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City Heat

City Heat is a 1984 American buddy-crime comedy film starring Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds, written by Blake Edwards and directed by Richard Benjamin. The film was released in North America in December 1984.

City Heat
Theatrical release poster by Bill Gold
Directed byRichard Benjamin
Screenplay byBlake Edwards
(as Sam O. Brown)
Joseph C. Stinson[1]
Story byBlake Edwards
(as Sam O. Brown)
Produced byFritz Manes
Starring
CinematographyNick McLean
Edited byJacqueline Cambas
Music byLennie Niehaus
Production
company
The Malpaso Company Deliverance Productions
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • December 7, 1984 (1984-12-07)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25 million[2][3][4]
Box office$38.3 million

The pairing of Eastwood and Reynolds was expected to be a major box-office hit, but the film earned a disappointing $38.3 million against a $25 million budget.

Plot edit

In Kansas City, 1933, police lieutenant Speer goes to a diner for coffee. Two men arrive, looking for a former cop turned private eye named Mike Murphy. Speer and Murphy were good friends until the latter left the force. The men pounce on Murphy the minute he arrives. Speer ignores them until a goon causes him to spill his coffee. Both goons are thrown through the front door. Murphy sarcastically thanks Speer for saving his life.

The two rivals have eyes for Murphy's secretary Addy. She loves both and proves it when, after tenderly kissing Murphy goodbye, she goes on a date with Speer. Murphy has a new romantic interest, a rich socialite named Caroline Howley, but finds himself unable to commit.

Speer and Addy go to a boxing match where the mob boss Leon Coll is present. Murphy's partner Diehl Swift is also there, and he seems to be in cahoots with Primo Pitt and his gang. Swift is in possession of a suitcase whose contents are supposed to be the accounting records of Coll's operations. The ledgers are the target of both Pitt's gang and Coll's gang. Coll's financial records are actually in the possession of his bookkeeper, who met and colluded with Swift earlier at the club where black singer Ginny Lee is the star attraction.

Swift leaves the boxing ring, tailed by Speer and Addy, and he is confronted by Pitt and his thugs at his apartment with Ginny, who is taken hostage. She manages to escape but Swift is killed during a struggle with Pitt. A thug opens the suitcase, but it is empty. He picks up Swift's body and throws it out the window, where it lands on the roof of Speer's parked car (occupied by the horrified Addy, who waits while Speer goes to investigate in the apartment).

Murphy vows revenge on Pitt for killing his partner. He asks Speer for assistance, and they form an alliance. After meeting with Murphy at a movie, Ginny is confronted by Pitt's thugs outside the theater. As she tries to escape, she is hit by a car and seriously injured.

After Murphy shows Addy the "laundry" containing the missing financial records, two goons shoot holes through his apartment door. He hits them with a baseball bat when they charge into the apartment and then runs. A gun fight between Coll's men and Pitt's men breaks out on the street below. Murphy hides as the rival thugs battle it out, with Lieutenant Speer watching until one puts a round through Speer's car windshield. Speer pulls out a 12-gauge shotgun, walks up the street, and finishes the fight. Murphy and Speer vow to avenge Ginny and to rescue Caroline, who has been kidnapped by Pitt's gang to force Murphy to hand over the missing records. A final showdown with Pitt and his gang occurs in a warehouse.

In a high class bordello, Speer and Murphy rescue Caroline. Coll shows up holding Addy at gunpoint and demands his records. Murphy hands over the books in exchange for Addy, but the suitcase is booby-trapped; Coll's car is blown up with him in it.

The movie ends with Speer, Addy, Murphy, and Caroline double-dating at the club, listening to Ginny sing and enjoying themselves until Murphy's smart mouth provokes a brawl with some of the other patrons.

Cast edit

Production edit

Blake Edwards wrote the script, initially titled Kansas City Jazz.[5] He originally wrote the script in the 1970s while living in Switzerland. "I really wrote the story for myself," says Edwards. "But when Julie read it, she thought it was the best thing I'd done and over the years friends urged me to film it. So to see it turned into something completely different was very painful for me."[6]

Edwards originally was attached to direct, but he was fired during pre-production and replaced with Richard Benjamin. Edwards retained co-writing credit under the pseudonym Sam O. Brown, the initials of which are S.O.B., a reference to his earlier film in which Andrews acted.[5]

"The whole thing was such a horrendous experience, it could have come right out of S.O.B.," said Edwards. 'In fact it inspired me to write S.O.B. 2.'[6]

Reynolds later recalled:

If you could just release the announcement for City Heat and not have to look at the film, it'd be the most successful picture I'd ever been in. Blake laid out his way for Clint to play his part. To me, it was clearly apparent that Blake's way was in no way how Clint saw the part. Clint didn't say anything except his Gary Cooper comments like "Yup" and "Nope." Clint and I went home in his truck, and he still didn't say anything until we were halfway there. Finally he said "I guess this won't be the film we do together." I said "I didn't think so." Warner Bros. really wanted to make the film. I think they thought like I did that it would be one of those pictures which would look great in the catalogue...Clint likes a director he gets along with, which makes a lot of sense to me...Blake's dismissal hurt him badly. I don't think he's ever gotten over it.[7]

Eastwood was cast as the lead and received a salary of $4 million.[8]

Filming began in February 1984. On the first day, Reynolds was accidentally hit in the face with a metal chair during a fight scene.[2] His jaw was broken, and he was restricted to a liquid diet, causing him to lose over 30 pounds by the time filming wrapped. His condition made headlines in the tabloids, which speculated he had AIDS.[9][10]

On Monday, September 20, 2021, an interview with the film's director Richard Benjamin was released on Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast that contradicted this story of a stunt injury. Richard Benjamin said that Reynolds’ terrible jaw injury was caused when the actor fell from a make-up chair and hit his jaw.

Soundtrack edit

Clint Eastwood, a jazz aficionado, is one of the pianists heard on jazz-oriented soundtrack composed by Lennie Niehaus.[11]

Release and reception edit

 
Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke, Burt Reynolds and Loni Anderson at the premiere

City Heat was released in United States theaters in December 1984. It grossed $38.3 million at the North American box office.[12]

For his roles in this film and Cannonball Run II, Reynolds was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Actor.[13] Reynolds later recalled:

Ten days after shooting began, I knew I was going to take the fall. Clint was playing formula Clint that always worked for Clint. I was playing Jack Lemmon in this strange film where people were getting blown away. I never read a review of the film because I knew I was going to get killed by the critics. The public wanted Boom Town or to see us in a contemporary film. They didn't want "Dirty Harry vs. the Wimp". It's regrettable the material wasn't there because Hollywood or maybe just Warner Bros. will never let Clint and I act together again.[7]

City Heat received lackluster reviews, and critics expressed their disappointment with the script and the pairing of the two star actors. On Rotten Tomatoes, 14 of the 18 reviewers cited gave the film a "rotten" review for a score of 22%.[14] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 39 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[15] Roger Ebert gave the film half a star, asking "How do travesties like this get made?" and "a complete, shocking mess".[16] Gene Siskel gave the film zero stars, writing "Save for two moments when Eastwood does an amusing parody of his angry squint, City Heat is devoid of humor, excitement and amazingly, a comprehensible story."[17]

Janet Maslin was more positive, writing "overdressed and overplotted as it is, City Heat benefits greatly from the sardonic teamwork of Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds. Without them the film would be eminently forgettable, but their bantering gives it an enjoyable edge". According to Maslin:

[T]he film...manages to be both cumbersome and slight. As he did in My Favorite Year and, to some extent, in Racing with the Moon, Richard Benjamin has settled on an evocative time period and a top-notch cast and more or less left things at that. City Heat devotes much more energy to props, sets and outfits than to the dramatic streamlining it so badly needed. The screenplay - which is part The Sting, part Sam Spade and part kitchen sink - is either a hopelessly convoluted genre piece or a much too subtle take-off on the same.[18]

Variety wrote of the star duo: 'This will hardly go down as one of the highlights in either of their careers, but there remains a certain pleasure just in seeing them square off together in a good-natured arm-wrestling match of charisma and star voltage. Nevertheless, one might have hoped for material more exciting than this hokum.'[19] Paul Attanasio of The Washington Post criticized the "embarrassingly broad comedy and Benjamin's smarmy fealty toward his leads. Inside this star vehicle, there's a real movie screaming for air.'[20] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote that Eastwood and Reynolds were "in fine fettle on their own and together, playing off each other beautifully. But the pleasure derived in watching them poke fun at themselves and each other in this period gangster comedy is spoiled by a numbing display of violence that is far too literal for such hokum."[21]

References edit

  1. ^ "Review - City Heat". Variety. January 1984. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  2. ^ a b Hughes, p.73
  3. ^ Munn, p. 200
  4. ^ "The Unstoppables". Spy. November 1988. p. 92.
  5. ^ a b Hughes, p. 72
  6. ^ a b Mann, Roderick (25 November 1984). "Edwards' Year of Living Dangerously". Los Angeles Times. p. 260. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  7. ^ a b Modderno, Craig (January 4, 1987). "Burt Reynolds Is the Comeback Kid". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 18, 2016.
  8. ^ Hughes, p. 74
  9. ^ Eliot, p. 216
  10. ^ Hirschberg, Lynn (16 June 1996). "Deliverance". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved 2018-08-28.
  11. ^ Tosches, Nick (12 December 2008). "Nick Tosches on Clint Eastwood". Vanity Fair. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  12. ^ Hughes, p.75
  13. ^ Wilson, John (2005). The Official Razzie Movie Guide: Enjoying the Best of Hollywood's Worst. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 0-446-69334-0.
  14. ^ "City Heat". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  15. ^ "City Heat (1984) reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  16. ^ Ebert, Roger (January 1, 1984). "City Heat". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 2016-11-18.
  17. ^ Siskel, Gene (December 7, 1984). "Superstars get no stars in 'City Heat'". Chicago Tribune. Section 7, p. 5.
  18. ^ Maslin, Janet (December 7, 1984). "Benjamin Directs City Heat". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-11-18.
  19. ^ "Film Reviews: City Heat". Variety. December 5, 1984. 17.
  20. ^ Attanasio, Paul (December 7, 1984). "'City Heat': Eastwood and Reynolds Don't Connect". The Washington Post. D8.
  21. ^ Thomas, Kevin (December 7, 1984). "Comedy Gets Burned in 'City Heat' Violence". Los Angeles Times. Part VI, p. 10.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

city, heat, 1984, american, buddy, crime, comedy, film, starring, clint, eastwood, burt, reynolds, written, blake, edwards, directed, richard, benjamin, film, released, north, america, december, 1984, theatrical, release, poster, bill, golddirected, byrichard,. City Heat is a 1984 American buddy crime comedy film starring Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds written by Blake Edwards and directed by Richard Benjamin The film was released in North America in December 1984 City HeatTheatrical release poster by Bill GoldDirected byRichard BenjaminScreenplay byBlake Edwards as Sam O Brown Joseph C Stinson 1 Story byBlake Edwards as Sam O Brown Produced byFritz ManesStarringClint Eastwood Burt Reynolds Jane Alexander Madeline Kahn Rip Torn Irene Cara Richard Roundtree Tony Lo BiancoCinematographyNick McLeanEdited byJacqueline CambasMusic byLennie NiehausProductioncompanyThe Malpaso Company Deliverance ProductionsDistributed byWarner Bros Release dateDecember 7 1984 1984 12 07 Running time97 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 25 million 2 3 4 Box office 38 3 million The pairing of Eastwood and Reynolds was expected to be a major box office hit but the film earned a disappointing 38 3 million against a 25 million budget Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Soundtrack 5 Release and reception 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksPlot editIn Kansas City 1933 police lieutenant Speer goes to a diner for coffee Two men arrive looking for a former cop turned private eye named Mike Murphy Speer and Murphy were good friends until the latter left the force The men pounce on Murphy the minute he arrives Speer ignores them until a goon causes him to spill his coffee Both goons are thrown through the front door Murphy sarcastically thanks Speer for saving his life The two rivals have eyes for Murphy s secretary Addy She loves both and proves it when after tenderly kissing Murphy goodbye she goes on a date with Speer Murphy has a new romantic interest a rich socialite named Caroline Howley but finds himself unable to commit Speer and Addy go to a boxing match where the mob boss Leon Coll is present Murphy s partner Diehl Swift is also there and he seems to be in cahoots with Primo Pitt and his gang Swift is in possession of a suitcase whose contents are supposed to be the accounting records of Coll s operations The ledgers are the target of both Pitt s gang and Coll s gang Coll s financial records are actually in the possession of his bookkeeper who met and colluded with Swift earlier at the club where black singer Ginny Lee is the star attraction Swift leaves the boxing ring tailed by Speer and Addy and he is confronted by Pitt and his thugs at his apartment with Ginny who is taken hostage She manages to escape but Swift is killed during a struggle with Pitt A thug opens the suitcase but it is empty He picks up Swift s body and throws it out the window where it lands on the roof of Speer s parked car occupied by the horrified Addy who waits while Speer goes to investigate in the apartment Murphy vows revenge on Pitt for killing his partner He asks Speer for assistance and they form an alliance After meeting with Murphy at a movie Ginny is confronted by Pitt s thugs outside the theater As she tries to escape she is hit by a car and seriously injured After Murphy shows Addy the laundry containing the missing financial records two goons shoot holes through his apartment door He hits them with a baseball bat when they charge into the apartment and then runs A gun fight between Coll s men and Pitt s men breaks out on the street below Murphy hides as the rival thugs battle it out with Lieutenant Speer watching until one puts a round through Speer s car windshield Speer pulls out a 12 gauge shotgun walks up the street and finishes the fight Murphy and Speer vow to avenge Ginny and to rescue Caroline who has been kidnapped by Pitt s gang to force Murphy to hand over the missing records A final showdown with Pitt and his gang occurs in a warehouse In a high class bordello Speer and Murphy rescue Caroline Coll shows up holding Addy at gunpoint and demands his records Murphy hands over the books in exchange for Addy but the suitcase is booby trapped Coll s car is blown up with him in it The movie ends with Speer Addy Murphy and Caroline double dating at the club listening to Ginny sing and enjoying themselves until Murphy s smart mouth provokes a brawl with some of the other patrons Cast editClint Eastwood as Lieutenant Speer Burt Reynolds as Mike Murphy P I Jane Alexander as Addy Murphy s Secretary Madeline Kahn as Caroline Howley Rip Torn as Primo Pitt Beau Starr as Pitt Lookout Irene Cara as Ginny Lee Richard Roundtree as Diehl Swift P I Tony Lo Bianco as Leon Coll William Sanderson as Lonnie Ash Nicholas Worth as Troy Roker Robert Davi as Nino Art LaFleur as Bruiser Jack Nance as Aram Strossell The Bookkeeper Tab Thacker as Tuck The Bouncer Tom Spratley as ChauffeurProduction editBlake Edwards wrote the script initially titled Kansas City Jazz 5 He originally wrote the script in the 1970s while living in Switzerland I really wrote the story for myself says Edwards But when Julie read it she thought it was the best thing I d done and over the years friends urged me to film it So to see it turned into something completely different was very painful for me 6 Edwards originally was attached to direct but he was fired during pre production and replaced with Richard Benjamin Edwards retained co writing credit under the pseudonym Sam O Brown the initials of which are S O B a reference to his earlier film in which Andrews acted 5 The whole thing was such a horrendous experience it could have come right out of S O B said Edwards In fact it inspired me to write S O B 2 6 Reynolds later recalled If you could just release the announcement for City Heat and not have to look at the film it d be the most successful picture I d ever been in Blake laid out his way for Clint to play his part To me it was clearly apparent that Blake s way was in no way how Clint saw the part Clint didn t say anything except his Gary Cooper comments like Yup and Nope Clint and I went home in his truck and he still didn t say anything until we were halfway there Finally he said I guess this won t be the film we do together I said I didn t think so Warner Bros really wanted to make the film I think they thought like I did that it would be one of those pictures which would look great in the catalogue Clint likes a director he gets along with which makes a lot of sense to me Blake s dismissal hurt him badly I don t think he s ever gotten over it 7 Eastwood was cast as the lead and received a salary of 4 million 8 Filming began in February 1984 On the first day Reynolds was accidentally hit in the face with a metal chair during a fight scene 2 His jaw was broken and he was restricted to a liquid diet causing him to lose over 30 pounds by the time filming wrapped His condition made headlines in the tabloids which speculated he had AIDS 9 10 On Monday September 20 2021 an interview with the film s director Richard Benjamin was released on Gilbert Gottfried s Amazing Colossal Podcast that contradicted this story of a stunt injury Richard Benjamin said that Reynolds terrible jaw injury was caused when the actor fell from a make up chair and hit his jaw Soundtrack editClint Eastwood a jazz aficionado is one of the pianists heard on jazz oriented soundtrack composed by Lennie Niehaus 11 Release and reception edit nbsp Clint Eastwood Sondra Locke Burt Reynolds and Loni Anderson at the premiere City Heat was released in United States theaters in December 1984 It grossed 38 3 million at the North American box office 12 For his roles in this film and Cannonball Run II Reynolds was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Actor 13 Reynolds later recalled Ten days after shooting began I knew I was going to take the fall Clint was playing formula Clint that always worked for Clint I was playing Jack Lemmon in this strange film where people were getting blown away I never read a review of the film because I knew I was going to get killed by the critics The public wanted Boom Town or to see us in a contemporary film They didn t want Dirty Harry vs the Wimp It s regrettable the material wasn t there because Hollywood or maybe just Warner Bros will never let Clint and I act together again 7 City Heat received lackluster reviews and critics expressed their disappointment with the script and the pairing of the two star actors On Rotten Tomatoes 14 of the 18 reviewers cited gave the film a rotten review for a score of 22 14 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 39 out of 100 based on 11 critics indicating generally unfavorable reviews 15 Roger Ebert gave the film half a star asking How do travesties like this get made and a complete shocking mess 16 Gene Siskel gave the film zero stars writing Save for two moments when Eastwood does an amusing parody of his angry squint City Heat is devoid of humor excitement and amazingly a comprehensible story 17 Janet Maslin was more positive writing overdressed and overplotted as it is City Heat benefits greatly from the sardonic teamwork of Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds Without them the film would be eminently forgettable but their bantering gives it an enjoyable edge According to Maslin T he film manages to be both cumbersome and slight As he did in My Favorite Year and to some extent in Racing with the Moon Richard Benjamin has settled on an evocative time period and a top notch cast and more or less left things at that City Heat devotes much more energy to props sets and outfits than to the dramatic streamlining it so badly needed The screenplay which is part The Sting part Sam Spade and part kitchen sink is either a hopelessly convoluted genre piece or a much too subtle take off on the same 18 Variety wrote of the star duo This will hardly go down as one of the highlights in either of their careers but there remains a certain pleasure just in seeing them square off together in a good natured arm wrestling match of charisma and star voltage Nevertheless one might have hoped for material more exciting than this hokum 19 Paul Attanasio of The Washington Post criticized the embarrassingly broad comedy and Benjamin s smarmy fealty toward his leads Inside this star vehicle there s a real movie screaming for air 20 Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote that Eastwood and Reynolds were in fine fettle on their own and together playing off each other beautifully But the pleasure derived in watching them poke fun at themselves and each other in this period gangster comedy is spoiled by a numbing display of violence that is far too literal for such hokum 21 References edit Review City Heat Variety January 1984 Retrieved 2013 06 02 a b Hughes p 73 Munn p 200 The Unstoppables Spy November 1988 p 92 a b Hughes p 72 a b Mann Roderick 25 November 1984 Edwards Year of Living Dangerously Los Angeles Times p 260 Retrieved 6 August 2019 a b Modderno Craig January 4 1987 Burt Reynolds Is the Comeback Kid Los Angeles Times Retrieved November 18 2016 Hughes p 74 Eliot p 216 Hirschberg Lynn 16 June 1996 Deliverance The New York Times Magazine Retrieved 2018 08 28 Tosches Nick 12 December 2008 Nick Tosches on Clint Eastwood Vanity Fair Retrieved September 8 2012 Hughes p 75 Wilson John 2005 The Official Razzie Movie Guide Enjoying the Best of Hollywood s Worst Grand Central Publishing ISBN 0 446 69334 0 City Heat Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 2013 06 02 City Heat 1984 reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved April 4 2020 Ebert Roger January 1 1984 City Heat RogerEbert com Retrieved 2016 11 18 Siskel Gene December 7 1984 Superstars get no stars in City Heat Chicago Tribune Section 7 p 5 Maslin Janet December 7 1984 Benjamin Directs City Heat The New York Times Retrieved 2016 11 18 Film Reviews City Heat Variety December 5 1984 17 Attanasio Paul December 7 1984 City Heat Eastwood and Reynolds Don t Connect The Washington Post D8 Thomas Kevin December 7 1984 Comedy Gets Burned in City Heat Violence Los Angeles Times Part VI p 10 Bibliography edit Hughes Howard 2009 Aim for the Heart London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 902 7 External links editCity Heat at IMDb nbsp City Heat at AllMovie City Heat at Box Office Mojo City Heat at Rotten Tomatoes Blu ray Review at Blu ray com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title City Heat amp oldid 1211048539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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