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Heat (1995)
TrailerNeil and his professional criminal crew start to feel the heat from police when they unknowingly leave a clue at their latest heist.Actors: Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer, Jon Voight, Tom Sizemore, Diane Venora, Amy Brenneman, Ashley Judd, Mykelti Williamson, Wes Studi, Ted Levine, ...»Director: Michael MannCountry: United StatesDuration: 170 minQuality: HDRelease: 1995IMDb: 8.31 CommentsSort By- Newest
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AlexRoid AnonymousMasterpiece2019-07-20 02:07Keywords: -
Actors of "Heat (1995)"
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Characters of "Heat (1995)"
Lt. Vincent HannaPlayed by: Al PacinoNeil McCauleyPlayed by: Robert De NiroChris ShiherlisPlayed by: Val KilmerNatePlayed by: Jon VoightMichael CherittoPlayed by: Tom SizemoreLillian HannaPlayed by: Diane VenoraEadyPlayed by: Amy BrennemanCharlene ShiherlisPlayed by: Ashley JuddSergeant DruckerPlayed by: Mykelti WilliamsonDet. Lou CasalsPlayed by: Wes StudiBoskoPlayed by: Ted LevineDonald BreedanPlayed by: Dennis HaysbertRoger Van ZantPlayed by: William FichtnerLauren GustafsonPlayed by: Natalie PortmanKelsoPlayed by: Tom NoonanWaingroPlayed by: Kevin GageAlan MarcianoPlayed by: Hank AzariaElaine CherittoPlayed by: Susan TraylorTrejoPlayed by: Danny TrejoHugh DennyPlayed by: Henry RollinsDet. Bobby SchwartzPlayed by: Jerry TrimbleRichard TorenaPlayed by: Tone LocDr. BobPlayed by: Jeremy PivenSergeant HeinzPlayed by: Paul HermanHarry DieterPlayed by: Dan MartinProstitutePlayed by: Kai Soremekun -
Directors of "Heat (1995)"
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Creators of "Heat (1995)"
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Critic Reviews of "Heat (1995)"
Chicago TribuneApril 29, 2014When Pacino's loud, bruised cop and De Niro's canny crook stare at each other, you can read something spent and weary in their eyes and voices. The heat is hell. So are their jobs -- but somebody's got to do them.
New YorkerApril 29, 2014The taciturn De Niro and the braying Pacino share a flawless scene over a cup of coffee, but the real honors go to Val Kilmer and Ashley Judd as a warring, loving couple.
Philadelphia InquirerApril 29, 2014So why doesn't Heat, with its elaborately staged, tautly edited robberies, its killer cast, edgy score and elegant cinematography, offer more satisfaction? It's the script, stupid.
NewsweekApril 29, 2014Just when it seemed that the only hope for crime movies lay in the postmodernist artifice of films like Pulp Fiction, Mann reinvests the genre with brooding, modernist conviction. This one sticks to your gut.
Chicago ReaderApril 29, 2014There's nothing really new in this lengthy 1995 thriller by writer-director Michael Mann about cops and robbers in Los Angeles, but it has craft, pacing, and an overall sense of proportion, three pretty rare classic virtues nowadays.
New York Daily NewsApril 29, 2014An odd though often entertaining blend of The Asphalt Jungle and Oprah, a traditional cops-and-robbers story weirdly fitted out with long, earnest discussions of interpersonal relationships.
Suite101.comDecember 29, 2015Ominous, operatic, often emulated but never equaled. This is go-for-broke, GOAT-level filmmaking - not only upending expectations but exceeding them with unanticipated success in its elegant, exciting examination of existential and emotional entropy.
Common Sense MediaOctober 13, 2015Criminal and police face off in bloody '90s action-adventure
Philadelphia Daily NewsApril 29, 2014A movie with two powerhouse performances and enough bad dialogue (it runs two hours, 45 minutes) to clog a Pentium processor.
Radio TimesApril 29, 2014Though punctuated by bursts of virtuoso action, including a running battle in downtown LA that ranks as one of the best action scenes ever filmed, it is the unusual emphasis on character that impresses most.
Baltimore SunApril 29, 2014This is glandular, not intellectual, movie-making but it's at the highest end of technical expressiveness.
Christian Science MonitorApril 29, 2014The performances are persuasive but the plot rattles on much too long.
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Gallery of "Heat (1995)"