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Kiss Me Deadly [DVD]

4.6 out of 5 stars 636 ratings
IMDb7.5/10.0
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June 21, 2011
The Criterion Collection
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Product Description

A brilliant film noir classic based on Mickey Spillane's bestseller, Kiss Me Deadly is masterfully directed by Robert Aldrich (The Dirty Dozen) and hailed as one of his best (Leonard Maltin). This DVD edition of Kiss Me Deadly features the fully restored original endingwhich contains over one minute of crucial footage that clarifies decades of false interpretations. In order to illustrate the vastly different impressions left by each version, the altered/shortened ending has been included as well. When callous thugs beat Mike Hammer (Ralph Meeker) senseless and viciously murder the gorgeous blonde he's been trying to help, the hard-boiled detective retaliates theonly way he can: by hitting first and asking questions later. Cutting a brutal swath through the city's sleazy underside, Hammer uncovers a mysterious black container whose deadly contents not only solve the murder...but trigger an apocalyptic climax as well!

Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 1.66:1
  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ Unrated (Not Rated)
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.75 inches; 3.2 ounces
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Robert Aldrich
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, Letterboxed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 1 hour and 46 minutes
  • Release date ‏ : ‎ June 19, 2001
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Albert Dekker, Juano Hernandez, Paul Stewart, Ralph Meeker, Wesley Addy
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ French, Spanish
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
  • Studio ‏ : ‎ MGM (Video & DVD)
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00005AUK9
  • Writers ‏ : ‎ A.I. Bezzerides, Mickey Spillane
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Best Sellers Rank: #70,269 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 636 ratings

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
636 global ratings

Customers say

Customers consider this film one of the best Mike Hammer movies, praising its plot as a great crime drama with a twist and alternate endings. Moreover, the movie receives positive feedback for its picture quality, with one customer highlighting its new high-definition restoration, and its acting, with one review noting Cloris Leachman's early performance. Additionally, customers find the film entertaining and worth the price. However, the violence level receives mixed reactions from customers.

47 customers mention "Film quality"41 positive6 negative

Customers praise this film as one of the best in the Mike Hammer series and among the best film noirs.

"great movie and the bonus material and excellent print make it even MORE worthwhile" Read more

"Great movie" Read more

"Very good movie." Read more

"Love old movies and bought this one after seeing it on turner classecs" Read more

25 customers mention "Plot"20 positive5 negative

Customers enjoy the plot of the movie, appreciating its crime drama elements with a twist and alternate endings, with one customer highlighting the interesting take on the Mickey Spillane story.

"It's infamously unfaithful to Spillane's novel, but it's a great story in it's own right." Read more

"...and film buffs will enjoy this movie - blue ray crisp and clean, great storyline that echoes the nuclear age and end of the film noir genre...." Read more

"One of the very best film noir's of it's time. Cool characters, excellent plot and pacing and wow what a wonderful surprise twist ending...." Read more

"...only one reservation: the DVD offers nothing but a trailer and an alternate ending which in actuality is the original edited ending...." Read more

23 customers mention "Film noir genre"22 positive1 negative

Customers love this film noir, describing it as one of the most shocking and excellent thrillers in the genre, with one customer noting it as the best 50s noir ever.

"Excellent film noir." Read more

"This film shines as a classic example of film noir...." Read more

"excellent film noir thriller. very complex, i need to watch it 50 times in a row. i think i will! very good quality dvd! very crisp, very clear." Read more

"...classic film noir cycle, and shows the genre at its most violent, surreal, cruel, cynical, and visually bizarre...." Read more

14 customers mention "Picture quality"14 positive0 negative

Customers praise the movie's picture quality, describing it as crisp and crystal clear, with one customer noting it's a high-definition restoration.

"...movie, unique, this one has the original directors ending......super picture quality." Read more

"...BLU-RAY: The picture is excellent. It is presented in a 1.66:1 aspect ratio...." Read more

"...Long to have seen before revitization of the newer L.A. Picture was great.. Meeker - low keyed.... reprint very good.... Criterion did a good job..." Read more

"...Just amazed how great the black and white image can be on this older movie. If you have the MGM DVD, replace it with this superior version!..." Read more

13 customers mention "Acting quality"10 positive3 negative

Customers praise the performances in this film, with one customer specifically highlighting Cloris Leachman's early career effort.

"...era when movies were creatively written, competently directed and well acted. Stylish and intriguing...." Read more

"Good Noir movie by a great director" Read more

"...Cloris Leachman, Wesley Addy and Maxine Cooper and the rest of the wonderful cast...." Read more

"...No blockbuster actors, but everyone played their part well. A rather gritty movie considering it came out in the mid-50's...." Read more

11 customers mention "Entertainment value"9 positive2 negative

Customers find the movie entertaining and captivating, with one customer describing it as a great fast-paced detective movie.

"This movie was a lot of fun to watch" Read more

"Kiss Me Deadly is a top notch Film Noir movie, underrated and captivating, deals with radioactive Cobalt 14...." Read more

"...Stylish and intriguing. No CGI needed as it stimulates the mind without having to overwhelm the senses...." Read more

"...Solid audio commentary and extras docs are really informative and entertaining...." Read more

10 customers mention "Value for money"9 positive1 negative

Customers find the movie well worth buying, with one noting it's worth serious study.

"...My final say on Kiss me deadly if you have not seen it already it's worth a look. After multiple viewings it's a winner!" Read more

"Despite the outre cover art, it's well-worth buying if you're a film noir nut. Important to have for your collection." Read more

"...Seeing Cloris Leechman act in such a desperate role is worth the price of admission...." Read more

"Great Deal! Excellent Product!! Super Fast Delivery!!! Thanks a Bunch!!!!" Read more

11 customers mention "Violence level"6 positive5 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the movie's violence level, with one customer appreciating how it showcases the genre at its most violent, while others find it disturbing.

"...at the end of the American classic film noir cycle, and shows the genre at its most violent, surreal, cruel, cynical, and visually bizarre...." Read more

"...every chance there was, very strange private i movie, almost sci-fi with scary people, mysterious start to stop, never could put together the bits..." Read more

"...No blockbuster actors, but everyone played their part well. A rather gritty movie considering it came out in the mid-50's...." Read more

"...But it shows us a thoroughly dirty LA, a cast of unpleasantly unwholesome females (no delicately beautiful Jean Wallace here, as in "Big Combo".)..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2017
    This review is for the Blu-Ray version of Kiss Me Deadly released by Criterion in 2011.

    This is an excellent release and highly recommended for fans of Mike Hammer, film noir and even science fiction.
    This movie also serves as a kind of a time capsule for old Los Angeles.

    BLU-RAY: The picture is excellent. It is presented in a 1.66:1 aspect ratio. Inside the booklet that comes with this release there is information on the film transfer. It says that on a standard tv that it will appear letterboxed and that there will be bars if on the side if you watched on a wide screen tv as I did. The HD digital transfer was made from a 35mm master positive. Dirt, debris, scratches, etc. were manually removed. The monaural soundtrack was remastered.

    PLOT/SUMMARY: The movie opens with a naked girl running out onto a road that Mike Hammer is driving on one evening. Mike drives off the road and gives the girl a ride. She tells Mike that she was put in a mental institution and to "Remember Me." Shortly they are stopped by some thugs. They kill the girl and beat up Mike and send him and his car over a cliff. Mike survives and wakes up in a hospital. He is now determined to find out why the girl was killed and go after the girl's killers.
    From here the story takes several turns. Mike follows up leads throughout Los Angeles and eventually comes across a glowing case. It is implied that the case is the material for a nuclear bomb. Velda ends up getting kidnapped and Mike goes after Velda.

    EXTRA'S: There are plenty of extra's with this release. This is a strong point of this release. They are as follows:
    1) Double sided cover sleeve with the chapters on the reverse.
    2) 20 page booklet - There are two articles, "The Thriller of Tomorrow" by J. Hoberman and "You Can't Hang Up the Meat Hook" by Robert Aldrich, the director. There is also information on the restoration and credits and photographs.
    3) Audio Commentary by film noir specialists Alain Silver and James Ursini.
    4) Video tribute by director Alex Cox - This was quite entertaining to listen to. Cox has that sarcastic humor that so many of the British have.
    5)The Long Haul of A.I. Bezzerides, a documentary on the screenwriter of Kiss Me Deadly.
    6)Mike Hammer's Mickey Spillane - This is a documentary made in 1998 of Mickey Spillane. Spillane is his usual entertaining self in his interview. He tells lots of stories and elaborates on his feelings about the Mike Hammer films. He did not like Kiss Me Deadly when it came out and he says he left the theater half way though the movie.
    7)Film's Locations - You get to see comparisons of all the locations when filmed and how they look today.
    8) Altered Ending - Self explanatory. The altered ending is not a different ending, it just cuts out the final minute of the movie and places 'The End' over the burning house.
    9) Theatrical Trailer

    All in all, some excellent extra's!

    PRODUCTION: The movie had a budget of around $400,000 and was filmed in locations around Los Angeles in 1955.

    There are two different endings to this movie. There had been rumors that the original has Mike Hammer die in the house at the end as the house burns down....or at least he isn't shown escaping so you can assume that. It is true that this version exists but it is not the original ending. The original ending is the one presented in this release where Mike and Velda escape to the beach. The alternate ending is the one that was shown sometime after the first release that shows the house burning with the words The End superimposed over it. This one has the last minute cut from it showing Mike and Velda running away.

    This movie was not easy to get made. At the time, Mike Hammer had a reputation for being extremely violent and the censors didn't want to approve the movie. One of the ways that they got the movie approved was by Mike Hammer not using his gun. His gun is taken away by Pat early on in the movie.

    There are distinct differences between the book and the movie. The most obvious difference is that in the book the 'bad guys' are the mafia not some guys (terrorists?) trying to get their hands on a nuclear bomb.
    Also, Mike's main occupation is basically catching cheating spouses in the act. He uses Velda to set up the husbands.

    The title's meaning was changed with an ever so slight change. The book has a comma in it's title after Kiss Me. So it reads Kiss Me, Deadly. This movie does not, thus changing the message of the title.

    THOUGHTS/COMMENTS: I agree with most critics who say that Ralph Meeker was the best Mike Hammer. While he didn't have the rough look you might imagine from the books, he is a large guy and has a tough demeanor.

    I loved the fact that this movie was not shot in a studio and that most of the locations are filmed in old Los Angeles. You get to see many locations that don't exist in the same state anymore, most notably, the Bunker Hill scenes.

    This story, like many detective stories gets a bit confusing if you don't really pay attention. I had to go back a few times because I couldn't remember who all the people named were.

    I did not like the casting of Maxine Cooper as Velda. I've read all of the Mike Hammer books and Cooper is just not what I had pictured in my head as Velda. I always imagined a more glamorous looking girl.

    While Mike Hammer's violent nature was toned down for this movie by necessity in order to get it made, he does exhibit some violent behavior in other ways than shooting people. He uses his fists to beat up a mugger before throwing him down a long staircase. He smashes a collector's valuable record and he slams a drawer shut on an old man's hand.

    I liked the implication that the glowing case was Pandora's Box and the very creepy noise it made when opened.

    RECOMMENDATIONS/CONCLUSIONS: I think that this is an excellent release by Criterion. I'm giving it 5 stars based on the excellent picture and excellent extra's.

    Highly recommended for fans of Mike Hammer and also for fans of science fiction films of the 50's. The movie is included in Bill Warren's excellent 'Keep Watching the Skies,' a book on all science fiction films from 1950-1962. It is included for the reason that the Pandora's Box in the movie sort of allows this movie to be called science fiction. If they had stuck to the book's story line then this would not be so.
    41 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2011
    You either get it or you don't. Robert Aldrich's 1955 Noir masterpiece grabs you by the gut and never let;s go until the apocalyptic finale which comes in two versions. But you in the know get the truly explosive finale. Talk about your generation!! Speed and violence stew at the core of this great film. Ths shot selection and lighting immediately invoke the noir world. What a treat to have a brand new pristine print by Criterion. Instability is the ovverriding factor, especially if you are in a quest in the noir underworld. And of course you get special features which help to explain why Kiss Me Deadly is so so good!! New high definition restoration. Audio commentary by noir specialists Alain Silver and James Ursini. New video tribute by director Alex Cox. Mike Hammer's Mickey Spillane, a 1998 doc about th life and work of th author. In this atomic version of Spillane's novel, directed masterfully by Robert Aldrich, the good manners and mores of th 1950's are BLOWN UP REAL GOOD!!! Ralph Meeker is something else altogether in this baby. He should have won an Oscar over Ernest Borgnine. Marty was great but Kiss Me Deadly is super explosive Great!!! Fromtne moment when Hammer picks up Christina, played by Cloris Leachman, in her feature debut, until the explosive ending. Boom Boom Out go the lights!! FYI, American prints from th 60's until restoration in the 2000's, had the alternate ending when Hammer and Velda don;t make it out of Ground Zero. What a Quantum Leap!! All the difference in the world. Criterion also includes a great booklet,also. Time for me to go. Fading fast! Spend the $ and get the Criterion edition. It's well worth it!! SMRZ!!! .
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2004
    Robert Aldrich's 1955 detective thriller, "Kiss Me Deadly," came at the end of the American classic film noir cycle, and shows the genre at its most violent, surreal, cruel, cynical, and visually bizarre. It's the last great explosive moment of the classic era of film noir -- and I do mean explosive. This is one detective film, like "Chinatown," which you won't soon forget.
    Aldrich and screenwriter A. I. Bezzirides took on Mickey Spillane's popular P.I. Mike Hammer, but aside from keeping the basic plot outline of the original novel, they completely changed the nature of the character in a very reactionary move. Spillane's Mike Hammer is a New York detective-avenger, a self-righteous vigilante who deals out justice when the paralyzed forces of the law can do nothing: he's a vicious knight on a mean-spirited quest to right wrongs through brute force. (The title of the first Hammer novel, "I, the Jury" pretty much sums up his attitude.) The movie relocates Hammer to Los Angeles and turns him into a shallow con-artist who only cares about his car and his looks. He's a lousy detective too, relying on knocking people around for information, often innocent inoffensive folks, and never really paying attention to the important details of the case. His detective work is entirely matrimonial, where he and his `assistant' Velda put the squeeze on couples to blackmail them. Hammer's motto is simple: "What's in it for me?" Ralph Meeker is perfect in the role, looking as if someone carved him out of slab of meat.
    No doubt, in this story Hammer is in way over his head...if only he knew it. He picks up a nearly naked girl (Cloris Leachman in an early role) who throws herself in front of his sports car. Later, they're run off the road, and faceless gangsters torture her to dearth and leave Hammer for dead. Hammer sets out to find out what's up; not because he cares what happened to the girl, but because he sniffs out big money and he'd like to get the guys who wrecked his sports car! Hammer finds himself in a violent quest to locate an object that everyone desires: a package called `The Great Whatsit.' The Great Whatsit isn't a meaningless red herring or Hitchcock McGuffin, however. Its contents are the great surprise of the plot, and the perfect exclamation point on a movie taking place in a chaotic world that seems to be falling apart. I won't tell what the Great Whatsit is (and shame on the reviewers here who have!), but...oh wow!
    And this brings us to the issue of the ending, and the only extra on this disc. (Don't worry, I'm not going to spoil the ending.) For years, "Kiss Me Deadly" had a mysteriously abrupt finale that many people praised for its surreal, weird quality. This was how I first saw it. However, in 1997 the original ending was discovered in Aldrich's personal print of the film by editor Glenn Erickson and film noir scholar Alain Silver. Apparently, an accident involving a careless projectionist snipped off part of the ending, so what we had enjoyed and critiqued for years was actually a mistake! The new ending shown on this disc fortunately doesn't change the tone of the film: it's still pretty astonishing, filled with a brilliant use of light and sound effects. However, there's still something about that abrupt ending that gets to people. The DVD contains the option to watch this original abrupt ending so you can make up your mind which one `feels' more right to you: what the director intended, or the mistake that many embraced as a stroke of brilliance.
    No matter which ending you like, "Kiss Me Deadly" is a fabulous piece of brutal crime cinema. The photography is amazing, filled with weird and surreal images and crazy camera angles. The performances are all dead-on: Meeker's ugly Mike Hammer; Albert Dekker as the sinister and poetry spouting Dr. Soberin; Wesley Addy as Hammer's police acquaintance Pat, the sole voice of reason in the mess; Paul Stewart as a smarmy L.A. gangster; the late Jack Elam as freaky thug; and Gaby Rodgers in the film's strangest performance as the distant, weird, but ultimately very dangerous (to every living thing on the planet!) Lily Carver.
    If you love detective films and film noir, "Kiss Me Deadly" is a great must-see classic. For a 1950s film, it is surprisingly violent and far ahead of its time. And either end will leave you shivering in shock. If only they had the guts to end films this way today!
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Lou Knee
    5.0 out of 5 stars Low budget noir that aims high
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 26, 2009
    Spirited Mike Hammer noir thriller that takes you on a very twisty ride. The story is more convolute, more unfollowable than most Philip Marlowe thrillers, and that is saying something. Hammer is ofcourse a different man to Marlowe, more hands on and very streetwise, a blue collar type, ambitious and materialistic and less bothered by his scruples, operating at the lower end of the market. That's not to say he isn't a clever man and good at his work.

    L.A. and California are the natural, original and most authentic Film Noir settings, and they are exploited beautifully once again here in KMD. The mix of wealth, crime, desirable women and dangerous men living out swanky lives with one or two secrets to hide is all there, giving alot of work for P.I.s. Hammer takes on a case that is out of the ordinary for him, when he bumps into a troubled woman...make of the rest what you will, but don't expect convention all the way.

    Ralph Meeker isn't exactly one of the best known movie actors, and I struggled to think of another film I'd seen him in, but might look out for one or two now to watch. He was fantastic as the no-nonsense shamus with a job to do, a man who faces his adversaries head on and doesn't shy away from the rough stuff. (That's not to say that Marlowe didn't, but he was far less direct and more subtle about it.) Meeker gives his P.I. a fairly macho look and is obviously attractive to the ladies, but Mike Hammer is not a man to get too involved with his females, there is a cool mistrust of them and he handles them all with gloves.

    Cool, edgy, slightly trashy feeling Noir, owing mainly to its tight budget, lack of big names and short filming schedule, yet it just feels right as a Noir. And despite little patches of incredibility in the narrative, and the general lack of gloss in production, this film entertains all the way. Aldrich does not hold back either in his direction, he gives the movie an adult feel, which really adds to the Noirness, this is a dark Noir. With the resourses it has, and the tortuous narrative it deploys, it does a fantastic job, and adds something new to the genre. Not a Big Sleep or Touch of Evil maybe, but still not a Noir to be sniffed at.
    4.5
  • Kent
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Hollywood Classic
    Reviewed in Canada on June 5, 2013
    Being a big fan of both film noir and the Criterion label, I thoroughly enjoyed this DVD and highly recommend it. The restoration that Criterion has done on both the film and the audio track is superb. Special-feature bonuses are a big part of what the Criterion label is known for and this DVD offers many interesting extras to explore.
    Now on to the film itself, this is a great Mickey Spillane detective yarn. A tough Private Detective (perfectly played by Ralph Meeker) takes a journey through the Los Angeles criminal underworld that is pure fun to watch. The casting is fantastic and Cloris Leachman stands out in her big-screen debut. Cinema does not get any better than this.
  • cinwdr
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great movie fully restored at last.
    Reviewed in Australia on February 4, 2021
    Robert Aldrich's KISS ME DEADLY is a classic that has never appeared in a properly restored and presented version until now.
    The film is ground-breaking and sensational, as many of Aldrich's films are.
    It takes Mickey Spillane's hero and some of his book and turns them into something truly mythological and even poetic.
    Of course, this will not be to everyone's taste. Some younger children and even some adults may find the movie frightening and/or incomprehensible -- and no one should be forced to watch a movie they don't like. People have different tastes and I do not mean to suggest that there is anything wrong with that.
  • TCR
    5.0 out of 5 stars Superb film noir with SF elements
    Reviewed in Japan on September 20, 2018
    A Noir/SF/Violence picture. Still highly effective 60 yrs later. Worthy of any collector of film noir or 50s SF
  • Matt.H
    5.0 out of 5 stars Mysterious movie. Beauty transfer.
    Reviewed in Canada on September 20, 2021
    This movie has grown on me the more I watch it. I am happy there was a recent price drop on the blu ray and I may not have purchased it. Very happy with the transfer, the price and the quality of supplemental materials.