1953’s The Big Heat was directed by Fritz Lang and scripted to near perfection by former crime reporter Sidney Boehm. Based on a novel by William P. McGivern, The Big Heat contains disturbing violence remarkable for its time but the reason we still talk about it 71 years later has little to do with shock value. Directed by uber-influential expressionist Fritz Lang, it works largely because of a screenplay and actors who never fear to raise the emotional stakes. It’s a career highlight for leading man Glenn Ford. Still, it’s the amazing Gloria Grahame who is the beating heart of one of the most respected of all film noirs. Grahame’s Debby Marsh is a gun moll who transcends stereotypes and wins our hearts, even as she learns the hardest lesson about consorting with sociopaths.
Every character is recognizable and has multiple layers. Then newcomer Lee Marvin as brutal mob second-in-command Vince Stone may be a sadistic bully, but Marvin was a real-life tough guy and war hero as well as a trained stage actor, and his eagerness to please the gang boss plays as if he’s seeking fatherly approval…as well as preserving his life. When Vince gets some of his own medicine, we don’t entirely enjoy seeing him in the same kind of pain he enjoyed inflicting; we aren’t sadists. The town’s capo, Mike Lagana, played by sturdy character actor Alexander Scourby, has as much concern for his teenage daughter as Glenn Ford’s Officer Bannion has for his preschooler. Even an obese informant too scared for his family to spill the beans (Dan Seymour) and a plucky elderly lady with less to lose (Edith Evanson) are living, breathing characters. (Old Hollywood was often unfair and neither actor made it into the credits!)
But it’s Grahame who is the beating heart of The Big Heat, and Debby/Grahame makes the most fetching martini in movie history.
The Big Heat
2 ounces dry gin
1/4-1/2-ounce dry vermouth
1-??? dashes of Tabasco or other hot sauce of your choice
1-ounce Filthy Pepper (or brand of your choice) olive brine
1-3 Filthy Pepper olives (garnish)
Put the three liquid ingredients in a cocktail shaker or mixing glass. Add ice and stir. Make sure you use much more ice and stir longer than Gloria did. (That water she and Lee Marvin were drinking must have been near room temperature.) Probably best to save the sexy dance for later. Strain into a well-chilled glass. Drink with more caution than usual.
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I’ve written this recipe so you can make it as hot or as mild as you want. Heat tolerance is a very personal thing. Some people want only the scariest free-fall thrill rides or look forward to the most extreme torture-porn horror films, while others can’t take any movie where fictional pets are harmed…and they are sometimes the same people.
As for me, I enjoy spicy food with some heat but I don’t venture into “Hot Ones” territory and have occasionally met my match with both Indian and Mexican food. The first Big Heat I made was with nice-and-cheap Gordon’s Gin London dry (the brand Gloria Grahame’s character is supposed to be swigging – a fancy import in those days) and it was fine. There are more botanical flavors in Beefeater – a good brand that can be found at remarkably good prices at 1.75 liters (sometimes called a handle). I love the non-hot elements of the flavor of Tabasco so I think I might have slightly preferred how the drink worked with Gordon’s, which didn’t overcomplicate the drink. Even so, The Big Heat will probably work with most dry gins though maybe not ones with too many strong and/or unusual flavor notes like citrus or tea leaves.
I’ll end by noting that I really do hope people who read this and haven’t already seen The Big Heat check it out. It’s a forerunner of modern revenge films but with much more resonance than most. The characters, criminals, lawful, and what some of us would call “chaotic good” linger in my memory much as the memory of my Big Heat cocktail remains.