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{{for|the 1995 film directed by Michael Mann|Heat (1995 film)}}
{{for|the 1995 film directed by Michael Mann|Heat (1995 film)}}

{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = Heat
| name = Heat
Line 28: Line 27:
| language = [[English language|English]]
| language = [[English language|English]]
| budget = $17 million
| budget = $17 million
| gross = $2,793,214<ref>[http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=heat87.htm ''Heat'' at [[Box Office Mojo]]]</ref>
| gross = $2,793,214
}}
}}


'''''Heat''''' is a 1986 American [[action film|action]]-[[thriller (genre)|thriller film]] about an ex-[[mercenary]] working as a [[bodyguard]] in [[Las Vegas Valley|Las Vegas]]. The film was written by [[William Goldman]], based on his 1985 novel of the [[Heat (Goldman novel)|same name]]. It was directed by Dick Richards and Jerry Jameson, and stars [[Burt Reynolds]], [[Karen Young (actress)|Karen Young]] and [[Peter MacNicol]].
'''''Heat''''' is a 1986 American [[action film|action]]-[[thriller (genre)|thriller film]] about an ex-[[mercenary]] working as a [[bodyguard]] in [[Las Vegas Valley|Las Vegas]]. The film was written by [[William Goldman]],<ref name="Heat">{{cite web|url=http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/23044/Heat/full-credits.html|title=Heat|work=[[Turner Classic Movies]]|publisher=[[Turner Broadcasting System]] ([[Time Warner]])|location=[[Atlanta]]|accessdate=December 12, 2016}}</ref> based on his [[Heat (Goldman novel)|1985 novel of the same name]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.amazon.com/Heat-William-Goldman/dp/0446512753|first=William|last=Goldman|authorlink=William Goldman|title=Heat|publisher=[[Grand Central Publishing|Warner Books]]|location=[[New York City]]|edition=1st|year=1985|isbn=978-0446512756}}</ref> ''Heat'' was directed by [[Dick Richards]] and [[Jerry Jameson]]. The film stars [[Burt Reynolds]], [[Karen Young (actress)|Karen Young]], [[Peter MacNicol]], [Howard Hesseman]], [[Neill Barry]], and [[Joseph Mascolo]].<ref name="Heat"/>


==Plot==
==Plot==
Line 76: Line 75:
==Production==
==Production==
[[William Goldman]] later called the film:
[[William Goldman]] later called the film:
<blockquote>One of my major disasters... [there were an] amazing number of directors who worked on the flick. (There were six in all and yes that is a record, and like DiMaggio's batting streak, one that will never be broken. I am sanguine because it must always be remembered that the big six toiled on what was only a thirty-six-day shoot.)<ref>William Goldman, ''Five Screenplays'', Applause, 1997 p 340-341</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>One of my major disasters... [there were an] amazing number of directors who worked on the flick. (There were six in all and yes that is a record, and like DiMaggio's batting streak, one that will never be broken. I am sanguine because it must always be remembered that the big six toiled on what was only a thirty-six-day shoot.){{sfn|Goldman|2000|pages=340–341}}</blockquote>
Burt Reynolds was paid $2 million to play the lead role.<ref name="LAT"/> "I don't think ''Heat'' and ''Malone'' [another film he made shortly after] are the movies that are going to change my career," he later said. "But at least they are serious films which people have told me I should have been doing for years. I don't know how good they are, but at least I'm taking the advice now of close friends and doing films that take me out of a car."<ref name="LAT"/> He apparently initiated the project, having read the novel and calling Goldman about turning it into a film.<ref name="LAT"/>
Burt Reynolds was paid $2 million to play the lead role.{{sfn|Modderno|1987|page=L6}} "I don't think ''Heat'' and ''Malone'' [another film he made shortly after] are the movies that are going to change my career," he later said. "But at least they are serious films which people have told me I should have been doing for years. I don't know how good they are, but at least I'm taking the advice now of close friends and doing films that take me out of a car."{{sfn|Modderno|1987|page=L6}} He apparently initiated the project, having read the novel and calling Goldman about turning it into a film.{{sfn|Modderno|1987|page=L6}}


[[Robert Altman]] was originally going to direct the movie, but left after only one day of filming. He was replaced by Dick Richards, who did not get along with Reynolds. At one stage Reynolds hit Richards and the director left the project, being replaced by [[Jerry Jameson]]. Richards later returned, only to fall from a camera crane and wind up in hospital.<ref>[http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1987-03-13/features/8701200151_1_burt-reynolds-neill-barry-marathon-man Dave Kehr, ' 'Heat' Has Chandleresque Virtues', ''Chicago Tribune'', March 13, 1987]</ref>
[[Robert Altman]] was originally going to direct the movie, but left after only one day of filming. He was replaced by Dick Richards, who did not get along with Reynolds. At one stage Reynolds hit Richards and the director left the project, being replaced by [[Jerry Jameson]]. Richards later returned, only to fall from a camera crane and wind up in hospital.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1987-03-13/features/8701200151_1_burt-reynolds-neill-barry-marathon-man|first=Dave|last=Kehr|title='Heat' Has Chandleresque Virtues|work=[[Chicago Tribune]]|publisher=[[tronc|Tronc Inc.]]|location=[[Chicago]]|date=March 13, 1987|accessdate=December 12, 2016}}</ref>


Richards later took credit as 'D.M. Richards' and distanced himself from the final product. "I had nothing to do with the editing of the film," he said later. "I was one of five directors. All I did was the casting and 13 days of shooting... I should have taken my name off it entirely." A Directors Guild arbitration ruled that Richards was responsible for 41% of the finished film and Jerry Jameson 31%.<ref>Goldstein, P., & Klady, L. 'More "heat" '. ''Los Angeles Times'' (1923-Current File), 29 March 1987, pp. K18</ref>
Richards later took credit as 'D.M. Richards' and distanced himself from the final product. "I had nothing to do with the editing of the film," he said later. "I was one of five directors. All I did was the casting and 13 days of shooting... I should have taken my name off it entirely." A Directors Guild arbitration ruled that Richards was responsible for 41% of the finished film and Jerry Jameson 31%.{{sfn|Goldstein|Klady|1987||page=K18}}
cite news|last1=
Richards later tried to sue Reynolds for $25 million for the assault.{{sfn|Modderno|1987|page=L6}}


[[Lionel Wigram (film producer)|Lionel Wigram]] has one of his first industry jobs on the film.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/2009/dec/19/business/la-fi-himi20-2009dec20|title=A sorcerer of the big screen|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|location=[[Los Angeles]]|publisher=[[tronc|Tronc Inc.]]|date=December 19, 2009|accessdate=December 12, 2016|first=Claudia|last=Eller}}</ref>
Richards later tried to sue Reynolds for $25 million for the assault.<ref name="LAT">[http://articles.latimes.com/1987-01-04/entertainment/ca-1803_1_burt-reynolds/2 Craig Modderno, 'BURT REYNOLDS IS THE COMEBACK KID', ''Los Angeles Times'' 04 Jan 1987: L6.]</ref>

[[Lionel Wigram (film producer)|Lionel Wigram]] has one of his first industry jobs on the film.<ref>http://articles.latimes.com/2009/dec/19/business/la-fi-himi20-2009dec20</ref>


==Reception==
==Reception==
''Heat'' grossed [[United States Dollar|$]]2,793,214 in the United States.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=heat87.htm|title=Heat|work=[[Box Office Mojo]]|accessdate=December 12, 2016|publisher=[[Amazon.com]]|location=United States}}</ref>

===Critical response===
The film earned mixed-to-poor reviews from critics during its release and was not a success at the box office, grossing less than $3 million in ticket sales.
The film earned mixed-to-poor reviews from critics during its release and was not a success at the box office, grossing less than $3 million in ticket sales.


[[Walter Goodman]] of ''[[The New York Times]]'' write in his review: "SO you think [[Charles Bronson]] is the most lethal object on two feet? That's because you haven't seen ''Heat,'' which opens today at the Ziegfeld and other theaters. [[William Goldman]] has patched together a scenario based on his own novel to demonstrate that it's [[Burt Reynolds]] all the way. He plays Nick Escalante, a guy so tough that hunks twice his size turn to jelly at his frown, yet so lovable that little girls blow kisses at him. Escalante, known as ''Mex,'' is always ready to help a pal, even when it's a zonked-out party girl ([[Karen Young (actress)|Karen Young]]) who wants him to risk his life so that she can become a castrating female, no metaphor intended. That incident occurs early enough in this lugubrious movie, directed by [[Dick Richards|R. M. Richards]] as though it were a funeral cortege for Mex's adversaries, so that you know Mex will come out all right and be able to give a crash course in courage to a young fellow ([[Peter MacNicol]]) who's rich enough not to need it. They pass the time trading tag ends of pop psychotherapy while you're waiting for Mex to start damaging bad guys again. The setting is [[Las Vegas]], where Mex wins and loses a lot of money in blackjack without getting too excited about it, and things work up tepidly to the big battle in a factory handily stocked with murderous devices. Things finally get hot when Mex's opponents are crushed, electrified, speared, fried and parboiled in slow motion. ''I think I'm not here,'' says Mex. ''My brain is somewhere else.'' Another thing about Mex - he's lucky.<ref name="NYT">{{cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9B0DE6DF163EF930A25750C0A961948260|title=FILM: 'HEAT,' A DRAMA WITH BURT REYNOLDS|first=Walter|last=Goodman|authorlink=Walter Goodman|work=[[The New York Times]]|publisher=[[The New York Times Company]]|location=[[New York City]]|date=March 13, 1987|accessdate=December 12, 2016}}</ref>
In 2000, [[William Goldman]] published his second volume of memoirs, ''[[Which Lie Did I Tell?]]''. He mentioned ''Heat'' briefly, saying "the reason you will not learn more about this baby in these pages is simple: to my knowledge, lawsuits are still flying."<ref>Goldman, William, ''Which Lie Did I Tell?'', Bloomsbury, 2000 p 50</ref> He later reflected, "We had troubles, what can I tell you?"<ref>Egan p 216</ref>

In 2000, [[William Goldman]] published his second volume of memoirs, ''[[Which Lie Did I Tell?|Which Lie Did I Tell?: More Adventures in the Screen Trade]]''. He mentioned ''Heat'' briefly, saying "the reason you will not learn more about this baby in these pages is simple: to my knowledge, lawsuits are still flying."{{sfn|Goldman|2000|page=50}} He later reflected, "We had troubles, what can I tell you?"{{sfn|Egan|2014|page=216}}by [[Echo Bridge Home Entertainment]].

==Release==
''Heat'' was released in theatres on November 12, 1986, in the United States and [[France]].<ref name="NYT"/> The film was released on [[DVD]] on March 4, 2003, [[Echo Bridge Home Entertainment]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.com/Heat-Neil-Barry/dp/B0000C0FFV|title=Heat|work=[[Echo Bridge Home Entertainment]]|publisher=Echo Bridge Entertainment|location=[[La Crosse, Wisconsin]]|date=March 4, 2003|accessdate=December 12, 2016|asin=B0000C0FFV}}</ref>


==Remake==
==Remake==
{{main article|Wild Card (2015 film)}}
{{main article|Wild Card (2015 film)}}
[[Jason Statham]] starred in a [[Wild Card (2015 film)|remake]] written by Goldman and directed by [[Simon West]]. Filming took place in United States in early 2013<ref>[http://www.thewrap.com/movies/article/jason-statham-starring-remake-burt-reynolds-heat-35204 'Jason Statham Starring in Remake of Burt Reynolds' 'Heat' ', ''The Wrap'', February 08, 2012]</ref> and the film was released briefly in select theaters in December 2014 and to video and video-on-demand in January 2015.
[[Jason Statham]] starred in a [[Wild Card (2015 film)|remake]] written by Goldman and directed by [[Simon West]]. Filming took place in United States in early 2013<ref>{{cite news|location=[[Santa Monica, California]]|url=http://www.thewrap.com/movies/article/jason-statham-starring-remake-burt-reynolds-heat-35204|last=Lang|title='Jason Statham Starring in Remake of Burt Reynolds' 'Heat'|work=[[The Wrap]]|date=February 8, 2012|first=Brent|accessdate=December 12, 2016|publisher=The Wrap News Inc}}</ref> and the film was released briefly in select theaters in December 2014. The film was released on [[DVD]] and [[Blu-ray]] on March 31, 2015, by [[Lionsgate Home Entertainment]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.com/Wild-Card-Digital-Jason-Statham/dp/B00T2Z3P6K/ref=tmm_dvd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=|title=Wild Card|work=[[Lionsgate Home Entertainment]]|publisher=[[Lionsgate]]|location=[[Santa Monica, California]]|date=March 31, 2016|accessdate=December 12, 2016|asin=B00T2Z3P6K}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.com/Wild-Card-Blu-ray-Digital-HD/dp/B00T2Z3PN8/ref=tmm_blu_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=|title=Wild Card|work=[[Lionsgate Home Entertainment]]|publisher=[[Lionsgate]]|location=[[Santa Monica, California]]|date=March 31, 2016|accessdate=December 12, 2016|asin=B00T2Z3P6K}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
Line 103: Line 110:
{{Refbegin|30em}}
{{Refbegin|30em}}


* {{cite book|last=Egan|first=Sean|url=https://www.amazon.com/William-Goldman-Storyteller-Sean-Egan/dp/1593935838|title=William Goldman: The Reluctant Storyteller|publisher={{noitalic|Bear Manor Media}}|location=[[Duncan, Oklahoma]]|year=2014|isbn=978-1593935832}}
* {{cite book|url=https://www.amazon.com/William-Goldman-Screenplays-Applause-Screenplay/dp/1557832668/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=|first=William|last=Goldman|authorlink=William Goldman|title=Five Screenplays|publisher=[[Hal Leonard Corporation#Imprints|Applause Theatre and Cinema Books]]|location=[[Milwaukee]]|year=2000|edition=1st|isbn=978-1557832665|pages=340–341}}
* {{cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1987-03-29/entertainment/ca-801_1_director-dick-richards|last1=Goldstein|first=Patrick|last2=Klady|first2=Leonard|title='More "heat"'|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|publisher=[[tronc|Tronc Inc.]]|location=[[Los Angeles]]|date=March 29, 1987|accessdate=December 12, 2016|page=K18}}
* {{cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1987-01-04/entertainment/ca-1803_1_burt-reynolds/2|first=Craig|last=Modderno|title='BURT REYNOLDS IS THE COMEBACK KID'|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|location=[[Los Angeles]]|publisher=[[tronc|Tronc Inc.]]|date=January 4, 1987|accessdate=December 12, 2016|page=L6}}
* {{cite book|last=Goldman|first=William|authorlink=William Goldman|title=Which Lie Did I Tell?: More Adventures in the Screen Trade|publisher=[[Pantheon Books]]|location=[[New York City]]|year=2000|isbn=978-0375403491|edition=1st|url=https://www.amazon.com/Which-Lie-Did-Tell-Adventures/dp/0375403493/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=|page=50}}
* {{cite book|last=Egan|first=Sean|url=https://www.amazon.com/William-Goldman-Storyteller-Sean-Egan/dp/1593935838|title=William Goldman: The Reluctant Storyteller|publisher={{noitalic|Bear Manor Media}}|location=[[Duncan, Oklahoma]]|year=2014|isbn=978-1593935832|page=216}}


{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}

Revision as of 22:39, 12 December 2016

Heat
Theatrical release poster
Directed byDick Richards
Jerry Jameson
Screenplay byWilliam Goldman
Produced byElliott Kastner
Cassian Elwes
Starring
CinematographyJames A. Contner
Edited byJeffrey Wolf
Music byMichael Gibbs
Distributed byNew Century Vista Film Company
Release date
  • November 12, 1986 (1986-11-12)
(France)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$17 million
Box office$2,793,214

Heat is a 1986 American action-thriller film about an ex-mercenary working as a bodyguard in Las Vegas. The film was written by William Goldman,[1] based on his 1985 novel of the same name.[2] Heat was directed by Dick Richards and Jerry Jameson. The film stars Burt Reynolds, Karen Young, Peter MacNicol, [Howard Hesseman]], Neill Barry, and Joseph Mascolo.[1]

Plot

A woman in a Las Vegas bar is annoyed by a flirtatious drunk (Burt Reynolds). Her date, a milquetoast named Osgood (Wendell Burton), wants to do something about it. The woman, D.D. (Deborah Rush), begs him not to, but when the drunk turns mean, Osgood challenges him to step outside. To D.D.'s astonishment, Osgood wins the fight and even gets the tough-looking drunk to apologize. Next morning, it turns out that the drunk is Nick Escalante, known to his friends as Mex, who has been hired to make Osgood look tough in his lady's eyes.

Nick is a former soldier of fortune, lethal with his hands and an expert with weapons, in particular sharp objects. He now acts as a bodyguard for hire but is listed in the Yellow Pages as a "chaperone". Nick's goal is to make enough money to leave Vegas and move to Venice, Italy for good.

He is approached by another meek young man. Cyrus Kinnick (Peter MacNicol) is wealthy and claims to want someone by his side while he gambles, but that's a ruse. He really wants Nick to teach him how to be tough.

Nick is distracted by the savage beating of a friend, Holly (Karen Young). As a paid escort, she goes to the hotel suite of Vegas high roller named Daniel "Danny" DeMarco (Neill Barry) who has organized crime connections. There, she was sadistically abused by DeMarco, a small man backed by Kinlaw and Tiel, a pair of gigantic thugs.

Holly can't get her revenge over DeMarco without Nick's help. He reluctantly agrees and goes to DeMarco's hotel, dressed like a flamboyant pimp. He uses his friendship with a local crime boss, Baby (Joseph Mascolo), to get access to DeMarco's suite. When he asks about Holly's suffering, DeMarco tells him that it was only the beginning of a great game. When he requests financial restitution for Holly's injuries, DeMarco first offers $20,000, which Nick accepts. DeMarco then takes back the money and pulls a gun. Rather than require an apology, he demands that Nick flatter him. Nick makes a half-hearted attempt to do so, but DeMarco says that Nick has "failed the test." DeMarco again points his gun, asking what he is he thinking about, to which Nick answers, "Venice."

At that moment, DeMarco orders Nick to be taken out of his suite, apparently to be beaten or killed somewhere else. But before the huge henchmen can take any action, Nick proceeds to dispense his own kind of justice, using sharp objects like a medallion and the razor-sharp edge of a credit card to defeat DeMarco and his goons.

Holly arrives in DeMarco's suite and, finding him tied up, threatens to slice off DeMarco's manhood. She relents by cutting only the top of his penis, mocking it as small. DeMarco asks if this about the money, to which Holly asks, "What money?" Nick tells her about DeMarco's $20,000 in his desk. Holly gives the cash to Nick, after which DeMarco tries to blame Holly's treatment on his henchmen, but Kinlaw and Tiel insist that DeMarco had planned and done everything by himself.

Nick has a car prepared for Holly to get out of Las Vegas and gives Holly the $20,000. He refuses Holly's suggestion to take half the money. After she drives off, she gives $10,000 to a man and asks him to give the money to Nick.

Taking a liking to his new client, Nick agrees to give Kinnick a few pointers on how to defend himself. With the money Holly gave him, meanwhile, Nick begins to play blackjack in a casino where his friend Cassie (Diana Scarwid) is a dealer. Kinnick comes to realize what Cassie already knows, that the reason Nick has had so much difficulty leaving Vegas is because he is a compulsive gambler.

After he wins enough money to go to Venice as planned, Nick talks himself into believing that it wouldn't be enough to last him for the rest of his life and he needs more. He returns to the casino and proceeds to lose it all.

DeMarco goes to Baby, asking permission to kill Nick, lying that Nick killed his friends with their own guns. Baby organizes a meeting in his home with him as a mediator. By knowing that they will find his fingerprints on the guns from when he disarmed DeMarco's friends, Nick tells Baby that some part of DeMarco's story is true. Nick asks two questions: first, why would he need a gun? (DeMarco considers it a stupid question, but Baby answers that Nick never uses firearms). Nick's second question is how he knows that DeMarco has a small cut on his penis. Baby says that DeMarco will have to expose his penis to prove if Nick is right. DeMarco refuses, after which Baby concludes that it was not Nick who killed DeMarco's thugs, but likely DeMarco himself.

DeMarco defies Baby's orders. He and more of his men ambush Nick at his office. Nick manages to fight them off with a brave intervention by Kinnick, who steps in the path of a bullet. Nick manages to kill DeMarco's henchmen. A terrified DeMarco returns to his suite. The power is off and Nick talks to DeMarco from the darkness, asks if he wants to know how he is going to die, tells him that what happened to Kinlaw and Tiel is nothing compared to what awaits him. DeMarco fails to shoot Nick in the dark. Taunted that he now has only one bullet left and that, if he misses, Nick will tear his small and beautiful face off, a powerless DeMarco kills himself with his own gun.

As his new friend Kinnick recovers in the hospital, Nick is seen on a gondola in Venice, beginning a new life.

Cast

Production

William Goldman later called the film:

One of my major disasters... [there were an] amazing number of directors who worked on the flick. (There were six in all and yes that is a record, and like DiMaggio's batting streak, one that will never be broken. I am sanguine because it must always be remembered that the big six toiled on what was only a thirty-six-day shoot.)[3]

Burt Reynolds was paid $2 million to play the lead role.[4] "I don't think Heat and Malone [another film he made shortly after] are the movies that are going to change my career," he later said. "But at least they are serious films which people have told me I should have been doing for years. I don't know how good they are, but at least I'm taking the advice now of close friends and doing films that take me out of a car."[4] He apparently initiated the project, having read the novel and calling Goldman about turning it into a film.[4]

Robert Altman was originally going to direct the movie, but left after only one day of filming. He was replaced by Dick Richards, who did not get along with Reynolds. At one stage Reynolds hit Richards and the director left the project, being replaced by Jerry Jameson. Richards later returned, only to fall from a camera crane and wind up in hospital.[5]

Richards later took credit as 'D.M. Richards' and distanced himself from the final product. "I had nothing to do with the editing of the film," he said later. "I was one of five directors. All I did was the casting and 13 days of shooting... I should have taken my name off it entirely." A Directors Guild arbitration ruled that Richards was responsible for 41% of the finished film and Jerry Jameson 31%.[6] cite news|last1= Richards later tried to sue Reynolds for $25 million for the assault.[4]

Lionel Wigram has one of his first industry jobs on the film.[7]

Reception

Heat grossed $2,793,214 in the United States.[8]

Critical response

The film earned mixed-to-poor reviews from critics during its release and was not a success at the box office, grossing less than $3 million in ticket sales.

Walter Goodman of The New York Times write in his review: "SO you think Charles Bronson is the most lethal object on two feet? That's because you haven't seen Heat, which opens today at the Ziegfeld and other theaters. William Goldman has patched together a scenario based on his own novel to demonstrate that it's Burt Reynolds all the way. He plays Nick Escalante, a guy so tough that hunks twice his size turn to jelly at his frown, yet so lovable that little girls blow kisses at him. Escalante, known as Mex, is always ready to help a pal, even when it's a zonked-out party girl (Karen Young) who wants him to risk his life so that she can become a castrating female, no metaphor intended. That incident occurs early enough in this lugubrious movie, directed by R. M. Richards as though it were a funeral cortege for Mex's adversaries, so that you know Mex will come out all right and be able to give a crash course in courage to a young fellow (Peter MacNicol) who's rich enough not to need it. They pass the time trading tag ends of pop psychotherapy while you're waiting for Mex to start damaging bad guys again. The setting is Las Vegas, where Mex wins and loses a lot of money in blackjack without getting too excited about it, and things work up tepidly to the big battle in a factory handily stocked with murderous devices. Things finally get hot when Mex's opponents are crushed, electrified, speared, fried and parboiled in slow motion. I think I'm not here, says Mex. My brain is somewhere else. Another thing about Mex - he's lucky.[9]

In 2000, William Goldman published his second volume of memoirs, Which Lie Did I Tell?: More Adventures in the Screen Trade. He mentioned Heat briefly, saying "the reason you will not learn more about this baby in these pages is simple: to my knowledge, lawsuits are still flying."[10] He later reflected, "We had troubles, what can I tell you?"[11]by Echo Bridge Home Entertainment.

Release

Heat was released in theatres on November 12, 1986, in the United States and France.[9] The film was released on DVD on March 4, 2003, Echo Bridge Home Entertainment.[12]

Remake

Jason Statham starred in a remake written by Goldman and directed by Simon West. Filming took place in United States in early 2013[13] and the film was released briefly in select theaters in December 2014. The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on March 31, 2015, by Lionsgate Home Entertainment.[14][15]

References

  1. ^ a b "Heat". Turner Classic Movies. Atlanta: Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  2. ^ Goldman, William (1985). Heat (1st ed.). New York City: Warner Books. ISBN 978-0446512756.
  3. ^ Goldman 2000, pp. 340–341. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFGoldman2000 (help)
  4. ^ a b c d Modderno 1987, p. L6.
  5. ^ Kehr, Dave (March 13, 1987). "'Heat' Has Chandleresque Virtues". Chicago Tribune. Chicago: Tronc Inc. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  6. ^ Goldstein & Klady 1987, p. K18.
  7. ^ Eller, Claudia (December 19, 2009). "A sorcerer of the big screen". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles: Tronc Inc. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  8. ^ "Heat". Box Office Mojo. United States: Amazon.com. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  9. ^ a b Goodman, Walter (March 13, 1987). "FILM: 'HEAT,' A DRAMA WITH BURT REYNOLDS". The New York Times. New York City: The New York Times Company. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  10. ^ Goldman 2000, p. 50. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFGoldman2000 (help)
  11. ^ Egan 2014, p. 216.
  12. ^ "Heat". Echo Bridge Home Entertainment. La Crosse, Wisconsin: Echo Bridge Entertainment. March 4, 2003. ASIN B0000C0FFV. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  13. ^ Lang, Brent (February 8, 2012). "'Jason Statham Starring in Remake of Burt Reynolds' 'Heat'". The Wrap. Santa Monica, California: The Wrap News Inc. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  14. ^ "Wild Card". Lionsgate Home Entertainment. Santa Monica, California: Lionsgate. March 31, 2016. ASIN B00T2Z3P6K. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  15. ^ "Wild Card". Lionsgate Home Entertainment. Santa Monica, California: Lionsgate. March 31, 2016. ASIN B00T2Z3P6K. Retrieved December 12, 2016.

Sources

External links