas was walking back to their
honeymoon Mexican-border hotel, Susan was in their room being harrassed
by a peeping tom with a flashlight (one of the Grandi nephews)
that shone on her as she removed her cashmere sweater; although
she threatened her husband with leaving for the airport and immediately
traveling to Mexico City, she decided to "stick close to" her
husband, suggesting that she should stay in a safer, more comfortable
motel "on the American side of the border; Susan was driven out to the out-of-the-way
and remote motel on the outskirts of the Texas town (not knowing
it was owned by Grandi), known as the Mirador Hotel; she was to
be sequestered there, while her husband helped Quinlan investigate
the car bombing incident
Susan Deciding to Stay Nearby With Her Husband
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Susan's First Encounter With Texas Motel Manager
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- at about 7 am in the morning, Susan was dropped
off by Sgt. Menzies with her suitcase at the deserted Mirador
Hotel, where she entered Room # 7; the isolated motel was managed
by a skinny, bizarre, sex-crazed, nervous, hyperkinetic, beetle-like,
immature night attendant (Dennis Weaver); when the spectacled receptionist
first saw her, he was peeping through her motel window
- the officers (with Vargas) drove
to the Linnekar Construction Company site where it was suspected
that the dynamite for the car explosion originated; the foreman
(Billy House) was asked questions about former young Mexican employee
Manolo Sanchez (Victor Millan) and some stolen dynamite; he informed
Quinlan: "He's been playin' around with the boss' daughter";
the police radio alerted them that Sanchez was already a "suspect
now in custody" in Sanchez' own apartment - where the dead
man's daughter Marcia Linnekar had been living for four months
during an affair; Quinlan had an intuitive hunch that Manolo Sanchez was his suspect - now
a shoe clerk who was having an affair with Marcia at the time of
the car bombing murders; Vargas joined Quinlan and a team of police
detectives-investigators
- in Manolo's tiny, cramped, claustrophobic "shoe-box
size" apartment, the officers were greeted
by Marcia, Manolo, and Marcia's expensive attorney Howard Frantz
(William Tannen); a prejudiced, lengthy interrogation scene commenced
against Manolo (with another long unedited single take, often unnoticed)
after Marcia and her lawyer were allowed to leave; Quinlan surmised
that Sanchez had been fired from his last job (at the construction
site) working for Linnekar, and believed that Linnekar objected
to having a "Mexican shoe clerk for a son-in-law"
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In Cramped Apartment, Sanchez Interrogated by Quinlan
(with Vargas)
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- during the questioning, Vargas walked across the
street to phone Susan in the motel, where she was reclining on
her motel bed in sexy, silky lingerie; he told her "how very
very much" he loved her; as he conversed, the blind woman shop
owner eavesdropped and possibly fantasized
about the loving words he whispered to his wife
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Blind Shop Owner Eavesdropping on Conversation
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During Manolo's Questioning, Vargas Phoned Wife
Susan in the Mirador Motel
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- at the end of the visit, Quinlan
had surreptitiously placed two sticks of dynamite in a shoe box in
Sanchez' bathroom, although he let Menzies find the incriminating
evidence [Note: during this and many other past investigations, the experienced,
old-time cop Quinlan habitually fabricated or planted evidence to
convict the guilty (even though his instincts were usually correct
and he had a perfect arrest record)]; Menzies
was heard proudly announcing his discovery of the evidence linking
Sanchez to the bombing - two sticks of dynamite ("I found
it!") in a shoebox in the bathroom; at the same time, Sanchez
admitted that he was secretly married to Linnekar's daughter
Marcia - revealing a motive to kill her father as he was about to change his will
- Vargas had noticed the empty box earlier and knew
of the deception, putting him into direct conflict with Quinlan; he
immediately realized that the boy had been framed and that Quinlan
had planted the evidence to conclusively implicate his suspect
in the murders; when he told Quinlan that the shoebox was empty
ten minutes earlier, he threatened to expose Quinlan to authorities
- determined to clear the innocent man and expose the detective's
corrupt methods: "You framed that boy. FRAMED him!"; however, Sanchez
was taken away to be booked at the station
- immediately and behind the scenes, Grandi plotted
with Quinlan to discredit and destroy Vargas professionally and
personally; at the same time, DA assistant Al Schwartz and Vargas began
an official investigation of their own, determined to show how
Quinlan planted the dynamite; soon after, it was discovered that
Quinlan purchased sticks of dynamite at the hardware store in Los
Robles - and could have easily planted two of the sticks in Sanchez'
apartment; however, due to Quinlan's racist attitude and hatred
of Vargas, he was able to convince the DA and the Chief of Police
that he was being smeared by Vargas - and he also made the vicious,
unproven counter-accusation that Vargas was using his position
to supply his wife with narcotics
- meanwhile, Susan had opened her motel window to
see the arrival of hot rods and a gang of punks; the menacing thugs
were members of the Grandi gang, led by "Pancho"; they
were there to victimize and persecute Susan, by playing loud music
through her room's speaker; the group also took over the office
switchboard, cut off her phone calls, and terrorized the night attendant
who had returned; the black-jacketed gang members had been sent there
by Grandi - under Quinlan's orders
- Uncle Joe Grandi's plan with Quinlan was to terrorize
Vargas' pretty wife Susan by framing her in a sex/drug crime -
to force him to withdraw from his brother's case ("maybe with our
little deal, we can hurt him")
- a strange voice through her motel room's wall told
Susan that her room was about to be entered with the master key
and that the threatening gang might drug her with "marijuana," "Mary
jane," and a "mainliner";
the psychopathic, manly/butch, lesbian gang leader (Mercedes McCambridge)
promised: "The fun is only beginning"
Butch-Lesbian Gang Leader (Mercedes McCambridge): "The fun is
only beginning"
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Susan Continually Terrorized by Gang in the Mirador
Motel
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Susan Assaulted on a Motel Bed by the Gang
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- she was attacked by the menacing
thugs (members of the Grandi gang and other teens); in her room where
she was surrounded, she was grabbed by her arms and legs as she
cringed on the bed, struggling and screaming; when the door in
the room was shut, it was presumed that she was either raped and/or
shot up with drugs behind the door (but it was later revealed to
be a scare tactic)
- in the Hall of Records where Vargas was examining
records of all of Quinlan's old cases, Sgt. Menzies realized that
his boss was a truly dishonest cop; Quinlan had framed suspects
by repeatedly and ruthlessly planting evidence for Menzies to discover
(e.g., an axe, dentures, a lead pipe): "It's all there in
the record"; it was a revelatory moment for Menzies: "You can smear
him. Ruin his whole life's work"
- Vargas visited the Mirador Motel and found it totally
dark, with the tense night attendant describing a "terrible
brawl" and "one of 'em wild parties" in Cabin No.
7, Susan's room; somewhat oblivious to what had happened, Vargas
only became concerned when he found his briefcase with his gun
missing; a leftover joint in the abandoned, cluttered room caused
the night attendant to become hysterical, grab onto a bare, windblown
tree, and confess to Vargas that the hotel belonged to Grandi and
that the hot-rod gang could be located at the Rancho Grande night
club
- meanwhile, the semi-unconscious Susan had been brought
to a run-down room in Grandi's downtown Ritz Hotel
- and left half-naked on a bed; it was made to appear like
she had experienced a drug overdose; although she wasn't actually
raped or drugged, Grandi hoped she would awaken and "think maybe
something really did happen"; Quinlan entered the hotel room, put
on black gloves, and forced Grandi to telephone
the police station to notify Menzies that authorities could find
the drugged-up Susan after a wild party in the Ritz Hotel: ("The
way I hear it, things got a little outta control. Don't be surprised
what they find")
- then, Quinlan chillingly strangled Uncle
Joe Grandi to death with a stocking next to Susan,
in an attempt to frame Susan for his murder; as he left the
room after utilizing a "smart way to kill," Quinlan made a fatal mistake - tipped off
by a closeup of the sign on the back of the door: Stop, Forget
Anything, Leave Key at Desk; he left his cane at the scene
of the crime (a subtle reference to Welles' own Citizen
Kane character)
Grandi Pursued by Quinlan in Room 18 of the Ritz Hotel
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Susan Awakening and Seeing the Dead Grandi Above Her
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The Strangulation Death of Uncle Joe Grandi by Quinlan, to Frame Susan
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- the almost-naked, heavily-sweating Susan lying on
the bed looked up and saw the bloated face of the strangled Grandi
(with his tongue hanging out) above her; she struggled onto the
fire escape from the room where she was screaming for help as a
crowd gathered; meanwhile, once Vargas had arrived in town, he entered the Rancho Grandi nightclub
and attacked and beat up the Grandi gang members, unaware
of Susan's predicament; Vargas was notified by Schwartz
that his wife had been picked up by the vice squad and was held
in jail; he also explained that Susan had been charged with drug
possession: ("They found her at the Hotel Ritz, half-naked on one
of the beds, drugged. There were reefer stubs and a heroin fix")
- and for the murder of Grandi!
- Vargas was reunited with Susan in her jail cell,
where the Coroner (a cameo by Joseph Cotten) explained how authorities
found
"evidence of a mixed party...articles of clothing, half-smoked
reefers, needle marks"; lying on a jail cot, Susan begged her
husband: "Take
me home!" and "Don't go!" but again, Vargas deserted her
- as the film wound to its climactic conclusion, Sgt.
Menzies revealed to Vargas that Quinlan was implicated when he found
his cane at Grandi's murder scene; this evidence decisively proved
the police detective was guilty of the crime; Menzies agreed to
use Quinlan's dirty tactics - to wear a wire to try and entrap
his partner into confessing
- meanwhile, the aging, weakened cop
Quinlan had retreated to Tanya's brothel parlor with the pianola
playing; he sat in a stupor in front of a defeated bull head on
the wall - with toreadors' spears in him; when he asked for his
fortune to be told through tarot cards, Tanya replied: "Your future
is all used up. Why don't you go home?"
- in the gripping climax, as Quinlan and Menzies walked
through the desolation and filth of a section of canals in the
town, with oil derricks, rhythmically-pumping
oil pumps, garbage heaps, seedy streets, and metallic tanks, Quinlan
began to confess his wrong-doings - he was maneuvered into talking
about the many convictions he had been responsible for over the
years, asserting that all his suspects were guilty; he voiced his
opinion that to him, "faking evidence" was equivalent
to "aiding justice"
- but then Quinlan realized that Menzies
was betraying him and recording him; he heard the echo of his own
voice as it was recorded on a transmitter held by Vargas under
a bridge, and realized he had been taped and everything about the
frame-up had been revealed by his partner Menzies; learning
of the betrayal, Quinlan found the hidden "bug"/microphone
on Menzies; Menzies handed over Vargas' gun (heard on the
recording apparatus' speaker) before Quinlan shot him with the
weapon; as Menzies went down, Vargas was figuratively and literally
revealed behind him
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Vargas Recording Them Under the Bridge
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Quinlan's Murder of Menzies With Vargas' Gun
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Vargas Literally and Figuratively Revealed Behind the Falling Menzies
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- Quinlan had angrily shot Menzies and lethally wounded
him, and literally had blood on his hands; Quinlan stumbled over
to the riverbank to vainly attempt to wash his blood-soaked hand
in the filthy water
- Vargas told Quinlan
he had finally been caught committing murder, but Quinlan expected
to frame Vargas and blame him for Menzies' death; to protect the
unarmed Vargas from also being shot by Quinlan, Menzies shot and
lethally-wounded Quinlan from behind before dying; the corrupt police
captain was finally brought down; Schwartz drove up in Vargas'
convertible with Susan; as Quinlan expired, he listened as Schwartz
played his own confession on tape
- Vargas was reunited with Susan, and he promised
her: "It's all over, Susie. I'm taking you home. Home";
cleared of the drug charge, they sped away to a safer, more secure place
- the final image was of Quinlan staggering backwards
and lying dead and floating whale-like in dark and stagnant gutter-canal
water and garbage; Tanya arrived and watched Quinlan's body floating
in the muddy water
The Slow Death of Hank Quinlan
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Tanya's Epitaph for Quinlan
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- Tanya was told by Schwartz that although Sanchez
had been framed, he had also confessed to the car bombing crime
- and that Quinlan was right after all: ("His famous intuition
was right after all. He framed Sanchez. But he didn't even need to.
The kid confessed about that bomb. So, it turns out Quinlan was
right after all"); Schwartz described Quinlan as a good cop
who often knew - through intuition - who was guilty; but the detective,
acc. to Tanya, was also a "lousy cop" when he served
as the law's judge, jury, and executioner
- as the film concluded, Tanya
delivered Quinlan's epitaph in the film's final line: "He
was some kind of a man. What does it matter what you say about people?...Adios!"
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Mike Vargas (Charlton Heston) Kissing His Bride Susan
(Janet Leigh) at the Moment of the Car Bombing Blast
International Narcotics Officer Mike Vargas
Susan Vargas (Janet Leigh)
Detective Hank Quinlan's (Orson Welles) First Appearance
at the Car Bombing Scene
Uncle Joe Grandi (Akim Tamiroff) in the Ritz Hotel
Quinlan's
Loyal Partner Police Sgt. Pete Menzies (Joseph Calleia)
DA Adair (Ray Collins)
Mexican Gypsy Fortune Teller and Brothel Manager Tanya (Marlene Dietrich)
to Quinlan: "We're closed"
Susan Caught in a Peeping Tom's Flashlight Beam in Her Mexican
Honeymoon Hotel
Weird Mirador Motel Manager (Dennis Weaver)
(l to r): Marcia Linnekar, Her Lawyer Howard Frantz, and Manolo Sanchez
- in His Apartment to be Questioned
Vargas Realizing that Quinlan Had Planted Two Sticks of Dynamite in a
Shoebox to Frame Sanchez For The Car Bombing
Grandi Scheming with Quinlan Against Vargas
Al Schwartz (Mort Mills) Joining Up with Vargas to Investigate Corrupt
Cop Quinlan
Pancho and Grandi's Terrorizing Gang at the Mirador Motel
Sgt. Menzies in the Hall of Records With Vargas, Realizing That His Boss
Quinlan Was a Dishonest Cop
Night Attendant's Discovery of a Joint in Susan's Wrecked Motel Room
Fearful Night Attendant at the Motel Questioned by Vargas
Susan in Jail - Charged with Murder - Reunited with Vargas
Menzies' Revelation of Quinlan's Cane to Vargas - Damning Evidence That
Quinlan Had Killed Grandi
Quinlan in Tanya's Brothel Parlor - Before a Defeated Bull Head on the
Wall
Menzies Being Wired Up by Vargas to Record Quinlan's Guilty Confession
Tanya's Fortune-Telling for Quinlan: "Your future is all used up..."
Conversation Between Quinlan and Menzies During Their Walk
After Shooting Menzies, Quinlan with a Blood-Soaked Hand
Quinlan's Attempt to Wash the Blood Away in Dirty Water
Quinlan Turning a Gun on Vargas
Menzies Killing Quinlan Before Dying Himself
Vargas Reunited with Susan Before Driving Away
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