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Body Heat (DVD)

Deluxe Edition

APPROX. 113 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 1981 - MPA RATING: R

Kathleen Turner as Matty Walker
" ...builds slowly, then grabs you and never lets go.

DVD review

FIRST PUBLISHED Oct 20, 2006
By John J. Puccio

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Critics over the years have called Lawrence Kasdan's sexy, 1981 crime flick "Body Heat" a "sultry noir." Fair enough. Certainly, the setting is humid and the love story is torrid enough; more important, it is one of the better noirs to come along in ages. Dark places and dark deeds dominate; despair and paranoia abound; and you can't beat the film's sizzling femme fatale to lead a man to desperate measures.

William Hurt stars as the man caught up in a web of lies, lust, greed, and deceit; and Kathleen Turner is the woman who lures him in. It was one of Hurt's first big pictures and Turner's breakthrough role. Moreover, it was writer and director Lawrence Kasdan's ("The Big Chill," "Grand Canyon," "Silverado") first directorial effort. Together, they made if not a great film, at the very least a memorable one.

Hurt plays Ned Racine, a shabby Florida lawyer working in the sleepy little town of Miranda Beach. He's not a very good lawyer, and not a very honest one. Still, he ekes out a living and earns enough money to bed down a different waitress or nurse most every night. Turner plays Matty Walker, a beautiful woman married to a rich businessman (played by Richard Crenna). Ned and Matty meet by happenstance one evening at a jazz concert and strike up an instant friendship. Well, OK, it's more than a friendship. Although Matty plays coy and hard-to-get at first, the two more or less fall instantly in lust and don't stop making it together for the rest of the movie. But there is that pesky matter of the husband.

Matty lives in a house the size of New Jersey, and fortunately for her and Ned, who do their lovemaking there, the husband is gone on weekdays and they're alone in the place nights. You guessed what's coming next. Matty says she can't stand her spouse: "He's small and mean and weak." She wishes her husband were dead. And Ned is just unscrupulous enough to accommodate her.

If this plot sounds familiar, you're right. It's Billy Wilder's "Double Indemnity." In fact, that's one of the film's weaknesses. It tries so hard to draw on old noirs, it can sometimes seem like a parody of the old movies. The dark lighting, the dark night clubs, the dark places, the constantly hot days and foggy nights, and John Barry's evocative forties-style jazz score all underline the noir mood. Matty even goes so far as to buy Ned a man's hat of the kind worn in the forties. And just how "hot" is Matty? She's so hot, her skin is noticeably warmer than a normal person's. She says her body heat runs several notches high, around 100 degrees. I'll say she's hot. Anyway, you see what I mean; Kasdan piles it on maybe a little too much. However, he redeems himself in the movie's second half by introducing some clever twists and turns.

In the last hour, Ned's two best friends, a county prosecutor named Peter Lowenstein (Ted Danson) and a police detective named Oscar Grace (J.A. Preston), begin to suspect foul play and start sniffing around what they consider unusual circumstances. Mickey Rourke also has a small but notable part as a petty crook and explosives expert, Teddy Lewis, who becomes involved in the goings on.


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