The Big Heat |  | Director: Fritz Lang Actors: Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame, Jocelyn Brando, Alexander Scourby, Lee Marvin Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $11.97 as of 5/22/2012 00:27 MDT details You Save: $3.02 (20%)
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Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Dubbed, DVD, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired), English (Unknown), Chinese (Subtitled), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Korean (Subtitled), Thai (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Dubbed) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Running Time: 90 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: COLD06532D UPC: 043396065321 EAN: 0043396065321
Release Date: December 18, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame, Lee Marvin. The apparent suicide of a corrupt officer causes a determined cop to go after the men behind a big-city crime ring. 1953/b&w/90 min/NR/fullscreen.
There's a satisfying sense of closure to the definitive noir kick achieved in The Big Heat: its director, Fritz Lang, had forged early links from German expressionism to the emergence of film noir, so it's entirely logical that the expatriate director would help codify the genre with this brutal 1953 film. Visually, his scenes exemplify the bold contrasts, deep shadows, and heightened compositions that define the look of noir, and he matches that success with the darkly pessimistic themes of this revenge melodrama.The story coheres around the suicide of a crooked cop, and the subsequent struggle of an honest detective, Dave Bannion (Glenn Ford), to navigate between a corrupt city government and a ruthless mobster to uncover the truth. Initially, the violence here seems almost timid by comparison to the more explicit carnage now commonplace in films, yet the story accelerates as its plot arcs toward Bannion's showdown with kingpin Lagana (Alexander Scourby) and his psychotic henchman, the sadistic Vince Stone, given an indelible nastiness by Lee Marvin. When Bannion's wife is killed by a car bomb intended for the detective, both the hero and the story go ballistic: suspended from the force, he embarks on a crusade of revenge that suggests a template for Charles Bronson's Death Wish films, each step pushing Lagana and Stone toward a showdown. Bodies drop, dominoes tumbled by the escalating war between the obsessed Bannion and his increasingly vicious adversaries. Lang's disciplined visual design and the performances (especially those of Ford, Marvin, Jeanette Nolan as the dead cop's scheming widow, and Gloria Grahame as Marvin's girlfriend) enable the film to transcend formula, as do several memorable action scenes--when an enraged Marvin hurls scalding coffee at the feisty Debby (Grahame), we're both shattered by the violence of his attack, and aware that he's shifted the balance of power. --Sam Sutherland
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