Review: In the Heat of the Night
Set
in redneck central Mississippi, a wealthy industrialist from out of town is
found dead by lunkhead Deputy Sam (Warren Oates). Chief Gillespie (Rod Steiger)
tells Sam to be on the lookout for likely suspects. So he arrests the first
black guy he sees, a well-dressed African-American waiting for a train at the
station. Once he brings the man to the station and Gillespie starts to
interview him, a call comes in informing Gillespie that the man is one Virgil
Tibbs (Sidney Poitier, robbed of an Oscar nomination- just sayin’!), a top
homicide detective from Philly. Whoops. Gillespie wants Virgil out of town as
soon as possible, but the dead man’s hysterical wife (Lee Grant- who else?)
sees that Virgil’s the only one around with any brains or common sense and demands
he be a part of the investigation, or else the factory (that her husband was
planning to build) won’t be built. Scott Wilson plays a jailbird and likely
suspect, Matt Clark plays a friend of Wilson’s, Larry Gates plays Mr. Endicott
a plantation owner and chief enemy of the deceased, Anthony James plays a
prejudiced diner cook, William Schallert plays the pressured local mayor, and
Beah Richards has a cameo as the peculiar Mama Caleba, an abortionist.
If
it weren’t for a horribly inappropriate music score and director Norman Jewison
(underrated films like “The Cincinnati Kid” and the absurdist “…And
Justice for All”) telegraphing the guilty person even earlier than he
perhaps thinks he does, this 1967
racial tensions-infused crime investigation story would be an absolute classic.
As is, it’s still highly enjoyable and socially very important, bolstered by
excellent cinematography and brilliant performances right across the board.
Rod
Steiger doesn’t do subtlety, but as the big-bellied, good ‘ol boy sheriff who
is slightly more intelligent than his deputies, he’s perfect. It’s one of his
best-ever performances, and proof that in the right role, he could be an asset
(I’d also advise you to seek out his work in the excellent “No Way to Treat
a Lady”). Sidney Poitier, meanwhile, never gives anything less than a top
performance no matter the quality of the film. Not only is he one of the
greatest actors of all-time, he’s also the most consistently good ones.
The
standout in the supporting cast is probably Lee Grant, who delivers the exact
performance you expect from her, and the exact performance that was required of
her. She was quite fashionable in the 60s and 70s in rather melodramatic roles
(the best of which was probably her Oscar-nominated turn in the underrated “Voyage
of the Damned”), and this is one of her best. I like how your initial view
of her turns out to not be the whole story with her character at all. In
smaller turns, Warren Oates, Scott Wilson, Beah Richards, and Larry Gates are
all excellent. Oates makes for a masterful dumbarse redneck, and Richards’
cameo is curious but memorable. 1967 really was Scott Wilson’s year with a
memorable supporting role here and the co-lead in Richard Brooks’ “In Cold
Blood”. Why he wasn’t able to capitalise on such early success is beyond
me. He’s a helluva underrated talent, as viewers of “The Walking Dead”
will no doubt attest to. Larry Gates scores in the film’s best scene as Mr.
Endicott, but Poitier and Steiger are excellent in the scene as well. The shots
of cotton being mowed over in the preceding scene are a precursor of what to
expect, too. ***** SPOILER WARNING ***** If there’s one actor in the
cast who rubs one the wrong way, it’s Anthony James who calls way too much
attention to himself as the killer. Jewison doesn’t help rein him in, making
the mystery obvious from the opening scene, which is a tad unfortunate. *****
END SPOILER *****
The
biggest irritant with the film is the music score by Quincy Jones (“In Cold
Blood”, “Mirage”) that just doesn’t fit in. The awesome title song
by Ray Charles sets us off on the right foot, but along comes Quincy with his
semi-blaxploitation chase music (The film being made in the period just prior
to blaxploitation). African drums have no place in this film whatsoever, and
the dramatic transitional moments are out of a bad TV cop show. The more
laidback elements to the score, derived from Charles’ song, are great, but when
the drums and horns start up…let’s just say Mr. Jones ain’t no Isaac Hayes, and
this ain’t meant to be “Shaft”. The cinematography and location shooting
by Haskell Wexler (“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”, “Coming Home”),
however, deserve much praise, even though it ain’t shot in the South for the
most part (It was largely shot in Illinois. Apparently Poitier and Harry
Belafonte had some trouble in Mississippi with the Klan, so Poitier wanted it
filmed up North, understandably if you ask me). There’s a really nice use of
shadows, and the lighting for exterior night shots is outstanding.
A
few flaws keep this very good and important film from being a true masterpiece,
but if you’re a fan of these actors, you definitely need to see this film. The
Oscar-winning screenplay is by Stirling Silliphant (“The Poseidon Adventure”,
“The Towering Inferno”, “The Swarm”, “When Time Ran Out…”),
from a John Ball novel. The film also received Oscars for Best Picture, Best
Actor (Steiger), Best Sound, and Best Editing.
Rating:
B+
Comments
Post a Comment