Kiss Me Deadly (1955) USA
Kiss Me Deadly Image Cover
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Director:Robert Aldrich
Studio:MGM (Video & DVD)
Producer:Robert Aldrich
Writer:Mickey Spillane, A.I. Bezzerides
Rating:4
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2006-04-29
ASIN:B00005AUK9
UPC:0027616862914
Price:$14.95
Awards:1 win
Genre:Film Noir
Release:2001-06-18
IMDb:0048261
Duration:106
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Subtitles:Spanish, French
Features:Black & White
Letterboxed
Subtitled
Robert Aldrich  ...  (Director)
Mickey Spillane, A.I. Bezzerides  ...  (Writer)
 
Ralph Meeker  ...  Mike Hammer
Albert Dekker  ...  Dr. G.E. Soberin
Paul Stewart  ...  Carl Evello
Juano Hernandez  ...  Eddie Yeager
Wesley Addy  ...  Lt. Pat Murphy
Marian Carr  ...  Friday
Maxine Cooper  ...  Velda
Cloris Leachman  ...  Christina Bailey
Gaby Rodgers  ...  Gabrielle
Nick Dennis  ...  Nick
Jack Lambert  ...  Sugar Smallhouse
Jack Elam  ...  Charlie Max
Jerry Zinneman  ...  Sammy
Leigh Snowden  ...  Cheesecake
Percy Helton  ...  Doc Kennedy
Marjorie Bennett  ...  Manager
Mort Marshall  ...  Ray Diker
Fortunio Bonanova  ...  Carmen Trivago
Strother Martin  ...  Harvey Wallace
Mady Comfort  ...  Nightclub Singer (as Madi Comfort)
James McCallion  ...  Horace
Robert Cornthwaite  ...  FBI Agent
Silvio Minciotti  ...  Mover
Comments: "I don't care what you do to me, Mike - just do it fast!"

Summary: Kiss Me Deadly starts off with a bang--a young woman (Cloris Leachman) in bare feet and a trench coat runs along a highway, frantically trying to flag down help. In desperation, she finally throws herself into traffic, and the car she stops belongs to detective Mike Hammer. The pace never lets up--we're not even 15 minutes into the movie and there's already been a murder, a mysterious letter, an attempt to kill Hammer, and, of course, a warning to just stay out of it. Hammer, tired of lowlife divorce cases, smells something big and can't let it go. The film is exciting, about as dark as a noir can get, and full of skewed camera angles and mysterious whose-shoes-are-those shots. At the center, of course, is Mike Hammer, a detective so cool he can win a fight with nothing more than a box of popcorn as a weapon. Hammer knows his opera singers as well as his amateur prizefighters, and he makes the ladies swoon, but he's far from a conventional hero. In fact, he's rather emphatically not a nice guy; Hammer happily whores out his secretary-girlfriend Velma to cinch up those divorce cases and has a penchant for slamming other people's fingers in drawers. Even the bad guys know he's a sleazebag. ("What's it worth to you to turn your considerable talents back to the gutter you crawled out of?") Ralph Meeker plays Hammer's ambivalence brilliantly, swinging easily between sexy and just plain mean. Kiss Me Deadly is just terrific. Stop reading this review and watch it already. --Ali Davis