The Naked Kiss cover art

The Naked Kiss Reviews

1964 Certificate 18
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 251 members

A prostitute on the run from her pimp winds up in a small town where she becomes friends with the local police chief Griff. She takes a job in the hospital helping handicapped children and falls for Griff's friend Grant, who appears too good to be true... until she witnesses something she shouldn't have. Read more

Starring Constance Towers, Anthony Eisley, Michael Dante, Virginia Grey
Director Samuel Fuller
Genres Thriller

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  • Critics' reviews (3) of The Naked Kiss

    View all
  • 4 stars out of 5

    A typically bleak and brutal tale from maverick American independent Sam Fuller, who this time turns his cynical eye to the corrupt values lurking beneath small-town life. Constance Towers gives a dignified performance, especially considering the circumstances, as a former prostitute who attempts to build a new life in a new town, but finds her past coming back to haunt her when she tries to establish a relationship with the local leading citizen. The storyline is pure melodrama, but the harsh black-and-white photography and the startling images mark this out as a cult classic.

    • Radio Times
  • Not altogether the best of Fuller, despite an electrifying opening sequence in which a statuesque blonde (Towers)... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • 1 stars out of 4

    Tough early work by a director who never compromised but seldom hit the public fancy.

    • Halliwell's Film Guide
  • Most helpful members' reviews (3) of The Naked Kiss

    View all
  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    The original cuckoo's nest?

    This black'n white thriller was a real surprise for me - suggested by a friend with a 'unique' taste in films!

    It is a film set in an insane asylum, but not a scary horror type, more of a whodunnit mixed with the gradual mental disintegration of a reporter working undercover to expose a murderer.

    The acting is perfect for the era, the voiceovers geniunely powerful, and the flow of the film allows the viewer time to figure out whether the reporter is acting or really losing the plot.

    This may not be the obvious choice for a friday night movie, but it is well wort a look. Go on!

      • DrMikey from Middlewich
  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Great Sam Fuller flic

    The Naked Kiss opens with a shocking pre-credit sequence, shot partly with cameras harnessed to the actors, in which we see a furious woman beating a man with her handbag. He grabs at her and her wig comes off, revealing that she is totally bald - a prostitute who has been shaved in punishment by the pimp she is now assaulting. Kelly (Constance Towers), the hooker eventually makes her way to Grantville, a small town in New England and after a brief liaison with a law enforcement officer, abandons her bad ways and becomes a nurse in a children's hospital. In due course she becomes engaged to Grant (Michael Dante) a rich and handsome Korean War veteran. Grant, however, has a dark secret of his own... Sam Fuller started his career in newspapers, wrote some pulp novels and screenplays, and then wandered the United States as a tramp on freight trains during the Depression before serving with distinction in the US Army. Starting with I Shot Jesse James (1949) he directed a series of sometimes-controversial films that established him as a cult auteur, especially in Europe. His critical stock remains high today, for instance amongst such modern filmmakers as Quentin Tarantino and Tim Robbins. Perhaps Fuller's quote that 'Film is a battleground. Love, hate, violence, action, death... in a word, emotion' is the most famous statement of his creative philosophy. Certainly the assaults come thick and fast in The Naked Kiss, either during the opening scene (where the camera angles suggest that blows are struck directly against the audience's point of view), or the two other attacks by an out of control Kelly on Candy (Virginia Grey) the Madame, or Grant respectively. Finally of course there is the 'battleground' of the legal process in which the heroine finds herself entangled.

    The present film was the second of two notorious titles that Fuller made, one after the other in the early 1960s, the other being Shock Corridor. They polarised critics between those who found the results shallow and sensational and those others who discovered in Fuller's increasing disillusionment about American society a welcome, and brave aesthetic. There's no denying Fuller's in-your-face tabloid style has its rough edge, but this is part and parcel of the director's way of 'cinema as scoop' where his films were amongst the first to cover the pressing issues of the day. For instance, Steel Helmet (1950) early on brought the Korean War to the screen. The Naked Kiss goes the whole hog in sensationalism and manages to include abortion, prostitution, police corruption as well as paedophilia, often with the urgency of an on-the-spot report. At the centre of it all is Kelly, the poetry-loving prostitute who, despite her past, is both intelligent and sensitive. 'Intellect rarely goes with physical beauty' the self centred Grant smugly actually tells her, 'and that makes you a remarkable woman.' For Kelly leaving her earlier profession is a matter of self-esteem just as much as it is social duty. When Buff (Marie Devereux) tries to follow her bad example she is forcibly reminded that prostitution is 'a social problem, a medical problem, a mental problem' and that she will end up 'a despicable failure as a woman.'

    At times The Naked Kiss plays out like a garish Sirkian drama. Small town America, as displayed in Grantville, is just as full of hypocrisy and repression as anything found in Imitation Of Life (1959) or All That Heaven Allows (1955). The difference here is that the emotions are worn on the sleeve; the ironic reassurance of the German's widescreen colour is replaced by stark journalisms in black and white. Fuller's town is a personal one, where Shock Corridor is on the local cinema's marquee, and where Fuller's own paperback novel The Dark Page is being read by the heroine. This is a feminist noir with a controversial edge. If the result is the occasional miscalculation (such as the sugary song sung by Kelly and the children) then the overall effect can be judged a success. The film's title itself refers to the way one can, ostensibly at least, identify a pervert - by the nature of his or her intimate contact. The Naked Kiss, itself a title reminiscent of some garish dime fiction, is full of such distorted intimacies, much of which ends disappointingly or with violence. Of course 'naked' in one sense is also the way we first see Kelly, bald headed and frenziedly beating her pimp. As critics have observed, there's a characteristic contradiction in many of Fuller's films that antisocial characters perform the most necessary social actions. In Pickup On South Street (1953) for instance, it is the sociopath Skip McCoy who helps bring the communists to book. Here, although some still see the newly reformed Kelly as reprehensible - notably her first, and only, paying customer in Grantville, Captain Griff (Anthony Eisley) - it is she who provides the catalyst for the eventual exposure of Grant's perversions. Although still ostracised at the end of the film, she has performed a valuable, if uncomfortable, service to the community - her lack of sentimentality neatly sidestepping many of the 'whore with the heart of gold' clichés, which the director so despised. Fuller had an almost mystical faith in America's destiny, but sensationally recorded its sins and failings with increased pessimism as his career proceeded. The choice of Kelly as the vehicle for reform in The Naked Kiss is typical of his later films. In fact the present title was something of a watershed for the director. He next made the financially unsuccessful, and far more conventional, Shark! (aka: Maneater, 1969), before he eventually found his feet again in the American cinema in the 1980s.

      • A customer from London
  • Rated - 1 star

    sheer boredom

    i would give it no stars if possible,a real live turkey

      • A customer from scotland
  • Most recent members' reviews (2) of The Naked Kiss

    View all
  • Rated - 1 star

    THE NAKED KISS

    OOPS SILLY ME DID NOT REALIZE THE FILM WAS THAT OLD AND IN BLACK AND WHITE. WHEN I CLICKED ON NEW I THOUGHT IT WAS A UP TO DATE ON.

    SO I DID NOT WATCH IT

      • A customer from CHESHIRE
  • Rated - 3 stars

    She's enough to make a bulldog bust his chain.

    The Naked Kiss addresses abortion, corruption, prostitution and paedophillia in a seemingly idyllic community. Fuller had a unique approach to film making which can be simple and sensationalistic but his treatment of societies outcasts and handling of controversial issues (especially for its time) is to be admired. This film has moments of clumsiness but is worth seeing just for the blistering opening sequence and the incredible musical piece featuring an ex-prostitute and orthopaedic children on crutches.

      • Chester Dent from London, England
  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    The original cuckoo's nest?

    This black'n white thriller was a real surprise for me - suggested by a friend with a 'unique' taste in films!

    It is a film set in an insane asylum, but not a scary horror type, more of a whodunnit mixed with the gradual mental disintegration of a reporter working undercover to expose a murderer.

    The acting is perfect for the era, the voiceovers geniunely powerful, and the flow of the film allows the viewer time to figure out whether the reporter is acting or really losing the plot.

    This may not be the obvious choice for a friday night movie, but it is well wort a look. Go on!

      • DrMikey from Middlewich
  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Great Sam Fuller flic

    The Naked Kiss opens with a shocking pre-credit sequence, shot partly with cameras harnessed to the actors, in which we see a furious woman beating a man with her handbag. He grabs at her and her wig comes off, revealing that she is totally bald - a prostitute who has been shaved in punishment by the pimp she is now assaulting. Kelly (Constance Towers), the hooker eventually makes her way to Grantville, a small town in New England and after a brief liaison with a law enforcement officer, abandons her bad ways and becomes a nurse in a children's hospital. In due course she becomes engaged to Grant (Michael Dante) a rich and handsome Korean War veteran. Grant, however, has a dark secret of his own... Sam Fuller started his career in newspapers, wrote some pulp novels and screenplays, and then wandered the United States as a tramp on freight trains during the Depression before serving with distinction in the US Army. Starting with I Shot Jesse James (1949) he directed a series of sometimes-controversial films that established him as a cult auteur, especially in Europe. His critical stock remains high today, for instance amongst such modern filmmakers as Quentin Tarantino and Tim Robbins. Perhaps Fuller's quote that 'Film is a battleground. Love, hate, violence, action, death... in a word, emotion' is the most famous statement of his creative philosophy. Certainly the assaults come thick and fast in The Naked Kiss, either during the opening scene (where the camera angles suggest that blows are struck directly against the audience's point of view), or the two other attacks by an out of control Kelly on Candy (Virginia Grey) the Madame, or Grant respectively. Finally of course there is the 'battleground' of the legal process in which the heroine finds herself entangled.

    The present film was the second of two notorious titles that Fuller made, one after the other in the early 1960s, the other being Shock Corridor. They polarised critics between those who found the results shallow and sensational and those others who discovered in Fuller's increasing disillusionment about American society a welcome, and brave aesthetic. There's no denying Fuller's in-your-face tabloid style has its rough edge, but this is part and parcel of the director's way of 'cinema as scoop' where his films were amongst the first to cover the pressing issues of the day. For instance, Steel Helmet (1950) early on brought the Korean War to the screen. The Naked Kiss goes the whole hog in sensationalism and manages to include abortion, prostitution, police corruption as well as paedophilia, often with the urgency of an on-the-spot report. At the centre of it all is Kelly, the poetry-loving prostitute who, despite her past, is both intelligent and sensitive. 'Intellect rarely goes with physical beauty' the self centred Grant smugly actually tells her, 'and that makes you a remarkable woman.' For Kelly leaving her earlier profession is a matter of self-esteem just as much as it is social duty. When Buff (Marie Devereux) tries to follow her bad example she is forcibly reminded that prostitution is 'a social problem, a medical problem, a mental problem' and that she will end up 'a despicable failure as a woman.'

    At times The Naked Kiss plays out like a garish Sirkian drama. Small town America, as displayed in Grantville, is just as full of hypocrisy and repression as anything found in Imitation Of Life (1959) or All That Heaven Allows (1955). The difference here is that the emotions are worn on the sleeve; the ironic reassurance of the German's widescreen colour is replaced by stark journalisms in black and white. Fuller's town is a personal one, where Shock Corridor is on the local cinema's marquee, and where Fuller's own paperback novel The Dark Page is being read by the heroine. This is a feminist noir with a controversial edge. If the result is the occasional miscalculation (such as the sugary song sung by Kelly and the children) then the overall effect can be judged a success. The film's title itself refers to the way one can, ostensibly at least, identify a pervert - by the nature of his or her intimate contact. The Naked Kiss, itself a title reminiscent of some garish dime fiction, is full of such distorted intimacies, much of which ends disappointingly or with violence. Of course 'naked' in one sense is also the way we first see Kelly, bald headed and frenziedly beating her pimp. As critics have observed, there's a characteristic contradiction in many of Fuller's films that antisocial characters perform the most necessary social actions. In Pickup On South Street (1953) for instance, it is the sociopath Skip McCoy who helps bring the communists to book. Here, although some still see the newly reformed Kelly as reprehensible - notably her first, and only, paying customer in Grantville, Captain Griff (Anthony Eisley) - it is she who provides the catalyst for the eventual exposure of Grant's perversions. Although still ostracised at the end of the film, she has performed a valuable, if uncomfortable, service to the community - her lack of sentimentality neatly sidestepping many of the 'whore with the heart of gold' clichés, which the director so despised. Fuller had an almost mystical faith in America's destiny, but sensationally recorded its sins and failings with increased pessimism as his career proceeded. The choice of Kelly as the vehicle for reform in The Naked Kiss is typical of his later films. In fact the present title was something of a watershed for the director. He next made the financially unsuccessful, and far more conventional, Shark! (aka: Maneater, 1969), before he eventually found his feet again in the American cinema in the 1980s.

      • A customer from London
  • Rated - 1 star

    sheer boredom

    i would give it no stars if possible,a real live turkey

      • A customer from scotland
  • Rated - 3 stars

    She's enough to make a bulldog bust his chain.

    The Naked Kiss addresses abortion, corruption, prostitution and paedophillia in a seemingly idyllic community. Fuller had a unique approach to film making which can be simple and sensationalistic but his treatment of societies outcasts and handling of controversial issues (especially for its time) is to be admired. This film has moments of clumsiness but is worth seeing just for the blistering opening sequence and the incredible musical piece featuring an ex-prostitute and orthopaedic children on crutches.

      • Chester Dent from London, England
  • Rated - 1 star

    THE NAKED KISS

    OOPS SILLY ME DID NOT REALIZE THE FILM WAS THAT OLD AND IN BLACK AND WHITE. WHEN I CLICKED ON NEW I THOUGHT IT WAS A UP TO DATE ON.

    SO I DID NOT WATCH IT

      • A customer from CHESHIRE
  • 0 out of 3 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    received as a mistake and not watched

    After having seen Shock Corrider with which this is a set, I decided that life was too short too watch what seemed to be another purely sensationalist move.

      • Saty from Reading
  • Critics' reviews (3)

  • 4 stars out of 5

    A typically bleak and brutal tale from maverick American independent Sam Fuller, who this time turns his cynical eye to the corrupt values lurking beneath small-town life. Constance Towers gives a dignified performance, especially considering the circumstances, as a former prostitute who attempts to build a new life in a new town, but finds her past coming back to haunt her when she tries to establish a relationship with the local leading citizen. The storyline is pure melodrama, but the harsh black-and-white photography and the startling images mark this out as a cult classic.

    • Radio Times
  • Not altogether the best of Fuller, despite an electrifying opening sequence in which a statuesque blonde (Towers)... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • 1 stars out of 4

    Tough early work by a director who never compromised but seldom hit the public fancy.

    • Halliwell's Film Guide

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    • A prostitute on the run from her pimp winds up in a small town where she becomes friends with the local police chief Griff. She takes a job in the hospital helping handicapped children and falls for ...

Rating breakdown

251 Member ratings
  • 100
17
  • 90
21
  • 80
51
  • 70
43
  • 60
44
  • 50
21
  • 40
21
  • 30
12
  • 20
13
  • 10
8

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