Forty years old and still as wonderfully vile as ever, this newly re-edited version
(based on a recently unearthed 58-page memo from Welles himself) of the great director's
masterpiece of bad juju is as close as we're ever going to get concerning what Welles
actually had in mind. And what he had in mind was trouble, the dislocated, transient
trouble-fear of nightmares and dreamscapes, in which the sane and rational are spun
upside down and away while the outré and surreal take over and nothing makes
much sense anymore. Loosely based on Whit Masterson's pulp novel Badge of Evil, the
film follows honeymooning Mexican D.A. Mike Vargas (Heston) and his Anglo wife Susan
(Leigh) as they run afoul of the hulking, amoral gringo cop Hank Quinlan (Welles)
who is searching out the truth about a lurid double-homicide in a seedy, El Norte
border town (certainly one of the strangest surprises for modern audiences is the
fact that this run-down, barren helltown is actually Venice Beach, California, long
before gentrification caught up and revitalized that beachfront community). After
wrapping the film in 1957, Welles hightailed it down to Mexico to begin work on Don
Quixote and left the editing of Touch of Evil to Universal. Bad idea. The studio
ended up patching the film together as they saw fit, unable or unwilling to deal
with the fact that what was supposed to be a solid little B-picture had, under Welles'
firm hand, become a full-fledged art film, operating on so many different levels
that the studio gang didn't know what to do with it. This new edit restores Welles'
original vision -- beginning with the classic, three-minute opening tracking shot
in which a bomb is surreptitiously placed in the trunk of a meandering sedan (gone
is Henry Mancini's brassy, bongo-happy score, replaced as per Welles' instructions
with ambient street sounds and chattering extras), and including the restoration
of previously specified continuity edits that, while they may not make the film any
easier to follow, definitely make it harder to forget. It's more or less universally
agreed that Heston was miscast, and while his Latinified skin tone may be disagreeable
-- even offensive -- to the modern eye, I'd argue that his staccato, vaguely Hispanic
delivery adds yet another layer of the bizarre to an already freakish production.
Likewise Welles, who donned a prosthetic nosepiece, padded out his already-blossoming
girth (he was 43 at the time), and went through his lines as though with a mouthful
of dead kittens -- his Hank Quinlan is an excruciating, sublime portrait of burning-from-the-inside
decay, a hulking figure that smacks of the worst of the human id. It's not Welles'
best film -- you know what that is -- but it may turn out to be his most important
in the way it has influenced (and continues to influence) everything from the ongoing
film noir resurgence to bad dreams everywhere. As fortune teller Tanya (Dietrich)
tells Quinlan, "Your future's all used up" -- a line that would appear to fit Welles
as succinctly as it does his character. That's a mistake, though: To judge from this
re-edit, Welles' future is more vital than ever.
Full Length Reviews
Touch of Evil 
Touch of Evil 
Touch of Evil 
Touch of Evil 
Capsule Reviews
Touch of Evil 
Touch of Evil 
Touch of Evil 
Other Films by Orson Welles
Citizen Kane 
The Magnificent Ambersons 
The Trial 
Film Vault Suggested Links
The Killing 
Double Indemnity 
Mulholland Falls 
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