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In the Heat of the Night - Norman Jewison film 

James Drynan
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Starring Sidney Poitier as Virgil Tibbs, a northern homicide expert intimidated into solving a murder in 1966's Sparta, Mississippi.
Academy award for best actor was won by Rod Steiger for his portrayal of Sheriff Gillespie, a stranger in his own town, who comes to bear a grudging respect for Tibbs.
First appearance of Scott Wilson, who did a stunning acting job years later in Capote's "In Cold Blood," and most recently had a major role in HBO's " The Walking Dead. "
Canadian director Norman Jewison, (nominated for Best Director, ) hired talented people who had been unfairly blacklisted in the fifties as communist sympathizers: notably, Lee Grant as the widowed wife, her first motion picture since being ostracized.
"In the Heat of the Night" won five Academy Awards: best picture, best actor, (Mr. Steiger,) best film editing, best sound and best screenplay. Stirling Silliphant received his award for writing the best screenplay based on material from another medium, a 1965 novel by John Ball.
Title song was composed by Quincy Jones, lyrics by Allan & Marilyn Bergman and sung by Ray Charles.
Nice, tidy little murder mystery with great performances, writing and music.

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15 июл 2011

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Комментарии : 113   
@stephenvandecasteele8675
@stephenvandecasteele8675 3 года назад
Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger are a dynamic duo their body language and verbal dialogue makes for one of the most powerful performances in cinematic history
@harlorformula8516
@harlorformula8516 Год назад
Well said!!
@geoseward
@geoseward 3 года назад
Some movies are truly timeless. This is the type of movie that you see on cable four or five years later and watch it again because it's so very good.
@mikegike7273
@mikegike7273 Год назад
Top 5 movies of ALL time. No special effects. No fill (car chases, gun fights, blabbing). Just great acting, writting, directing, and producing. Every scene is no more or no less important than any other scene. Hollywood Magic at it's best.
@haroldbrown6630
@haroldbrown6630 Год назад
Amazing movie. Amazing acting. Amazing directing. Amazing sound track.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
Agreed, Harold! Quincy Jones wrote the song sung by Ray Charles with lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman. A truly evocative score for the movie. It took a Canadian director to address racism in the US at that time. Hats off to Norman Jewison!
@kalmia01
@kalmia01 Год назад
​@@jamesdrynanand to Hal Hashby, who was involved by Jewison, another legend ❤
@jamesstuart3346
@jamesstuart3346 3 года назад
This film is a course in casting, acting and direction. Should be compulsory in every film school.
@Thomas-eu6fj
@Thomas-eu6fj 10 месяцев назад
Absolutely !! A timeless classic !!
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 Год назад
In the top 10 as being the greatest Motion Picture of All Time, right there with The Godfather and On the Waterfront!!!!!
@Troycus
@Troycus 3 года назад
Some downright good old fashion acting right there.
@martinplatt5928
@martinplatt5928 7 лет назад
One of the greatest films ever made....Poitier and Steiger are brilliant.
@jubalcalif9100
@jubalcalif9100 4 года назад
Amen to that !!
@patricksmith3432
@patricksmith3432 4 года назад
2 legends
@brucewayne3602
@brucewayne3602 4 года назад
may I add "beyond brilliant"
@preving
@preving 3 года назад
agreed!
@user-pf7qg9lc6p
@user-pf7qg9lc6p 3 года назад
Good at least but "greatest" i like pretty much exaggerated
@mickymantle3233
@mickymantle3233 Год назад
I never realised a film could convey so much until I watched this timeless piece of art.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
Agreed,Micky! I saw it in 1967 when first released. Since then, I've watched it over fifty times. Best Actor Oscar for Steiger and Best Picture Oscar.
@raymondsteptore5062
@raymondsteptore5062 2 года назад
Brilliant acting unparalleled even by the subsequent series,released 20 years later. R.I.P., actors from the movie who have left us.
@marcusanderson933
@marcusanderson933 3 года назад
One of the greatest and most powerful films ever made! Sidney Poitier and Rod Stieger were brilliant!
@ricko3k
@ricko3k Год назад
Masterpiece. It don't get no better.
@numbersix100
@numbersix100 3 года назад
One of my top 5 movies of the last 60 years
@mikescaffo4850
@mikescaffo4850 2 года назад
I have watched this movie a dozen times and it never gets old these 2 actors did and outstanding job in this film 2 of the all time greats here both of them
@dontcare9689
@dontcare9689 2 года назад
Great movie.
@josephdiluzio6719
@josephdiluzio6719 Год назад
For me Rod Steiger along with Anthony Quinn is perhaps America's most accomplished character actor with a versatility unparalleled; If he's Chief Bill Gillespie in the one you forget that when you see him as the pawnbroker
@darraghgkelly
@darraghgkelly 5 лет назад
I saw this movie in the 1970s. As a 12 yr old. I've loved it since. It made me angry and excited. A sence of right and wrong explored so satisfactorily. Great performances! Love it.
@geokaker9630
@geokaker9630 4 года назад
in other words you were fed propaganda and they were succesful
@neutrino78x
@neutrino78x 2 года назад
@@geokaker9630 no, he clearly stated that right and wrong were explored. Treating white men and black men as anything other than brothers, fellow children of God, is wrong. Respect and love and brotherhood are right. "Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself: I am the Lord." --Leviticus 19:18 "And if a stranger sojourn with thee in your land, ye shall not vex him. 34 But the stranger that dwelleth with you shall be unto you as one born among you, and thou shalt love him as thyself; for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God." --Leviticus 19:33-34
@dennislang7417
@dennislang7417 2 года назад
I take nothing away with Sidney Poitier but when Rod Steiger found out that mr. Tibbs was a cop the look on his face was priceless
@Mftjan2000
@Mftjan2000 2 года назад
Steiger won the Academy Award because his character was very complex and he grew and changed during the film.
@jeannepalmer8518
@jeannepalmer8518 7 лет назад
A great movie. Sidney Poitier, what can I say about this great actor, Rod Steiger is exceptional as well. If you haven't seen this movie, take the time and watch it. You will not be disappointed.
@jubalcalif9100
@jubalcalif9100 4 года назад
I have a notion to second that emotion !!
@The_Husband_of_Jane_Lane
@The_Husband_of_Jane_Lane 4 года назад
I watched it today and it was awesome.
@patrickfennell6372
@patrickfennell6372 2 года назад
This was one of Sidney's top five preformances and hands down the still most timeless movie he wSas ever in, and yet he ws ignored from the Academy Awards for best actor. Rod Steiger deserved the award, but he should have been included in the five nominations. Spencer Tracy was simply nominated because of his health. The Academy has made too many mistakes to count but not nominated Poitier for an Oscar was a crime.
@darrylwiggins1156
@darrylwiggins1156 2 года назад
I love the way Sidney always positions his hands in all his early movies.
@markwoodger2
@markwoodger2 3 года назад
This film is so good.
@theo9952
@theo9952 Год назад
Ι love this movie, I have watched it several times. Starting with the first in 67 when i was 15 years old, at the cinema in Athens, (not Sparta lol) Greece, with Greek subtitles.
@embossed64
@embossed64 2 года назад
This is such a tense movie, they never let you have a break.
@sharonjensen3016
@sharonjensen3016 2 года назад
That's the whole idea. This film makes you think.
@toddcampbell5603
@toddcampbell5603 5 лет назад
This movie is the best of the best. Everyone in this motion picture is brilliant, including the Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad equipment !! Love that old school five-chime horn on the locomotive.
@HonNey-xi4ef
@HonNey-xi4ef Год назад
Definitely one of the best mystery movie. Classic.
@Thomas-eu6fj
@Thomas-eu6fj 5 лет назад
What a great film. They just don't make movies like this anymore.
@jeanvaljeanist
@jeanvaljeanist 5 лет назад
could not and cannot be remade. and thank goodness for that. truly one of a kind.
@larkinoo
@larkinoo 4 года назад
Boy, aint that the truth !!! It is why I don't go to the movies anymore, at all..........:-{
@michaelschulz9164
@michaelschulz9164 10 месяцев назад
Nowadays they specialise in .....dross
@alfredpuglisi1341
@alfredpuglisi1341 3 года назад
mine too. Saw it when it came out. The tension never lets up.
@attentiondeficitsquirrel7660
@attentiondeficitsquirrel7660 4 года назад
THEY CALL ME MISTER TIBBS!
@sharonjensen3016
@sharonjensen3016 2 года назад
I love that line.
@tompaulcampbell
@tompaulcampbell 12 лет назад
Great film but I thought Potier deserved an Oscar as much as Steiger.
@nicholasschroeder3678
@nicholasschroeder3678 2 года назад
Poitier had won in 63, and Stieger was due. His performance in The Pawnbroker is equally magnificent.
@lluisdeulovol1961
@lluisdeulovol1961 2 года назад
Molt bona pel·lícula ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
@Wolfsky9
@Wolfsky9 3 года назад
A MASTERPIECE ---------------an absolute masterpiece, from start, to end. 2 of THE very best, who have ever been on the big screen. they give a course-------a master Course--------on how to do it. --------------all one need do , is watch.-------------------------------WolfSky9, 74 y/o
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 3 года назад
Agreed, Wolfsky9! One of my favorite scenes is in Gillespie's home. According to the director, it was raining too hard for them to film because the roof was tin and the sound tech couldn't get a good reading. So, Poitier and Steiger went to Jewison's trailer and starting ad libbing the conversation their characters would have. When the rain stopped they went in and improvised. Fantastic!
@davelogan3051
@davelogan3051 7 лет назад
not only a great social commentary on race relations. but also good mystery with nice twists to it. both cops were wrong but get it right excellent movie top 25 of all times imo
@deloriserodriguez8942
@deloriserodriguez8942 4 года назад
The man is one of the best ever. Excellent movies. I love A PATCH OF BLUE AND IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT are my most favorite.😎
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 12 лет назад
I agree, Tom. Even though "In the Heat..." won for Best picture and actor, things were racially different back then. Poitier was in three nominated pictures that year, ( Heat, Guess who's coming to dinner and To sir, with love,) he wasn't nominated. He did win the Best actor in 1963 for Lilies of the Field, the first black lead actor to win an Oscar.
@justincase7764
@justincase7764 3 года назад
He should have been nominated for this movie,...he goes toe to toe with Steiger,....(although I agree with Steiger winning)
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 2 года назад
@@justincase7764 Agreed, Justin! In fact,the " Guess...Dinner " role was lightweight and silly compared to Jewison's film. It was a sign of the times,though. Race riots throughout the late sixties and Hollywood decides to honor this ludicrous white reaction to miscegeny.
@rosesmith6208
@rosesmith6208 4 года назад
one of my favorites along with mississippi burning, love the interactions between the two characters in both films. another thing about this movie you would not even think that ralf would of been the murderer he was not even on the suspect list. I love movies that throw in things like that and that you dont know who the murderer is until the end. I like movies like that.
@FBlackRules
@FBlackRules 11 лет назад
Better believe he did, James. Those days in the South were very very tough.
@thomastom888
@thomastom888 4 года назад
Definitely all time brilliant film
@W7DSY
@W7DSY 11 лет назад
They both were excellent. This movie is the best tale on racism I have ever seen. I say that because it was even-handed in showing that racism can cross the color barrier. Not that Gillespie and Tibbs were equals; Gillespie was far more prejudiced than Tibbs, but in an ironic sense, and one that the movies want to show,Gillespie and Tibbs were much the same.
@brionbraziel7968
@brionbraziel7968 4 года назад
The movie is about perspectives from all sides not just race, all indifference. There are too many good actors to have a film as such this to be so one dimensional tie limited only about race. That's racist...
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 12 лет назад
Poitier's co- star in " ...Heat...", Rod Steiger. He gave a wonderfully warped performance in 1965's "The Loved One," as Mr. Joyboy, an embalmer in California.
@fuita227
@fuita227 3 года назад
Great clip selection...movies are entertaining and some like this one, are educational.
@dalsenov
@dalsenov 8 лет назад
Great movie!
@finnmccool684
@finnmccool684 3 года назад
Not bad. It's even better than Sharknado 6.
@ronmackinnon9374
@ronmackinnon9374 Год назад
Re the video's description, it was not 'years later' that Scott Wilson acted in 'In Cold Blood,' it was that same year, 1967. Also, if I'm not mistaken, just wanted to add that Jewison's editor on this film was Hal Ashby, later a great director in his own right.
@jerrykitich3318
@jerrykitich3318 3 года назад
Oh yeah, they understand each other very well.
@thomasstecyk792
@thomasstecyk792 3 года назад
I was born in Sixty-Three. I watched this film when it came out. I also watched the Texas State Clocktower in the news.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 3 года назад
You watched this at the age of three?
@thomasstecyk792
@thomasstecyk792 3 года назад
@@jamesdrynan My uncle sat my but down in front of the TV.
@EuroGuy85
@EuroGuy85 5 лет назад
I wasn’t even a teenager when I saw this movie on italia1, in the early nineties.
@ashutoshpendse4273
@ashutoshpendse4273 2 года назад
I wonder why does the Sheriff character laugh when he hears the name Virgil Tibbs?
@sharonjensen3016
@sharonjensen3016 2 года назад
Probably because of the name "Virgil".
@astrobear5353
@astrobear5353 10 лет назад
this is the original movie of in the heat of the night in 1967 but the tv series came out in 1988.
@68air
@68air 4 года назад
The series was trash. The movie was exceptional.
@The_Husband_of_Jane_Lane
@The_Husband_of_Jane_Lane 4 года назад
Both the film and TV series are based on the novel of the same name.
@TMANN-jo1ps
@TMANN-jo1ps 3 года назад
@@68air I was born in 1988 on July 24th of that year. The series was good too just like the movie.
@greggweber9967
@greggweber9967 2 года назад
I once parked my long haul truck at a small truck stop there. It and a few others were broken into and cargo was taken. Had to replace the lock.
@870Rem12gauge
@870Rem12gauge 12 лет назад
Poitier gave an Oscar performance. Too good in fact. So who won the best actor award in '67?
@semivuetibau2076
@semivuetibau2076 4 года назад
Rod Steiger
@semivuetibau2076
@semivuetibau2076 4 года назад
Rod Steiger
@phaedrabacker2004
@phaedrabacker2004 2 года назад
I like when Virgil slaps the guy in the greenhouse. Heard around the 🌎!
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 2 года назад
At the time, Phaedra, it was a unique scene. If interested, there's an interview of Jewison, the director. The slap was done in two takes,with the first being used in film. www.dga.org/Craft/DGAQ/All-Articles/1101-Spring-2011/Shot-to-Remember-Norman-Jewison.aspx
@phaedrabacker2004
@phaedrabacker2004 2 года назад
@@jamesdrynan thanks
@phaedrabacker2004
@phaedrabacker2004 2 года назад
@@jamesdrynan great article
@Jinka1950
@Jinka1950 Год назад
The actor who played the guy in the diner was also the same actor who played the bar owner in the movie unforgiven.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan Год назад
You're right, Jinka! In fact, Anthony James' first film job was " In the Heat..." and his last was in " Unforgiven. " he appeared in many TV shows over the years as well as movies.
@RocketKirchner
@RocketKirchner 3 года назад
When there is an expert in Homicide around you use the man to get the job done .
@tomcooper9938
@tomcooper9938 4 года назад
Interesting little tidbits that get overlooked. Like when the chief points out to Virgil the factory will bring a lot of jobs for "his people". Virgil reacts with - "They're not my people!". Wonder whose people they were?
@rosesmith6208
@rosesmith6208 4 года назад
just because someone is the same color as yourself doesnt mean they are your people. racial divides will never end unless people stop putting people into tribes/family groups based on color. most of the white people around here I dont even know who they are I dont consider them my people, but I do consider them my neighbors. and as you know a neighbor comes in many wonderful colors. if I could be a color it would be palomino color golden white hair and yellowish brown gloss color. or maybe I would be chestnut (like horse colors)
@ADAMSIXTIES
@ADAMSIXTIES 4 года назад
Filmed in Sparta Illinois (was supposed to be Sparta Mississippi).
@garyduff8739
@garyduff8739 4 года назад
That way they wouldn't need to repaint things like water towers, building signs, etc. There is no Sparta, MS and southern IL is very similar to MS.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 4 года назад
Funny anecdote was Stirling Silliphant's screenplay had named Wells, Miss. as the town. When the production manager asked Norman Jewison, the director, what they were going to do with the water tower, which had SPARTA on it, Jewison said, "Well, let's just change the name of the town to Sparta instead of Wells."
@hismajestysmen
@hismajestysmen 4 года назад
My family is from southern Illinois. The locals refer to it as “Spar-tee”.
@juanmonge8
@juanmonge8 3 года назад
Sydney didn’t want to film in the Deep South.
@dendrzewiecki9170
@dendrzewiecki9170 2 года назад
Mine to.
@alessandrosouzzasouzza7881
@alessandrosouzzasouzza7881 2 года назад
ALESSANDRO DE SOUZA
@mr.vinegaroon3132
@mr.vinegaroon3132 4 года назад
Actor playing the counterman was the saloon owner in "Unforgiven."
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 4 года назад
You are correct.
@TheFacefinder
@TheFacefinder 4 года назад
That's why I have no friends. I've always been the smartest but y in room. It made me the best at what I did (csi) but it made me a master and a periah.
@user-pf7qg9lc6p
@user-pf7qg9lc6p 3 года назад
Good film but not quite my favorites, i liked more that series
@apocyldoomer
@apocyldoomer 2 года назад
Awesome movie, the movies of the last 20 years were just garbage, shoot em up, romantic Comedies, on and on, anyway, one of the best out of many. I could go on and on, not.
@stevestringer7351
@stevestringer7351 2 года назад
it is a really good movie. I believe it was once like what is portrayed in this movie in Mississippi and other places. I do not believe it is like thay anymore. is there still racism from some? Yes, always will be.... but that is not condoned or even swept under the rug any more like it once was.
@jamesdrynan
@jamesdrynan 2 года назад
I agree, Steve. In reality, racism is a fundamental flaw in human beings. Blacks against whites, Hutu against Tutsi, Christians against Jews. Intolerance is the stain of evil on mankind's soul.
@menonjaya3784
@menonjaya3784 3 года назад
How dare he touch a white woman
@zacktong8105
@zacktong8105 2 года назад
I absolutely don't think this film depicts MS white people in a bad light when they come to know and respect what use to be known as capable negroes at the time. I am virtually certain that both MS US Senators at that time Eastland and Stennis after a private showing for Congressional members if there was one at the time would have been deeply moved since MS white folks had NEVER BEFORE been shown in a positive light.
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