Home
AudioAsylum Trader
Films/DVD Asylum

Movies from comedy to drama to your favorite Hollyweird Star.

For Sale Ads

FAQ / News / Events

 

Use this form to submit comments directly to the Asylum moderators for this forum. We're particularly interested in truly outstanding posts that might be added to our FAQs.

You may also use this form to provide feedback or to call attention to messages that may be in violation of our content rules.

You must login to use this feature.

Inmate Login


Login to access features only available to registered Asylum Inmates.
    By default, logging in will set a session cookie that disappears when you close your browser. Clicking on the 'Remember my Moniker & Password' below will cause a permanent 'Login Cookie' to be set.

Moniker/Username:

The Name that you picked or by default, your email.
Forgot Moniker?

 
 

Examples "Rapper", "Bob W", "joe@aol.com".

Password:    

Forgot Password?

 Remember my Moniker & Password ( What's this?)

If you don't have an Asylum Account, you can create one by clicking Here.

Our privacy policy can be reviewed by clicking Here.

Inmate Comments

From:  
Your Email:  
Subject:  

Message Comments

   

Original Message

"Touch of Evil:" saw the version favored by Welles himself and corrected after he shot off a 52-page "memo" to

Posted by tinear on May 30, 2014 at 08:18:19:

the studio head objecting to the pre-release cuts.
I couldn't notice anything significant (except for the glorious exception of that famous eternal opening shot: no music, no titles overwhelm it, now), though it has been sometime since I viewed the "original."
Welles should have garnered a Best Actor Oscar for this performance. He certainly was as good an actor as he was a director behind the lens.
The ensemble equally amazes: Akim Tamiroff as the sleazy, but curiously endearing Uncle Joe;
Janet Leigh as the all-too-gullible bride;
Dennis Weaver in what has to be one of the most over-the-top jobs of all-time--- and a brilliant allusion and counterpoint to the Anthony Perkins' role in "Psycho:" he even is a motel clerk hosting Janet Leigh (who provides some lascivious thrills for the viewer in her motel room, yet again!);
Marlene Dietrich as some sort of gypsy fortune teller/courtesan;
Mercedes McCambridge as a very diesel tough girl;
Joseph Calleia as the detective most loyal to Welles' Captain Quinlan.
If you're very attentive, you'll also spot Welles' favorite Joseph Cotton in a tiny cameo, as well as Zza Zza Gabor…

Wait a minute… I forgot to mention the hero, Vargas as played by Charlton Heston. Fresh off his role in "The Ten Commandments," Heston has lost little of his imposing stage presence. That he is totally miscast--- brown face paint and all--- as a Mexican isn't the issue: he is so wooden that the idea that bodacious Janet Leigh would even give him the time of night is unbelievable. Still, as a figure representing unbending law and order, he may be just about perfect. He certainly provides plenty of irony as a straight-shooter who exposes (pun intended) his new bride to dangers and terrors no honeymooner should experience.