Movie · 1967 · Crime, Drama, History · 2h 14m · R · English
Curator score: 9.2/10 (31.9K ratings)
The crime that shocked a nation.
Overview
After a botched robbery results in the brutal murder of a rural family, two drifters elude police, in the end coming to terms with their own mortality and the repercussions of their vile atrocity.
Ratings
Curator score: 9.2/10
IMDb: 7.9/10
Rotten Tomatoes: 75%
Metacritic: 89
TMDB: 7.5/10
Director
Richard Brooks
Production
Pax Enterprises, Columbia Pictures
Cast
Robert Blake, Scott Wilson, John Forsythe, Paul Stewart, Gerald S. O'Loughlin, Jeff Corey, John Gallaudet, James Flavin, Charles McGraw, Will Geer, John McLiam, Ruth Storey, Brenda Currin, Vaughn Taylor, Duke Hobbie, Guy Way, Sheldon Allman, Sammy Thurman, Raymond Hatton, Sadie Truitt
Curator Review
Verdict
A landmark true-crime drama that turns a notorious murder case into a cold, methodical study of violence, class resentment, and moral emptiness. Its formal control, stark black-and-white imagery, and unsettling empathy for the killers make it one of the defining crime films of the 1960s.
Best for
true-crime viewers who want serious, adult filmmaking
fans of bleak procedural crime dramas
viewers interested in American social realism and moral ambiguity
people drawn to influential classic cinema with strong cinematography
Skip if
you want a fast-paced thriller
you prefer crime stories with clear heroes and catharsis
graphic violence or bleak subject matter is a dealbreaker
you dislike older films with deliberate pacing
Overview
In Cold Blood is one of the great American crime films because it refuses easy comfort. Richard Brooks stages the Clutter family murder with chilling restraint, then follows the killers not to excuse them, but to expose the dead-end logic of their lives. The result is both a procedural and a tragedy, with the film’s emotional force coming from how ordinary everything looks until it suddenly isn’t.
Worth noting
The black-and-white cinematography gives the film a documentary chill, while the editing keeps the story moving with grim inevitability. Robert Blake and Scott Wilson are especially effective as men who seem both dangerous and pathetic, and the film’s refusal to simplify them is what makes it so disturbing. It’s a study of violence that feels modern in its skepticism about motive and meaning.
Bottom line
What lingers most is the film’s bleak sense that the damage spreads far beyond the crime itself. Families, institutions, and even the audience are left with no clean resolution, only the afterimage of a society that produces and then punishes its own wreckage. It’s not an easy watch, but it is a major one.
Top Letterboxd reviews
sydney (5★) · 756 likes
Some of the best editing and story-telling methods I've ever seen, certainly some of the best performances, one of the most frightening stories about American society, maybe the best example of how to make a disgusting and unlikable criminal into a pitiable human being. We all feel awful for the victims, but it was Perry that broke my heart - just another kid who got cheated by life, raised in circumstances he couldn't control, who nobody cared about. It's him… more Some of the best editing and story-telling methods I've ever seen, certainly some of the best performances, one of the most frightening stories about American society, maybe the best example of how to make a disgusting and unlikable criminal into a pitiable human being. We all feel awful for the victims, but it was Perry that broke my heart - just another kid who got cheated by life, raised in circumstances he couldn't control, who nobody cared about. It's him… more
Matt! (4★) · 568 likes
I wonder what Truman Capote would think of how much of a fetish the “true crime” genre has become today.
The film adaptation of Capote’s monumental non-fiction novel of the same name, In Cold Blood is a piecemeal portrayal of the events preceding, during, and following the attempted robbery and unplanned murder of the Clutter family by Perry Smith and Dick Hickock in 1959 rural Kansas. As powerful today as it was then, the story is meant to be a… more
Josh Lewis (5★) · 527 likes
"How can anyone know what's inside another person?"
Brutal death-drive cinema. Loses a bit of the immense, cumulative detail of Capote's text but does a good job matching the structure; the ugly, random momentum you have reading it, and makes up for the lost information in its pure formal rhythm. The constant cross-cutting between grit-textured docudrama realism and bursts of intensely subjective memory is basically perfect and nails the procedural elements of how terrifyingly casual and unmotivated the carnage deployed… more
Sean Fennessey (5★) · 325 likes
Would make a great double with Killers of the Flower Moon.
Ethan ☔️ · 273 likes
So this, The Graduate, and Bonnie and Clyde were released in the same year? I guess this was when editing was invented.