They Call Me Mister Tibbs (1970) ***

United Artists had reinvented the sequel business, shifting it away from the low-burn low-budget Tarzan adventure or Gene Autry western or any inexpensive picture movie capable of maintaining a series character, to bigger-budgeted numbers like James Bond (four sequels so far), The Magnificent Seven (two), The Beatles (four) and The Pink Panther (two). Even Hawaii (1966) spawned The Hawaiians (1970). So when the company hit commercial and critical gold – five Oscars including Best Picture and Best Actor – with In the Heat of the Night (1967) it seemed too good an opportunity to miss not to try for a repeat.

You might have expected UA to continue with the pairing of Sidney Poitier and Oscar-winner Rod Steiger and locate a sequel again in the Deep South. Instead, Steiger was junked and the Poitier character Virgil Tibbs relocated from his Philadelphia hometown to the more snazzy environs of San Francisco, recently popularized by such items as Bullitt (1968).

But minus the racism element what you’re left with is pretty much a standard detective tale with domestic issues thrown in. Tibbs isn’t the kind of cop we’ve come to expect, sinking into alcoholic oblivion or having thrown away a marriage. Instead, and this would strike a contemporary chord, he’s struggling with fatherhood. His son comes off best in arguments and at one point Tibbs resorts to giving the child a few slaps. That looks initially as if emotions will quickly heal and the repentant dad quickly administers a comforting hug, but any bonding is blown apart when the resentful boy complains, as if this represents betrayal, that his father made him cry.

Tibbs is also the old-fashioned kind of male who believes the only way to teach his son not to fall into bad ways like smoking and drinking is to force him to puff on a big cigar and knock back a stiff one until the child throws up.

But Tibbs does do a diligent enough job of detection, evidence relating to the murder of a high-priced sex worker hinging upon whether the killer had long fingernails. The most obvious suspect is street preacher Rev Logan Sharpe (Martin Landau), who visited the prostitute in his capacity as spiritual adviser and who’s heading up a campaign to clean up the streets. But his alibi holds up.

Next in line is building owner Woody Garfield (Ed Asner), exposed, to the shame of wife Marge (Norma Crane) as being a client of the prostitute, and then a janitor of low intelligence called Mealie (Juano Hernandez) and pimp Weedon (Anthony Zerbe), the kind of hood who enjoys taunting cops.

While Tibbs doesn’t indulge in the blatant maverick approach to the job of the earlier Madigan (1968) or the later Dirty Harry (1971) he’s not above putting the squeeze on witnesses.  

Rather foolishly, but perhaps feeling this has now become de rigeur, there’s a car chase which hardly compares to Bullitt. In fact, we’re stuck in an automobile rather too often but these only result in desultory conversations between Tibbs and his sidekick. While in some respects it’s refreshing that Tibbs isn’t subject to any racism, and the picture doesn’t head down the blaxploitation route, the result lacks edge.

Tibbs’ reactions to his child bring him down sharply from the ivory tower of sainthood from the previous picture, and the family stuff, while building up his character, doesn’t make up for what the story lacks.

Gordon Douglas, who had previously excelled in this genre via Tony Rome (1967), The Detective (1968) and Lady in Cement (1968), found out the hard way that Frank Sinatra was more appealing as an investigator and cop than Sidney Poitier and, without steaminess or wise-cracking to fall back on, the sequel quietly runs out of steam.

Screenplay by Alan Trustman (The Thomas Crown Affair, 1968) and James Webb (Alfred the Great, 1969) from the bestseller by John Ball. Not a patch on the original

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Author: Brian Hannan

I am a published author of books about film - over a dozen to my name, the latest being "When Women Ruled Hollywood." As the title of the blog suggests, this is a site devoted to movies of the 1960s but since I go to the movies twice a week - an old-fashioned double-bill of my own choosing - I might occasionally slip in a review of a contemporary picture.

4 thoughts on “They Call Me Mister Tibbs (1970) ***”

  1. This is such a clunker especially after the brilliance of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT. For me the family scenes were total cringe. I am a fan for journeyman director Gordon Douglas, but he and the script let audience down. It is a border line TV movie. The next one THE ORGANIZATION was much, much better.

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  2. I think you’ve summed it up nicely. Neither of the sequels were especially memorable. They aren’t terrible, but they don’t really stick in the mind either. Like you, I was pleased that they didn’t resort to making everything about race in Tibb’s regular life, because it was clear from ITHOTN that Tibbs had in fact largely (if not, obviously, entirely) escaped that sort of thing by moving to a big city. The problem being, as you note, that the race angle isn’t replaced with anything especially compelling. They Call Me… is just another OK cop flick. I’d say Tibbs having a family is a nice place to start, but again, the writing just isn’t sharp enough to do all that much with it.

    If I were making a sequel, I’d have skipped the idea of sending Tibbs back to Sparta as being a bit on the nose. Also, let’s admit it, they never would have equaled the first film, which would have hung much more heavily over the sequel had they done so. It’s hardly inspired, but I think the second film would have done better to send Steiger to the big city where their previous positions would have been reversed.

    If I find Heat of the Night immensely superior as a race film to Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, which I do, it’s because they capture the way that even the superior Tibbs is tarnished by it. He so wants the killer to be the town’s old rich racist dude that he fails to really examine the evidence until he’s forced to. For a man so prideful of his detached intelligence, it’s profoundly humiliating. By sending Steiger to San Francisco, they could have put Tibbs in a position where he was forced to deal with local contempt for Steiger. Not because he’s black, but because he’s a hayseed. One can imagine the blow up if Steiger caught Tibbs going along with this due to his own personal embarrassment over Steiger’s hick ways.

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