Kiss Me Deadly - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Kiss Me Deadly"
Kiss Me Deadly (1955)
Timing: 1:46 (106 min)
Kiss Me Deadly - TMDB rating
7.19/10
356
Kiss Me Deadly - Kinopoisk rating
6.862/10
2182
Kiss Me Deadly - IMDB rating
7.5/10
24000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Executive Producer

Photo Victor Saville #120894

Victor Saville

Victor Saville
Executive Producer

Editor

Michael Luciano
Editor

Art Direction

William Glasgow
Art Direction

Set Decoration

Howard Bristol
Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

Robert J. Schiffer
Makeup Artist

Director of Photography

Ernest Laszlo
Director of Photography

Script Supervisor

Helen Gailey
Script Supervisor

Screenplay

Novel

Sound Designer

Jack Solomon

Jack Solomon
Sound Designer

Music

Frank De Vol
Music

What's left behind the scenes

  • The screenplay was based on Mickey Spillane's novel about detective Mike Hammer (1952). Because the novel dealt with drugs, it was officially deemed unsuitable for filming. To overcome this difficulty, screenwriter A.I. Bezzerides completely transformed the plot, filling it with noir clichés and fears of the atomic age. He came up with the hot "nuclear briefcase" and the apocalyptic finale, and also moved the action from New York to California.
  • The girl on the highway and the hero's secretary were played by debutantes.
  • Filming took place in Los Angeles, and many of the neighborhoods and establishments that appeared in the film were already slated for demolition. Thus, the film can serve as a guide to the Californian metropolis at the intersection of different eras.
  • Before the film's release, Aldrich published an article in the New York Herald Tribune in which he attempted to reassure fans of Mike Hammer, who were alarmed by the careless attitude towards the literary source. The film's road to wide release was a thorny one. Guardians of public morality sent the director a petition demanding more than 30 changes to the film.
  • In 1999, the film was added to the National Film Registry.
  • The screenplay was based on Mickey Spillane's novel about detective Mike Hammer (1952). However, due to the novel's subject matter involving drugs, it was officially deemed unsuitable for adaptation. To circumvent this difficulty, screenwriter A.I. Bezzerides completely transformed the plot, saturating it with noir tropes and fears of the atomic age. He came up with the hot “nuclear briefcase” and the apocalyptic finale, and also moved the action from New York to California.
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