The enduring horror of Kiss Me Deadly | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

The endur­ing hor­ror of Kiss Me Deadly

09 May 2025

Words by Fred Barrett

Two people embracing in a dark, watery setting with crashing waves in the background.
Two people embracing in a dark, watery setting with crashing waves in the background.
As Robert Aldrich’s 1955 noir turns 75, the film lives on in the work of Cro­nen­berg, Lynch and many more.

Heavy breath­ing, bare feet run­ning on the asphalt, and a des­per­a­tion so intense that it makes a woman put her­self in front of a vehi­cle bar­relling towards her at 50mph. Robert Aldrich’s 1955 noir Kiss Me Dead­ly begins where many oth­er films would find their emo­tion­al and nar­ra­tive cli­max: psy­chi­atric hos­pi­tal run­away Christi­na (Cloris Leach­man) runs along a road reck­less­ly attempt­ing to flag down pass­ing motorists while try­ing to evade unseen pur­suers. Though she even­tu­al­ly finds refuge in the sports car of pri­vate eye Mike Ham­mer (Ralph Meek­er) this does lit­tle to relieve the ten­sion. As the cred­its roll over their night­time dri­ve, the cam­era look­ing over their shoul­ders from the back­seat, Christina’s ter­ri­fied sobs omi­nous­ly min­gle with the Nat King Cole tune blar­ing over the car radio. When the pair are lat­er ambushed by a group of gang­sters, the flim­sy illu­sion of safe­ty final­ly comes crash­ing down and the rough­neck Ham­mer briefly awakes from uncon­scious­ness only to wit­ness Christi­na being bru­tal­ly tor­tured to death.

Aldrich’s live-wire over­ture doesn’t just set the stage tonal­ly but the­mat­i­cal­ly, philo­soph­i­cal­ly, and polit­i­cal­ly as well. Ham­mer, hav­ing sur­vived the thugs’ attempt on his life, decides to inves­ti­gate Christina’s death, sens­ing there must be some­thing big” con­nect­ed to the crime. His hunch proves to be cor­rect, of course, and he ends up embroiled in the hunt for a mys­te­ri­ous box which is sup­pos­ed­ly con­nect­ed to the Man­hat­tan Project. The case’s con­nec­tion to the infa­mous mil­i­tary research pro­gram isn’t a coin­ci­dence; the world of Kiss Me Dead­ly is one that exists in the shad­ow of nuclear weapons and the film’s ren­der­ing of the Atom­ic Age isn’t one of post-war opti­mism but rather one in which the Trin­i­ty test and the sub­se­quent bomb­ings of Hiroshi­ma and Nagasa­ki formed a polit­i­cal, moral, and cul­tur­al desta­bi­liz­ing event.

In fact, the ten­drils of Lit­tle Boy and Fat Man have twined around every sphere of Amer­i­can life and the puz­zle-box sto­ry­telling screen­writer A.I. Bezzerides makes use of in this loose adap­ta­tion of Mick­ey Spillane’s 1952 crime nov­el of the same name (give or take a com­ma) serves not as a show­case for his skills as a crafter of dense mys­ter­ies, but rather as an exten­sion of the opaque nature of life in the midst of what is some­times referred to as the Gold­en Age of Cap­i­tal­ism. The film bur­rows so deep into its own gloomy, para­noid, hys­ter­i­cal log­ic that it comes out the oth­er side bear­ing a deep­er, more ecsta­t­ic truth: not only is there an under­side to the care­ful­ly man­i­cured façade of 1950s Amer­i­ca but that under­side also bub­bles uncom­fort­ably close to the sur­face. More than that, it con­sti­tutes an inte­gral part of the soci­etal struc­ture it dwells beneath.

It’s a ten­sion that would come to per­me­ate the ensu­ing decades of genre (and genre-adja­cent) film­mak­ing. Tobe Hoop­er let post-Man­son, ser­i­al killer and Viet­nam War-era Amer­i­ca loose on a group of laid-back hip­pie kids in his 1974 hor­ror mile­stone The Texas Chain Saw Mas­sacre; that same year Roman Polan­s­ki craft­ed his own hell­ish vision of Los Ange­les with Chi­na­town. Near­ly a decade lat­er, Video­drome saw David Cro­nen­berg trans­pose nuclear para­noia to the bur­geon­ing infor­ma­tion age by nest­ing con­spir­a­cies with­in even grander, more elab­o­rate con­spir­a­cies. Famous­ly, David Lynch’s nas­ti­est film, 1997’s Lost High­way, took direct visu­al cues from Aldrich’s infer­nal coda for its own beach house-set finale where­in Fred Madison’s (Bill Pull­man) macho guilt becomes the real­i­ty-dis­tort­ing void at the cen­ter of the film.

A woman in a robe holding a handgun while lying on a sofa against a patterned wall.

Kiss Me Dead­lys influ­ence expand­ed beyond North Amer­i­ca too. French New Wave film­mak­ers took to its potent images and gut-punch sen­si­bil­i­ty, its sub­ver­sive art­ful­ness that was garbed in pulp. François Truf­faut was par­tic­u­lar­ly tak­en with the fever­ish ener­gy of Aldrich’s fifth film – he ranked it amongst the works of Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitch­cock, Jean Cocteau, Robert Bres­son, and Orson Welles. He fur­ther com­pared Aldrich’s ease behind the cam­era to Hen­ry Miller fac­ing a blank page”, a sur­pris­ing­ly apt com­par­i­son espe­cial­ly when con­sid­er­ing the force­ful and unre­strained viril­i­ty that under­girds both Kiss Me Dead­ly and Miller’s work in general.

Aldrich’s unsta­ble frames – also an influ­ence on Atsushi Yamatoya’s Inflat­able Sex Doll of the Waste­lands and Sei­jun Suzuki’s corky yakuza films from the 1960s – paint the world as a chaot­ic vor­tex where even the men behind the cur­tain are bare­ly in con­trol. The sud­den intru­sion of the Man­hat­tan Project into the goings-on of Aldrich’s thriller plays like a gonzo plot thread out of a Thomas Pyn­chon nov­el, stripped of its imp­ish sense of humor; the gumshoe who gets in way over his head, mean­while, is a noir sta­ple, per­haps even a pre­req­ui­site for the genre to oper­ate the way it does. Here, how­ev­er, Hammer’s sleuthing seems to brush up against the very edges of the real, against what can be grasped ratio­nal­ly. It’s an esca­la­tion of stakes that adds a mytho­log­i­cal weight to what start­ed out as a sim­ple detec­tive sto­ry – what Ham­mer ulti­mate­ly comes face to face with isn’t sim­ply a sprawl­ing, well-con­nect­ed net­work of orga­nized crime or even the more abstract notion of moral decay but the apoc­a­lyp­tic inevitabil­i­ty of Amer­i­can hege­mo­ny itself.

Curi­ous­ly, Hammer’s instinct about there being more to Christine’s mur­der isn’t mere instinct but rather reveals a desire on his part to give mean­ing to the bizarre events he unwit­ting­ly became caught up in. But even as he hardass­es, punch­es, and kiss­es his way through a gallery of crooks, pat­sies, and lusty women, mean­ing con­tin­ues to elude him. The obses­sive curios­i­ty – a mir­ror image of Hammer’s desire-dri­ven moti­va­tions – of one woman he meets, the unsta­ble Lily (Gaby Rodgers), is what gives Kiss Me Dead­lys eerie finale: ignor­ing warn­ings not to do so, she opens the hot-to-the-touch box and is met by a blind­ing light and the sound of a demon’s death rat­tles before she bursts into flames that end up engulf­ing the entire beach house. The world the char­ac­ters inhab­it, the world after the war, after the bomb, is one where no deep­er mean­ing can be gleaned from its grotes­queries – Pandora’s box has been opened but there is no hope left inside it.

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