A group of professional bank robbers start to feel the heat from police when they unknowingly leave a clue at their latest heist.
Director: Michael Mann Writer: Michael Mann Stars: Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer | See full cast and crew »
Storyline
Hunters and their prey--Neil and his professional criminal crew hunt to
score big money targets (banks, vaults, armored cars) and are, in turn,
hunted by Lt. Vincent Hanna and his team of cops in the Robbery/Homicide
police division. A botched job puts Hanna onto their trail while they
regroup and try to put together one last big 'retirement' score. Neil
and Vincent are similar in many ways, including their troubled personal
lives. At a crucial moment in his life, Neil disobeys the dictum taught
to him long ago by his criminal mentor--'Never have anything in your
life that you can't walk out on in thirty seconds flat, if you spot the
heat coming around the corner'--as he falls in love. Thus the stage is
set for the suspenseful ending
"Heat (1995)" Movie official trailer
"Heat (1995)" Movie Reviews
Sound
like a bold statement? Devotees of classic cops and robbers flicks of
old will no doubt take exception, but I believe that Michael Mann
achieved some measure of perfection with Heat. To break this three-hour
gem of a film down to its core, this is a film about men - strong men -
and the supporting role that he women of the film have on them for
better or worse. Take Pacino as good cop Vincent Hanna: one of the most
intense characterizations of the tragic hero that I have ever witnessed,
as he laments the demise of his third marriage to a pill-junkie wife. A
fact which he discusses with his archnemesis (De Niro) in what history
will regard as one of the most frenetic scenes in the history of film.
The dialogue in this scene (at the very end of the first tape, if you
own the VHS version) sets up the last half of the film beautifully, as
our two rivals come to the joint realization that they have no hand in
choosing the paths that will lead them to their ultimate confrontation:
their very natures so define their respective actions that any attempt
to do otherwise would simply be a waste of time. While I have heard
others (who I am ashamed at times to call close friends) say that Heat
drags in places, I will concede that there are moments in the film that
require more than the cursory attention that they give to the movie they
happen to be watching at any given time (I'm sorry not every director
is Jerry Bruckheimer), there are poignant developments of character in
Heat that many would casually disregard. I am thinking of the
interaction between the ex-con who finds conditional employment in a
diner with an opportunistic scum of a boss, and whose girlfriend is so
proud of him for swallowing his pride and not simply giving the
sonofabitch a good pummeling. But there is a catharsis that I felt for
that same ex-con when De Niro's character presents him with the
opportunity to take just one more score, for old time's sake. Who
doesn't feel for this guy - this minor character in a film with big-time
heavyweights who gets to shine for a few brief moments. That's what
Heat is really: a series of brief moments, some touching, others
traumatic, and still others incredibly horrifying in the feelings that
they inspire in the romantic who, like me sees not black or white
portrayals of protagonist and villain, but a montage of grays that
combine to create a vivid spectrum of film characterization that could
not be found in hundreds of films combined. One of my five favorite
films of all time, Heat is a cinematic banquet of intense imagery and
pulse-pounding action. Come hungry.
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