Directed By: Fritz Lang
Written By: Sydney Boehm, from novel by William P. McGivern
Main Cast: Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame, Lee Marvin, Jeanette Nolan, Alexander Scourby
BEWARE: HOT COFFEE!
Damn, am I turning into a real noir hound. The other day it was "Detour" and now tonight I become entangled all in an intricately weaved web of police corruption, suicide and murder, all without leaving the comfort of my bed.
To explain the story of "The Big Heat", I guess you have to start with crime boss Mike Lagana (Scourby). Lagana runs the city and keeps a number of police on his payroll. One of those police is Tom Duncan, who, as the film opens, is promptly committing suicide, leaving behind a note. His wife, upon finding his body, collects the note and makes a swift call to Lagana and later to the police. Enter Sgt. Dave Bannion (Ford) - a good cop and a family man, who, at the end of a hard day, has a pretty, blond wife and a little girl at home waiting for him. Bannion is called in to investigate the suicide of Tom Duncan. At first, it seems like an open and shut case of suicide, but as Bannion begins to pry, he reveals that it may not be so simple. Bannion begins to uncover tidbits about Duncan's past, finding out that he was on Lagana's payroll and also finding out that he was cheating on his wife. I'll stop there and suffice it to say that it all steamrolls toward frantic outcomes for all the characters concerned and a mystery that will take some definite footwork to crack.
POSSIBLE SPOILER ALERT!
I think what attracts me to these noir stories, especially the ones about cops and criminals, is that nothing this exciting ever happens in real life. To me, these stories are as good as fantasy or sci-fi stories to others. It's almost like a bit of make-believe and when I really want to suspend my disbelief and get lost in a movie, I find that a good film-noir is as good a destination as any. "The Big Heat" is NO exception, as it provides shock after shock and my jaw was literally dropping at certain points in the film. I should have known that there was no place for a family man in a noir and when Mrs. Katie Bannion (Jocelyn Brando) went to start her car and I heard that explosion I was stunned. Since I'm new to noir, a part of me was thinking that a flick from the 50s wouldn't go that far and even when I heard the *BANG*, I just assumed they'd write it off as a "pretty serious injury, but she'll pull through" case. But, no - she was pronounced dead and suddenly I was backing Bannion all the way, wanting the criminal scum to pay for what they did. One of the leaders of the "criminal scum" being Lee Marvin, a fantastic actor with a menacing voice that makes him any film makers dream for a villain.

RATING: 9/10 Not that I'd want them to, but I wonder why modern Hollywood doesn't try to remake some of these old noir films. Have we grown out of the "dirty cops, criminals ruling the city, lone man seeks revenge" phase?
MOVIES WATCHED: 292
MOVIES LEFT TO WATCH: 709
July 14, 2011 1:21am
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