List
In the Heat of the Night

Director: Norman Jewison
Writer: Stirling Silliphant, John Ball
Producer: Walter Mirisch
Theatrical: 1967
Rated: Unrated
Studio: United Artists
Genre: Classics
Duration: 109
Media: DVD
Collection ID: 708
IMDb: 0061811
DVD Details
Languages: English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, Spanish
Sound: AC-3
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Picture Format: Widescreen
Discs: 1
Release:Jan 2008
Price: $14.98
Credits
Virgil Tibbs
Sidney Poitier
Gillespie
Rod Steiger
Sam Wood
Warren Oates
Mrs. Colbert
Lee Grant
Shagbag
Timothy Scott
Cinematographer
Haskell Wexler
Endicott
Larry Gates
Mr. Purdy
James Patterson
Mayor Schubert
William Schallert
Mama Caleba
Beah Richards
Courtney
Peter Whitney
Henderson
Kermit Murdock
Watkins
Larry D. Mann
Packy
Matt Clark
Ulam
Arthur Malet
Dr. Stuart
Fred Stewart
Delores
Quentin Dean
Harvey Oberst
Scott Wilson
McNeil (as William C. Watson)
William Watson
Charles Hawthorne
Eldon Quick
Shuie
Stuart Nisbet
Jess
Khalil Bezaleel
Fryer
Peter Masterson
Butler
Jester Hairston
1st Tough
Phil Adams
2nd Tough
Nikita Knatz
Clerk
Sam Reese
Ralph
Anthony James
Conductor
Buzz Barton
Summary
Both riveting murder mystery and classic fish-out-of-water yarn, Norman Jewison's Oscar-winning "In the Heat of the Night" represents Hollywood at its wiliest, cloaking exposé in the most entertaining trappings. Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger prove the decade's most formidable antagonists. Poitier plays Virgil Tibbs, an arrogant homicide detective waylaid in Sparta, Mississippi; Steiger, in his bravura Oscar-winning turn, is Bill Gillespie, the town's hardheaded, bigoted sheriff who first arrests Tibbs for murder and then begs for his expertise. As the clues and suspects mount, Gillespie and his deputies develop begrudging respect for the black officer. The first-rate supporting cast includes Lee Grant as the victim's angry widow, Warren Oates as a voyeuristic deputy, William Schallert as the pragmatic mayor, and, in his screen debut, Scott Wilson ("In Cold Blood") as an unlucky fugitive. The brilliant widescreen cinematography is by Haskell Wexler, and the scat-music score is by Quincy Jones. Ray Charles wails the blues theme song. --"Glenn Lovell"