The Naked Kiss

The Naked Kiss
The Naked Kiss

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Samuel Fuller
Produced by Samuel Fuller
Written by Samuel Fuller
Starring Constance Towers
Anthony Eisley
Michael Dante
Virginia Grey
Music by Paul Dunlap
Cinematography Stanley Cortez
Editing by Jerome Thoms
Distributed by Allied Artists Pictures Corporation
Release date(s) October 29, 1964 (1964-10-29) (United States)
Running time 90 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Naked Kiss is a 1964 neo-noir film written and directed by Samuel Fuller, starring Constance Towers as Kelly, Anthony Eisley as Captain Griff and Michael Dante as J.L. Grant.[1]

Contents

Plot

Kelly (Towers) is a prostitute who shows up in the small town of Grantville, just one more burg in a long string of quick stops on the run after being chased out of the big city by her former pimp. She engages in a quick tryst with local sheriff Griff (Eisley), who then tells her to stay out of his town and refers her to a cat-house just across the state line.

Instead, she decides to give up her illicit lifestyle, becoming a nurse at a hospital for handicapped children. Griff doesn't trust reformed prostitutes, however and continues trying to run her out of town.

Kelly falls in love with J.L. Grant (Dante), the wealthy scion of the town's founding family, an urbane sophisticate, and Griff's best friend. After a dream-like courtship where even Kelly's admission of her past can't deter Grant, the two decide to marry - and after Kelly finally convinces Griff that she truly loves Grant and has given up prostitution for good, he agrees to be their best man.

Shortly before the wedding, Kelly arrives at Grant's mansion only to find him on the verge of molesting a small girl. As he grinningly tries to persuade her to marry him, arguing that she too is a deviant, the only one who can understand him, and that he loves her, Kelly strikes him with a phone receiver, killing him instantly. Jailed, and under heavy interrogation from Griff, she must convince him and the town that she is telling the truth about Grant's death.

As Kelly tries to exonerate herself, one disappointment follows another, and enemies old and new parade through the jailhouse to defame her. In despair, she is at last able to find Grant's victim and prove her innocence.[2]

Cast

Reception

Critical response

The staff at Variety magazine gave the film and acting a positive review, writing, "Good Samuel Fuller programmer about a prostie trying the straight route, The Naked Kiss is primarily a vehicle for Constance Towers. Hooker angles and sex perversion plot windup are handled with care, alternating with handicapped children 'good works' theme...Towers' overall effect is good, director Fuller overcoming his routine script in displaying blonde looker's acting range."[3]

Critic Jerry Renshaw liked the film and wrote, "The Naked Kiss finds Sam Fuller's tabloid sensibilities boiling to the surface, as it dwells on the uncomfortable and taboo subjects of deviancy, prostitution, and small-town sanctimony. In typical Fuller style, it's a hard look at a nightmarish world, lurid and absorbing enough to demand that the viewer watch. It's part melodrama, part sensationalism, and part surreal, but above all it's absolutely, positively 100% Sam Fuller, with all the nuance and subtlety of a swift kick in the butt."[4]

Eugene Archer, writing in The New York Times, wrote that The Naked Kiss "has style to burn" and shows that Fuller is "one of the liveliest, most visual-minded and cinematically knowledgeable filmmakers now working in the low-budget Hollywood grist mill", but denounced the plot as "patently absurd" and "sensational nonsense", judging the whole as a "wild little movie".[2]

References

  1. ^ The Naked Kiss at the Internet Movie Database.
  2. ^ a b Eugene Archer (10-29-1964). "The Naked Kiss Movie Details Review". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/34395/The-Naked-Kiss/overview. Retrieved 2008-07-21. 
  3. ^ Variety. Film review, October 29, 1964. Last accessed: January 11, 2008.
  4. ^ Renshaw, Jerry. The Austin Chronicle, film review, July 27, 1998. Last accessed: January 11, 2008.

External links


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