Kiss Me Deadly | |
---|---|
Directed by | Robert Aldrich |
Produced by | Robert Aldrich |
Screenplay by | A. I. Bezzerides |
Based on | the novel Kiss Me, Deadly by Mickey Spillane |
Starring |
Ralph Meeker Albert Dekker Paul Stewart Juano Hernandez |
Music by | Frank DeVol |
Cinematography | Ernest Laszlo |
Edited by | Michael Luciano |
Production
company |
Parklane Pictures
|
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date
|
|
Running time
|
106 minutes 104 minutes (USA) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $410,000 |
Box office | $726,000 (USA/Canada) $226,000 (foreign) 436,699 admissions (France) |
Kiss Me Deadly is an 1955 film noir, produced and directed by Robert Aldrich, that stars Ralph Meeker. The screenplay was written by A.I. Bezzerides, based on the Mickey Spillane Mike Hammer mystery novel Kiss Me, Deadly. The film was released by United Artists
Kiss Me Deadly grossed $726,000 in the United States and a total of $226,000 overseas. The film also withstood scrutiny from the Kefauver Commission, which called it a film "designed to ruin young viewers", leading director Aldrich to protest the Commission's conclusions.
Kiss Me Deadly marked the film debuts of the actresses Cloris Leachman and Maxine Cooper.
Kiss Me Deadly is often considered a classic of the noir genre. In 1999, Kiss Me Deadly was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
Ralph Meeker plays Mike Hammer, a tough Los Angeles private eye who is almost as brutal as the crooks he chases. Mike and his assistant/secretary/lover, Velda (Maxine Cooper), usually work on "penny-ante divorce cases".
One evening on a lonely country road, Hammer gives a ride to Christina (Cloris Leachman), an attractive hitchhiker wearing nothing but a trench coat. She has escaped from a mental institution, most probably the nearby Camarillo State Mental Hospital. Thugs waylay them and Hammer awakens in some unknown location where he hears Christina screaming and being tortured to death. The thugs then push Hammer's car off a cliff with Christina's body and an unconscious Hammer inside. Hammer next awakens in a hospital with Velda by his bedside. He decides to pursue the case, for vengeance, a sense of guilt (as Christina had asked him to "remember me" if she got killed), and because "she (Christina) must be connected with something big" behind it all.