Heat (Blu-ray)
APPROX. 170 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 1995 - MPA RATING: R
" One of the best cops-and-robbers crime dramas ever made gets even better in this excellent Blu-ray high-definition transfer.
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One of the best cops-and-robbers crime dramas ever made gets even better in this excellent Blu-ray high-definition transfer. Thank heaven (and Warner Bros.) for small favors.
The centerpiece of "Heat" is a raging gun battle outside a city bank between L.A. Police Lieutenant Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino) and his army of cops and mastermind criminal Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro) and his gang of thieves. It's one of the scenes viewers remember most, but action and adventure are not the only elements in this harrowing, nearly three-hour crime saga. Of equal importance and getting equal attention are the personal lives of the two adversaries and their relationship with one another. It is a lengthy, violent, yet reflective film that perhaps bites off a little more than it can chew. Still, it's an effective thriller that provides intimate portraits of its cops and robbers. By casting two of Hollywood's best actors in the starring roles, writer-director Michael Mann ("Manhunter," "Thief," "The Last of the Mohicans") almost pulls it off.
The first character we meet is Hanna, the policeman. He's having another bad day. His wife (Diane Venora) is about to leave him, his stepdaughter (Natalie Portman) is having a breakdown, and somebody has just pulled off an armed robbery with multiple murders on his beat. Hanna is a guy whose job is his life. He's tough, restless, jumpy, relentless, and more than a little over the edge. To emphasize these attributes, Pacino's performance is more than a little over the top, too. He spends a good deal of his time shouting at people. We're never sure if his character is so moody he's overreacting to every situation, or if Pacino himself is just overacting. In either event, it works fine, making Hanna a more complex fellow than most cops in these kinds of dramas.
McCauley, on the hand, is cool, calm, and calculating as the super crook who pulls off big-scale heists. De Niro's performance is deliberately understated to set off Pacino's high-strung behavior. McCauley is single; in his occupation attachments are a hazard. As he is fond of saying, "Allow nothing in your life that you cannot walk out on in thirty seconds flat if you spot the heat around the corner." But he, too, finds his existence cold, without personal bonds. He meets a young woman in a library, a graphic designer named Eady (Amy Brenneman), with whom he falls in love. She almost makes him forget his favorite dictum.
The third major character in the film is Chris Shiherlis (Val Kilmer), a friend, accomplice, and protégé of McCauley. Like Hanna, Chris is having marital problems directly related to his work. Chris's wife (Ashley Judd) understands him better than Hanna's wife understands her husband, but it's of small consolation. Good or bad, the men in this story place their business ahead of their family or their private affairs. McCauley and Shiherlis's job are to rob stuff. Hanna's job is to stop them. They are men obsessed.
In spite of having two high-profile stars in the same movie, Mann puts Pacino and De Niro together in only a couple of scenes. Their most notable is a brief conversation they have in a coffee shop in which they reveal how much alike their characters really are. Both men have killed, but neither man is a killer. Dedicated and smart, both men have chosen dangerous, unpopular, and consuming lines of work. Both men are doing their job. When they part, one can sense they have a grudging respect and maybe even admiration for one another.
The fact is, we tend to root for both men, the good guy and the bad guy, since we can see the conflicting emotions in each of them. These fellows don't know anything else to do nor want to do anything else.
As much as I liked the little scene between Pacino and De Niro, it is the film's action sequences that stand out. The previously mentioned bank holdup is a good example. It's a long, brutal, drawn-out ordeal filled with constant tumult and danger. The camera never stops moving and the excitement never flags for an instant. Other tension-filled scenes take place in the lot of an abandoned drive-in theater, in a precious metals depository, and at an airport hotel.
Drawbacks? Sure. The movie is brilliant, but it's too damned long. There's no reason for a three-hour character study. This is not "Godfather II" or "Gone With the Wind." Mann allows the quieter, transitional scenes to go on too long and lingers on too many peripheral details with minor characters, permitting the film to expand about a half an hour or more beyond what could have been a tighter story.
