Best and Most Memorable
Film Kisses of All Time
in Cinematic History


1955 - 1


Best Movie Kisses of All-Time
Title Screen
Film Title/Year and Description of Kiss in Movie Scene
Screenshot

All That Heaven Allows (1955)

May/December Kiss

Director Douglas Sirk's May/December romantic melodrama was a soap-opera tale set in a small New England town where an attractive widow fell in love with her younger gardener, although their relationship was perceived as fortune-hunting on his part by her friends and family:

  • free-spirited gardener Ron Kirby (Rock Hudson)
  • older, more-uptight, well-to-do, fortyish Cary Scott (Jane Wyman)

Ron told her that he had fixed up the farmhouse to "make the place livable" for the two of them, away from the town's malicious gossipers. He boldly declared his intentions to marry her: "I'm asking you to marry me. I love you, Cary"; although she had doubts that it was "impossible."

He proved his steadfast love with "This is the only thing that matters" - a kiss.

The Big Combo (1955)

Avoiding the Hays Code Censors Kiss

Director Joseph H. Lewis' thriller-film noir contained a notorious kissing scene of a female who was masochistically drawn to an organized crime boss:

  • sadistic and arrogant mobster hood-kingpin Mr. Brown (Richard Conte)
  • weak-willed, abused, and unwilling society blonde girlfriend Susan Lowell (Jean Wallace)

The first kiss was on the ear, then the cheek and neck, and then traveling behind her body and out of sight, as the camera dollied in for a stunning erotic close-up - leaving the rest up to the audience's imagination.



East of Eden (1955)

Conflicted Kiss

Director Elia Kazan's drama, based upon John Steinbeck's novel set in California's Salinas Valley in the early 20th century, featured the first major role of 'generation gap' rebel James Dean - only one of three films he made in his short career. The story was a basic updating of the Biblical Cain and Abel relationship.

In the Ferris wheel-carnival scene, vulnerable, troubled and insecure Cal Trask (James Dean) struggled to express his longing for his sensible but rival (and favored) twin brother Aron's (Richard Davalos) girlfriend Abra (Julie Harris).

She confessed her conflicted-in-love feelings for him - but after a kiss pulled back and turned away:

"Oh, I love Aron, I do, really I do."



Guys and Dolls (1955)

Intimate, Sin-Fighting, Salvation Kiss

This Samuel Goldwyn production by director Joseph L. Mankiewicz was developed from a story by Damon Runyon about NY sharpsters. It was the big screen version of the long-running stage musical.

In the musical comedy, slick, high-rolling big-city gambler Sky Masterson (a slightly miscast Marlon Brando) made a $1,000 bet that he could romance/seduce and date an unlikely "doll" - virginal Salvation Army Sister Sarah Brown (Jean Simmons).

During a scene over drinks, she came closer and closer to his lips before their intimate kiss -- telling the "full time sinner" that she wanted to be with him and that he wouldn't be fighting sin alone anymore because she was on a mission to save him:

"Whatever you do, wherever you go...I want to be with you...anytime, anywhere..."

Kiss Me Deadly (1955)

A Deadly Kiss - With a Bullet

Director Robert Aldrich's classic film noir thriller was adapted from Mickey Spillane's novel, and set during the dark Cold War era.

Nearing the film's apocalyptic ending set in a beach house, an avaricious and determined Lily/Gabrielle (Gaby Rodgers) had just shot and killed deceiving mastermind-scientist Dr. Soberin (Albert Dekker) after she threatened him with possessing the "Whatsit" box all for herself: "I'll take it all if - you don't mind." As he fell dead, he warned: "Listen to me, as if I were Cerberus barking with all his heads at the gates of Hell, I will tell you where to take it. But don't, don't open the box."

She then greeted hard-boiled PI detective Mike Hammer (Ralph Meeker), bursting into the room, with a wide smile and her gun:

"Hello, Mike...Come in. Come in."

Seductively, she commanded sexual favors from him:

"Kiss me, Mike. I want you to kiss me. Kiss me. The liar's kiss that says 'I love you.' It means something else. You're good at giving such kisses. Kiss me."

With the femme fatale's destructive sexuality and promise of the kiss of death (although she never physically kissed Hammer), she fired point-blank into the midsection of the misogynistic hero before he reached her, and he fell to the floor - wounded.


'Lily' About to Open the Box, When Hammer Burst In



Lily to Hammer: "Come in. Kiss me, Mike" Before Shooting Him

Lady and the Tramp (1955)

Shared Spaghetti Kiss

At an outdoor Italian restaurant, cocker spaniel Lady, and mongrel Tramp shared a spaghetti dinner, while being serenaded by a waiter singing the love song ''Belle Notte." They each started chewing or slurping on opposite ends of a spaghetti strand and were startled to meet in the middle - where they kissed. Lady blushed charmingly, as he nudged a meatball toward her with his nose as a symbol of his affection.

The iconic 'Bella Note' spaghetti-eating scene has been copied (lampooned actually) many times, including these two film examples:

Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993)
Kids in America (2005)
 
Heroic Navy commando Topper Harley (Charlie Sheen) was with espionage agent Ramada Rodham Hayman (Valeria Golino) while dining on spaghetti together. She urged: "Kiss me. Kiss me like you've never kissed me before" - words from Casablanca (1942)

Holden Donovan (Gregory Smith) and Charlotte Pratt (Stephanie Sherrin) re-enacted classic kissing moments from film favorites, including the spaghetti kiss scene from Lady and the Tramp (1955)



Love is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955)

Cigarette Kiss and Goodbye Kiss

Han Suyin's autobiographical novel was turned into this romantic drama about an inter-racial/cross-cultural relationship, filmed on location in Hong Kong. Two lovers were in a clandestine relationship there during China's Communist revolution:

  • unhappily-married American newsman/correspondent Mark Elliott (William Holden)
  • beautiful Eurasian doctor Ms. Han Suyin (Jennifer Jones), widow of a Chinese general

They joined their two cigarettes together as a symbol (he lighted hers - it was both a sublimation of their passion and a symbol of the sexual consummation of their secretive love affair as the Oscar-winning title tune swelled in the background. She told him: "There is nothing stronger in the world than gentleness."

Also, he reluctantly bid her farewell from a hilltop (where they often went to share kisses) in a melodramatic scene. He told her that he didn't have a present for her:

"I have to go now and I don't want you to be sad...And I don't want you to come down the path with me. I want to look back and see you here."

She promised that she would be there for him at their familiar meeting place ("I will be here when you come back to me. I promise") as they kissed and the theme music swelled. However, the film ended sadly and tragically, as she returned to the hillside without him, and remembered his words to her (in voice-over):

"I often think that healing is man's salvation, and I envy your ability to help. You deal with suffering, but you can do something about it. I can only stand and watch. We have not missed, you and I. We have not missed that many-splendored thing."





Picnic (1955)

Drifter's Enticing Kiss

Daniel Taradash's adaptation of William Inge's Pulitzer Prize-winning play brought forth director Joshua Logan's Technicolored rural romantic drama, set during Labor Day in a small Kansas town.

Outdoorsy, uninhibited and virile drifter Hal Carter (William Holden) told pretty Kansas girl Madge Owens (Kim Novak) before kissing her and proposing:

"Listen, baby. You're the only real thing I ever wanted. Ever! You're mine. I've gotta claim what's mine or I'll be nothin' as long as I live...You love me, you know it, you love me, you love me."

He then rushed away to jump onto a passing train.

Madge would make a romantically-inclined decision to board a bus to Tulsa and leave her boring and repressive Kansas town to join him, as the film concluded.




Best and Most Memorable Film Kisses
(in chronological order by film title)
Introduction | 1896-1925 | 1926-1927 | 1928-1932 | 1933-1936 | 1937-1939 | 1940-1941
1942-1943 | 1944-1946 | 1947-1951 | 1952-1954 | 1955 - 1 | 1955 - 2 | 1956-1958 | 1959-1961
1962-1965 | 1966-1968 | 1969-1971 | 1972-1976 | 1977-1981 | 1982
1983-1984 | 1985-1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989-1990 | 1991 | 1992-1993 | 1994
1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006-2007 | 2008 | 2009-


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