SummaryThis film noir portrait of corruption and morally-compromised obsessions stars Welles as Hank Quinlan, a crooked police chief who frames a Mexican youth as part of an intricate criminal plot. Charlton Heston plays an honorable Mexican narcotics investigator who clashes with the bigoted Quinlan after probing into his dark past. A memorable support... Read More
Directed By:Orson Welles
Written By:Orson Welles, Whit Masterson, Franklin Coen, Paul Monash
Touch of Evil
Metascore
Universal Acclaim
99
User score
Generally Favorable
7.6
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Metascore
Universal Acclaim
96% Positive
23 Reviews
23 Reviews
4% Mixed
1 Review
1 Review
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
100
Amazingly, Welles gets away with it. Citizen Kane may be the more weighty, rounded work, but Touch of Evil is a heap more fun.
100
An all-star A-movie with large themes, brilliant technique, and a dark and daring performance by its star-writer-director that remains one of his two or three best. [Director's Cut; 18 Sept 1998, p.H1]
User score
Generally Favorable
81% Positive
101 Ratings
101 Ratings
9% Mixed
11 Ratings
11 Ratings
10% Negative
12 Ratings
12 Ratings
Oct 29, 2024
10
Simply a masterpiece. The greatest film noir oat. 99 is a score that doesn't do it justice. Great acting, cinematography, cast, critiques of racism and American society and Mexican society being more similar than we might think and reverse stereotypes that set it apart from any other film noir, great scenes, and the second-best film of the director who crafted the GOAT Citizen Kane, the king of the film Orson Welles.
Jan 31, 2020
10
Interesting title considering the studio recut it in a fight with Welles that ended in them not wanting to submit it for awards and him never working for a studio again. Also interesting is that Welles' character mirrored his life at that time. I saw the 1998 version, reconstructed from Welles' notes. It is fantastic, his 2nd best movie, just have to get past Charlton Heston as a Mexican.
100
Still seems close to the pinnacle of film noir. [Director's Cut]
100
Welles manages to wring engaging performances out of all of his actors, but what's most impressive about the film is the way in which the director makes use of every corner of the screen with deliberate precision.
100
Astonishing cinematography and brilliantly played, this certainly one of the most influential crime movies in history.
90
What it really has to do with is love of the film medium, and if Welles can't resist the candy of shadows and angels and baroque decor, he turns it into stronger fare than most directors' solemn meat and potatoes. It's terrific entertainment.
60
Touch of Evil smacks of brilliance but ultimately flounders in it.
Aug 23, 2019
10
The best, GREATEST thrilling gangster movie ever portrayed! With the best movie character ever portrayed: Orson Welles as Capt. Hank Quinlan! Plus the best movie quote ever spoken: "He was some kind of a man. What does it matter what you say about people?" And the best movie score ever composed!
Nov 25, 2018
10
An essential from Orson Welles. Police thriller with the well-known ingredents that makes works clockwise: crooked policemen, femmes fatale, an overwhemed atmosphere and intrigue.
May 17, 2020
6
Not my favourite Film Noir. Quinlan is so disgusting. And somehow I find this movie was so cheap, many scenes are in the studio with artificial light. There are some very mean scenes, but somehow I just wanted to see the end.
Sep 27, 2024
4
On honeymoon with his new bride, a Mexican narcotics officer is unwittingly drawn into a web of crime and corruption when he witnesses a fatal car bombing. Following the case with interest, he's repulsed by the brusque attitude and morally-questionable methods of the local authorities. This is particularly true of their notorious lead detective, Quinlan, whose dubious past hangs like a rumbling storm cloud over the whole town. Like most late-period noir films, Touch of Evil is a wash of pulp and grit, with the seedy subject matter providing a sense of persistent danger and the black-and-white film stock pumped for all the grain and contrast it can muster. Orson Welles, sitting in the director's chair, may have gone overboard in his quest to probe these depths, although post-production on the film wasn't exactly trouble-free and he was eventually ousted from that post en route to a studio-mandated final cut. The result is a jumbled narrative, stocked with far too many loud characters and pointless subplots, albeit one with a stylish, progressive look and feel. Welles is good on the screen (he also plays the shady, multifaceted gumshoe Quinlan), but the double-billing may have been more than he could manage at this stage of his career.
Production Company:
- Universal International Pictures (UI)
Release Date:Feb 1, 1958
Duration:1 h 35 m
Rating:PG-13
Tagline:The Overwhelming Drama of a Strange Vengeance
Awards
New York Film Critics Circle Awards
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
Society of Camera Operators
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
National Film Preservation Board, USA
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination



























