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Recommended The Big Heat

Fritz Lang, 1953

Star Review

From the opening suicide of a police sergeant, The Big Heat stays true to Fritz Lang's bleak worldview while dexterously handling the conventions of pulp detective fiction. Laconic cop Bannion (Glenn Ford) smells a rat after the sergeant's floozy is also found dead, but his corrupt superiors want him off the case. Bannion isn't one for ignoring his instincts, so he snoops a little further and targets local crime boss Lagana as the chief suspect. The result is tragedy for Bannion's family.
From this point on, The Big Heat is relentless in its portrayal of naked vengeance. Bannion becomes a proto-Dirty Harry, the archetypal maverick cop: bucking authority, brutalising witnesses, revealing nothing but disconcerting everyone with a steely glare that barely suppresses the raging pain inside him. Ford gives a masterclass performance in deadpan machismo; his Bannion is twice as hard-bitten as any of the criminals he encounters, and prefers to opt for violence over words whenever it comes to getting to the truth (he even roughs up the police sergeant's shady middle-aged widow).
Indeed, The Big Heat is a film steeped in brutality - barely a scene goes by without a violent outburst of one kind or another: dropping in on Lagana, Bannion wipes the floor with a henchman twice his size; heavy Vince Stone (Lee Marvin) stubs a cigarette out on a prostitute's hand and later throws hot coffee in his girlfriend's face. Lang offers little let-up from this barbarism: the setting may be different, but as with his earlier masterpiece, M (1931), the dark world of The Big Heat thrives on menace and intimidation, on revenge and retribution.

Julian Upton on 26th January 2006

View all 80 of Julian Upton’s reviews

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Film Details

Director

Fritz Lang

Year

1953

Country

USA

Cast

Lee Marvin, Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame

Technical Details

Certificate

15

Length

89 mins

Label

SPHE

Format

DVD B&W

Region

2

Aspect

1.33:1

Cat No

CDR10186

Main Language

English

Subtitles

English

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