After the suspicious suicide of a fellow cop, tough homicide detective Dave Bannion takes the law into his own hands when he sets out to smash a vicious crime syndicate.
Ratings
Curator score: 9.0/10
Letterboxd: 4.11/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 95%
TMDB: 7.7/10
Director
Fritz Lang
Production
Columbia Pictures
Cast
Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame, Jocelyn Brando, Alexander Scourby, Lee Marvin, Jeanette Nolan, Peter Whitney, Willis Bouchey, Robert Burton, Adam Williams, Howard Wendell, Chris Alcaide, Michael Granger, Dorothy Green, Carolyn Jones, Ric Roman, Dan Seymour, Edith Evanson, Phil Arnold, Linda Bennett
Curator Review
Verdict
A hard-boiled noir that turns a police revenge story into something colder, crueller, and more morally corrosive than it first appears. Its violence, fatalism, and sharp performances make it a standout for viewers who want classic crime cinema with real bite.
Best for
classic noir fans
viewers who like revenge thrillers
fans of tough, cynical crime stories
people interested in 1950s Hollywood style and atmosphere
audiences who appreciate morally compromised protagonists
Skip if
you want a comforting or upbeat crime film
you prefer subtle, low-violence noirs
you dislike bleak endings and emotional cruelty
you need a fast, modern pacing style
you’re looking for a clean hero-villain morality play
Overview
The Big Heat is one of the great pressure-cooker noirs: lean, brutal, and stripped of sentiment. Fritz Lang takes a familiar revenge setup and makes it feel poisonous, as if every act of justice only deepens the rot around it. Glenn Ford’s Bannion is compelling precisely because he becomes less human as the film goes on, while Gloria Grahame gives the movie its most electric ambiguity.
Worth noting
What lingers is not just the plot, but the film’s sense that corruption spreads through institutions, relationships, and even the body itself. The violence lands with unusual force for the era, and Lang stages it with a severity that still feels shocking. It’s a crime film, but it also plays like a warning about what happens when rage becomes the organizing principle.
Bottom line
If you like noir that is emotionally punishing, visually sharp, and uninterested in easy redemption, this is essential viewing. It’s one of those films that feels both tightly controlled and deeply feral at the same time.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Sean Gilman (5★) · 989 likes
The men don't do much, and what little they do attempt, they either fail at or leave incomplete. It's the women that set the machine in motion, give it speed and ultimately burn it all down.
Yet the squares think they won.
Josh Lewis (5★) · 883 likes
Hands down one of the most ruthlessly cruel and violent feeling noirs I've seen. Lang conceives the world of crime and corruption as a shadowy infection of pain and mutilation; even the faint glimmers of affection and hope here are severely undermined by the visual spaces they occupy and the larger system we know exists outside the frame. Marvin's mutilation of Grahame's face with a coffee pot is still one of the more shocking pieces of violence for the genre imo.
Full discussion on episode 96 of my podcast SLEAZOIDS.
Todd Gaines (4.5★) · 557 likes
While watching Fritz Lang's The Big Heat, I realized a lot of cool aspects about what makes it such a special film-noir. Glenn Ford is insane as a cop out for revenge. Gloria Grahame is in most ways a femme fatale, yet she's not poison to Glenn Ford. Lee Marvin is running around throwing coffee on dames. Marlon Brando's sister, Jocelyn Brando is the type of girl you marry and wish you could live happily ever after with. Chris Alcaide… more While watching Fritz Lang's The Big Heat, I realized a lot of cool aspects about what makes it such a special film-noir. Glenn Ford is insane as a cop out for revenge. Gloria Grahame is in most ways a femme fatale, yet she's not poison to Glenn Ford. Lee Marvin is running around throwing coffee on dames. Marlon Brando's sister, Jocelyn Brando is the type of girl you marry and wish you could live happily ever after with. Chris Alcaide… more
Karsten (4.5★) · 467 likes
goes hard
Will Sloan (5★) · 427 likes
M is probably Lang's best, but this is my favourite. Is there any actual difference between "best" and "favourite"? I don't know. Phones are open.
The scene where Lee Marvin throws the coffee in Gloria Grahame's face is one of the hardest in an Old Hollywood movie. So is the scene where Grahame throws coffee back in Marvin's face. And so especially is the scene where Glenn Ford's wife gets murdered. Just shattering. What did Lang know about wives getting… more