Here's what I find amazing. This was only Mickey Rourke's 2nd film role and very 1st speaking role. It was William Hurt's 2nd film role. It was Kathleen Turner's 1st film role ever. They all gave superb performances as if they had been film stars for years. In addition to the marvelous acting, this was only Lawrence Kasdan's 2nd film as a screenwriter and 1st as director.
In the MR bio I read he said when he auditioned for this part (screen time approx 6 mins) they offered him the part for $500. He wanted the role but held out for 1K and he got it.
That is crazy. I'm in my early 40s and I've known Mickey from 9&1/2, Marborol Man, Wrestler.. etc and even Wild Orchid (which my dad put in with his dirty movies to hide from me but I found anyway). I found out about Angel Heart a few weeks ago and have been binging Mickey Rourke movies ever since. He is an incredible talent.
My friend met Mickey Rourke during the time of his super-stardom. My buddy was a school teacher and Mickey asked him question after question about being a teacher. Said Rourke was (back then anyway) one of nicest, most down to earth guys he'd ever met. I agree....he was "untouchable" for 5 or 6 years.
The Barbarian Brothers (of bodybuilding/movie fame) have always spoken glowingly, lovingly about The Mick. Consider Mick a legend. Told me how Mick wanted a million dollars, cash, before he got out of a limo with Menahem Golan. "Ten dollar effing-bills." (to sign w/Cannon). Those are the stories ye live for!
Mick's Diva-Era, and God Bless Mick for having one - incredible performances continuing today - but still needs the right script. THE WRESTLER close but not quite.
I have a great list of examples: Christopher Walken - Pulp fiction Alec Baldwin - Glengarry Glenn Ross Bill Murray - Zombieland William Hurt - History of Violence Matthew Mcconaughey & Kyle Chandler - The wolf of wall street Donnie Whalberg - The sixth sense Colin Farrell - The batman Alfred Molina - Boogie Nights
Mickey owned the screen - no debate from me, but if you want one of the GREATEST scene stealers, the GOAT if you will, a man that hijacked a movie, look no further than Orson Welles in *The Third Man* . When Welles made the *Cuckoo Clock* speech in the Ferris Wheel to Joseph Cotten, Orson stole the movie right then and there. The funny thing was, Welles wasn't even in the movie for the first hour or so, but when the Great Man made his grand appearance to make that speech in that amusement ride in post-WWII Vienna, he was on screen for perhaps 10 minutes, tops.
Everyone else in the movie seems to be acting in some 1950's stage play while Mickey Rourke's character feels like a real guy from down the street. What a performance.
Yes! Especially Kathleen Turner.. her acting is pretty bad maybe that's how her character is supposed to be I don't think she likes men at all in this movie, but William Hurts character is SO hot for her he doesn't notice she is just using him. But for me Mickey Rourke never disappoints! 💖😁
Keep in mind the dialogue was written to be a very stylized “film noir” 1940’s style. That’s why the acting is the way it is. It’s SUPPOSED to be like that.
I read somewhere that Mickey Rourke was the very first person to get into the actors studio on the first try. I believe it. And he was absolutely gorgeous. I fell in love with him watching this movie.
The whole cast of this movie was outstanding. Rourke, Turner, Dansen, Richard Crenna. What a lineup! Every one of them letter perfect. All the bit players were great, too. And last but not least, William Hurt was in a class by himself.
I looked up Hurt's IMDB a couple of years ago, and I was blown away at some of his movie roles. I had forgotten some of them. Everything was excellent. I think what separated him from many other American actors was the fact in addition to be talented, he got a lot of training at Julliard and the NYC stage.
Everyone in this movie is great. Even down to Ted Danson's dancing in the parking lot. Just an excellent movie. One of my top ten. Larry Kasdan's debut as director, coming after writing Empire Strikes Back and Raiders of the Lost Ark. Next, he'd write and direct The Big Chill. Not too shabby. Any one of those is a career high. All of them is one talented dude.
@@bluecollarlit Like James Woods he was one of the best actors back then . Mickey Rourke however got an attitude towards Hollywood and also took up boxing. He also was obsessed with seeing himself humping. He later admitted he screwed up !
I watched an interview with him recently and he said acting came incredibly easy to him, the trouble was for a while he got bored not challenged and found it hard to respect some of the directors. He didn’t like the fame and went off the rails sadly. I hope he writes an autobiography, I think it would be very interesting 🙂
Wonderful noir film, superb contributions from all the cast; these two short scenes are critical in the narrative of the movie. The soundtrack is one of John Barry’s best and adds to the growing unease and uncertainty
It's hard to remember what it was like when movies were made for adults, with real actors. Mickey Rourke: feel like I am watching a hidden camera, not an actor, these can't be characters, because the movie is so damn good you believe it is real. William Hurt--doesn't even have to talk, he is a rel actor. That guy can sit there and not say a word, and not have to. Kathleen Turner--well, no one has ever topped her in this movie. Hollywood hasn't made a real movie in twenty years. Maybe longer. How can you compare a noir thriller like this to a damn comic book character.
Brigid What's funny is that Body Heat was inspired by earlier films. Maybe the Indy industry is still making films like this. You should see the Movie "The Lookout". Not exactly like this movie, but a film made for adults. BTW "Wonder Woman" was a blast! At least most of it. LOL..
True about the hidden camera. The first time I saw trancendental acting when Brando in a Streetcar. Feels like you're watching a documentary or blooper but the character is the actor.
The Drop . A real movie featuring Tom Hardy with New York accent and the late James Gandolifini . Need I say more ! Yes I can. As classic as Body Heat !
I recently rediscovered this film and have become obsessed again. It is such a great story and a great twist at the end. And Kathleen Turner's performance is just eternal in this film.
I first saw Mickey in Diner. Such range. Such warmth. Such skill. Pauline Kael, in the New Yorker, told her readers to pay especial attention to him with Body Heat.
I'm rewatching Body Heat for the first time in years. Mickey Rourke is insanely charismatic. He's not doing anything another actor might have done in the same role. He's not even movie star handsome. He's just pure onscreen magnetism.
I saw this movie when it was released, and just loved it. Still do. The acting, the lighting, the editing, the cinematography, EVERYTHING about it. And then......this little 4 or 5 minutes of (Who the hell IS this??????) Mickey Rourke, just mesmerizing. As somebody else commented, for 6 or 7 years, he was the man. Some of his films were panned, but I enjoyed all of his performances. Year of the Dragon was, I thought, terrific. And Diner, and Wild Orchid, and the film with DeNiro and Lisa Bonet, and one of my favorite films ANYBODY ever made, The Pope of Greenwich Village. But when Mickey jumped off the screen right here, that was when it started, in my humble opinion.
He played all of his roles so differently, very good acting skills - amazing. magnetic persona. there's really something about him that stayed with him to this day i can't really tell what is it. I've watched Angel Heart yesterday (cool film, entertaining, but a bit too obvious) and I thought that he was better than this movie - like he did too good job for this film. One of last scenes with "I know who I am" was incredible. He acted his gut out in it.
Mickey was so badass in this movie, I think he totally stole the William Hurt presence in about 5 minutes. He was charismatic + handsome actor back in the days. I still like him anyway.
Ahhh Mickey, such an outstanding actor...and he's actually convincing. He makes it effortless, not like the actors today. Those assholes can never hold his jockstrap.
There are certain actors, that come around that have it all. Movie star looks and incredibly great acting chops. Rourke had the whole package, but refused to fall into the game of just taking any role
Mickey is awesome in this. To quote Vincent gallo " Sean Penn wishes he was mickey Rourke!" LOL. So true mickey Def has that " it " factor that rarely comes along.
he was only in those 2 scenes, what made it so memorable was that in the movie pretty much everyone is lying and double-crosssing. the wife pretends to love her husband while plotting his murder; she enlists the aid of a local lawyer, someone not adverse to telling the convenient lie; and he in turn is lying to his colleagues and policeman/friend. the only one telling the truth straight up is the ex-con, mickey Rourke. he gives him the advice probably the whole audience was thinking--don't do it. probably the whole audience was thinking that, but then lost their mind when Kathleen turner came on screen....
To compare Lawrence Kasdan's directoral debut with Body Heat to that of Orson Wells with Citizen Kane might be a bit lavish, but Body Heat is a great film with uniformly excellent performances. I can find no real flaws anywhere and have come back to enjoy this movie again year after year.
This movie is essentially a remake of Billy Wilder's "Double Indemnity" and it pales in comparison. Hurt, Turner and Danson can't compare to MacMurray, Stanwyck and Edward G Robinson.
Kathleen Turner stunning. Home run right out of the box - just an incredible turn for KT. Stunning performances like being inside an Elmore Leonard novel.
It was and still is a great joy to watch these two key scenes after I discovered Rourke in Rumble Fish and The Pope of Greenwich Village back in high school. He could do no wrong for a while until he did go wrong with Wild Orchid and Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man. I remember being completely devastated after that when it seemed like it was all over for him. Much like Brando in the 60s. But thankfully he clawed his way back with the Wrestler. I wish he didn't fuck up his face though. I would have killed to have a face like that. Imagine the women he must have had in his day chasing him.
I loved this movie, and this one one of my favorite scenes. Mikey WAS cool!! But so was william hurt, kathleen turner, richard crenna, ted danson, j.a. preston.... and all the rest. What a cool movie.
Spellbinding. If he didn't self destruct he would've been the greatest actor of all time without question. His career (even in shit films) from 81-86 were spellbinding.
Mickey is so good in many roles I've seen him in. He kinda reminds me of James Dean or a little Brando. Dean's impact came after his death but Rourke was lovmmmfng it superstardom
"I feel like a number". Great song. Great performance. All of them. Check out Rumble Fish with Mickey Rourke It's very cool. He was a soft way of speaking that's commanding. Nice work .
It does. Everyone had high hopes for Edward Norton, that could bring back something from the old days of real acting, real dialogue, real scripts, his dinner scenes in American History X are still riveting, like it is so intense I feel like an eavesdropper. He hasn't made a film in years, and who can blame him for not wanting to play comic book characters. Brad Pitt, meh. The last director to make good use of him was Guy Richie.
A lot of similarities between Rourke and Norton...two extremely-talented "heir apparent" method actors who ruled for about a 6-year period and really captured the zeitgeist of their respective eras, but were ultimately undone by hubris and bad decisions.
plus he has had several surgerys to repair the damage to his nose from boxing and it all takes a toll..but he will always be BRILLIANT....Mickey Rourke rocks !!!!
Like a lot of movie fans who first saw Mickey in "Diner" and then "Body Heat" I was dead certain I had just seen the next Deniro, Pacino and Nicholson all rolled up into one amazing actor.
I absolutely agree with you. I don't know what it is, but I'm falling in love with Mickey Rourke. He was absolutely gorgeous back in the day, but he's still a good actor. And how his voice has gone deeper over the years...heck, I wasn't even born yet when this movie came out, LOL. ;p
William Hurt must've been thinking: "Who's this punk actor stealing every scene we do together?" Mickey Rourke makes acting look easy in this film. Very few people have a gift like that. Glad to see Mickey back in the business again. We can all look forward, hopefully, to more from Mr. Rourke.
O'Roark didn't steal this scene because its his scene. Count the words. Kasdan the Director was also Kasdan the writer. He created this scene for the O'Roark character. O'Roark has more to say and more to do here than Hurt. It's simply a matter of Hurt "giving stage" and O'Roark "taking stage".
This is right. up there for the best neo-noir film ever. I'd stack it right beside the Dennis Hopper directed 'Hot Spot' starring Don Johnson (his best role ever) and the amazingly hot Jennifer Connolly , Last Seduction with Linda Fiorentino and Peter Berg as well ... the list goes on and on ...
1:40 "What the f..k are you doing?? This not s..t for you to be messing with! Any time you try a decent crime, you've got 50 ways you can f..k up. If you can think of 25 of 'em, you're a genius."
Here's what I find amazing. This was only Mickey Rourke's 2nd film role and very 1st speaking role. It was William Hurt's 2nd film role. It was Kathleen Turner's 1st film role ever. They all gave superb performances as if they had been film stars for years. In addition to the marvelous acting, this was only Lawrence Kasdan's 2nd film as a screenwriter and 1st as director.
Wow! Incredible. Thanks for the info!
Great context
Yikes. Thnx for the info
In the MR bio I read he said when he auditioned for this part (screen time approx 6 mins) they offered him the part for $500. He wanted the role but held out for 1K and he got it.
That is crazy. I'm in my early 40s and I've known Mickey from 9&1/2, Marborol Man, Wrestler.. etc and even Wild Orchid (which my dad put in with his dirty movies to hide from me but I found anyway). I found out about Angel Heart a few weeks ago and have been binging Mickey Rourke movies ever since. He is an incredible talent.
WOW! Mickey was Brando & James Dean rolled into one. He is brilliant
More like was! Seen him lately??
My friend met Mickey Rourke during the time of his super-stardom. My buddy was a school teacher and Mickey asked him question after question about being a teacher. Said Rourke was (back then anyway) one of nicest, most down to earth guys he'd ever met. I agree....he was "untouchable" for 5 or 6 years.
Mickey Rourke will go down as one of the most underrated actors of all time.
In his prime he was better than a lot of the greats
He was on track to becoming the best ever in my opinion
if there is one person to blame it is himself for screwing up deliberately his career! Great actor but poor mind!
The Barbarian Brothers (of bodybuilding/movie fame) have always
spoken glowingly, lovingly about The Mick. Consider Mick a legend.
Told me how Mick wanted a million dollars, cash, before he got out
of a limo with Menahem Golan. "Ten dollar effing-bills." (to sign w/Cannon).
Those are the stories ye live for!
Mick's Diva-Era, and God Bless Mick for having one - incredible performances
continuing today - but still needs the right script. THE WRESTLER close but not quite.
Look up the term "scene stealer" and you'll find Mickey Rourke. He killed it in Body Heat, hands down.
Like Brad Pitt in Thelma and Louise
I have a great list of examples:
Christopher Walken - Pulp fiction
Alec Baldwin - Glengarry Glenn Ross
Bill Murray - Zombieland
William Hurt - History of Violence
Matthew Mcconaughey & Kyle Chandler - The wolf of wall street
Donnie Whalberg - The sixth sense
Colin Farrell - The batman
Alfred Molina - Boogie Nights
Ted Danson, too.
Mickey owned the screen - no debate from me, but if you want one of the GREATEST scene stealers, the GOAT if you will, a man that hijacked a movie, look no further than Orson Welles in *The Third Man* . When Welles made the *Cuckoo Clock* speech in the Ferris Wheel to Joseph Cotten, Orson stole the movie right then and there. The funny thing was, Welles wasn't even in the movie for the first hour or so, but when the Great Man made his grand appearance to make that speech in that amusement ride in post-WWII Vienna, he was on screen for perhaps 10 minutes, tops.
@@kevinriley2261You're absolutely bang on. Danson was completely under the radar but delivered a great performance.
There's something about Mickey Rourke - he always has such a magnetic screen presence, and always in a different way in each movie.
Interesting way to make an excellent point.
have you seen him lately???
It's called acting "chops"...
he looks horrible now
@@teresalinton5898 .....Acting was the subject, not looks.....Typical.
Everyone else in the movie seems to be acting in some 1950's stage play while Mickey Rourke's character feels like a real guy from down the street. What a performance.
Yes! Especially Kathleen Turner.. her acting is pretty bad maybe that's how her character is supposed to be I don't think she likes men at all in this movie, but William Hurts character is SO hot for her he doesn't notice she is just using him. But for me Mickey Rourke never disappoints! 💖😁
it's great they switch roles, i.e. the Criminal counseling the Attorney
on bad behavior LOL. Capped-by "Hey no smoking in here!"
Hey William hurt was pretty good!
@@inproper3952 I think Turner really nailed this role, it was her 1st film too.
Keep in mind the dialogue was written to be a very stylized “film noir” 1940’s style. That’s why the acting is the way it is. It’s SUPPOSED to be like that.
Mickey from '81-'87 was untouchable.
I agree 100%.
Sqeeazble
This movie is noooow avaаailable tо watсh hereeee => twitter.com/bb8746bc2b8f498b7/status/795842404804763648 Micccckeууyy Roourke in Body Heat 1981
Your Twitter account is suspended Carolina M
Angel Heart and I really like Wild Orchids from 1989 in which he met his future wife Kari Otis.
I read somewhere that Mickey Rourke was the very first person to get into the actors studio on the first try. I believe it. And he was absolutely gorgeous. I fell in love with him watching this movie.
14 people who disliked this don't know talent when they see it!!! Mickey completely stole this scene!! Greatly underated actor.
Still a brilliant actor and talent. One of my favorites. Still a beautiful person. And this movie was a masterpiece.
Everything about it, especially the score...❤👌
Mickey's voice back then :) Man, he was great.
'Don't do it, Counselor.' Rourke aced this scene! Saw this when the film first came out and was impressed with this unknown guy.
Me too
One of the coolest actors of his generation.
The whole cast of this movie was outstanding. Rourke, Turner, Dansen, Richard Crenna. What a lineup! Every one of them letter perfect. All the bit players were great, too.
And last but not least, William Hurt was in a class by himself.
RIP...William Hurt, great talent!! 😢❤
I looked up Hurt's IMDB a couple of years ago, and I was blown away at some of his movie roles. I had forgotten some of them. Everything was excellent. I think what separated him from many other American actors was the fact in addition to be talented, he got a lot of training at Julliard and the NYC stage.
Everyone in this movie is great. Even down to Ted Danson's dancing in the parking lot. Just an excellent movie. One of my top ten. Larry Kasdan's debut as director, coming after writing Empire Strikes Back and Raiders of the Lost Ark. Next, he'd write and direct The Big Chill. Not too shabby. Any one of those is a career high. All of them is one talented dude.
Mickey Rourke was on screen maybe 30 seconds, and I told myself, find out this guy's name; he is gonna be a star!
I thought this too, at the time.
@@bluecollarlit Like James Woods he was one of the best actors back then . Mickey Rourke however got an attitude towards Hollywood and also took up boxing. He also was obsessed with seeing himself humping. He later admitted he screwed up !
Thought the same thing when I saw Johnny Depp in "Platoon."
brilliant actor.
shame about his face
he had such a pretty face....
I watched an interview with him recently and he said acting came incredibly easy to him, the trouble was for a while he got bored not challenged and found it hard to respect some of the directors. He didn’t like the fame and went off the rails sadly. I hope he writes an autobiography, I think it would be very interesting 🙂
Mickey's was a ROCKSTAR in the 80's
brando level actor
Priyom Haider : yeah and really the only one. Other guys are great but Brando and Rourke were kind of set apart imo
Wonderful noir film, superb contributions from all the cast; these two short scenes are critical in the narrative of the movie. The soundtrack is one of John Barry’s best and adds to the growing unease and uncertainty
When you're getting good, sensible advice from a criminal lowlife you need to seriously reevaluate if your criminal plot is a good idea.
He ws BELIEVABLE in every movement, the intonation of every word.
It's hard to remember what it was like when movies were made for adults, with real actors. Mickey Rourke: feel like I am watching a hidden camera, not an actor, these can't be characters, because the movie is so damn good you believe it is real. William Hurt--doesn't even have to talk, he is a rel actor. That guy can sit there and not say a word, and not have to. Kathleen Turner--well, no one has ever topped her in this movie. Hollywood hasn't made a real movie in twenty years. Maybe longer. How can you compare a noir thriller like this to a damn comic book character.
Brigid What's funny is that Body Heat was inspired by earlier films. Maybe the Indy industry is still making films like this. You should see the Movie "The Lookout". Not exactly like this movie, but a film made for adults. BTW "Wonder Woman" was a blast! At least most of it. LOL..
Brigid
Damn Straight!
Hurt's expression when Rourke tells him he can't smoke is priceless... you can't coach great acting. It's innate IMHO...
True about the hidden camera. The first time I saw trancendental acting when Brando in a Streetcar. Feels like you're watching a documentary or blooper but the character is the actor.
The Drop . A real movie featuring Tom Hardy with New York accent and the late James Gandolifini . Need I say more ! Yes I can. As classic as Body Heat !
Bob Seager, Mickey Rourke, and a explosive device, what else could you ask for!
I recently rediscovered this film and have become obsessed again. It is such a great story and a great twist at the end. And Kathleen Turner's performance is just eternal in this film.
Mickey Rourke was an incredible actor, an amazing talented actor of the 1980s. He knew how to perform. He was a natural
Angel Heart, 9 1/2 weeks, Year of the dragon, Pope of Greenwich Village, Diner, some of my favorite 80s films.
I first saw Mickey in Diner. Such range. Such warmth. Such skill. Pauline Kael, in the New Yorker, told her readers to pay especial attention to him with Body Heat.
PS. Thanks for sharing❤
What an actor. Just unbelievably good.
I love this guy's loyalty and friendship. They were all loyal to him, ...except Matty.
I timed it. Three minutes and thirty-seven seconds total on screen and Mickey Rourke's film career was off and running.
I'm rewatching Body Heat for the first time in years. Mickey Rourke is insanely charismatic. He's not doing anything another actor might have done in the same role. He's not even movie star handsome. He's just pure onscreen magnetism.
Thanks for posting this scene. I forgot Mickey was in this movie. I remember seeing him and thinking "Who is this guy?" He's brilliant.
I saw this movie when it was released, and just loved it. Still do. The acting, the lighting, the editing, the cinematography, EVERYTHING about it. And then......this little 4 or 5 minutes of (Who the hell IS this??????) Mickey Rourke, just mesmerizing. As somebody else commented, for 6 or 7 years, he was the man. Some of his films were panned, but I enjoyed all of his performances. Year of the Dragon was, I thought, terrific. And Diner, and Wild Orchid, and the film with DeNiro and Lisa Bonet, and one of my favorite films ANYBODY ever made, The Pope of Greenwich Village. But when Mickey jumped off the screen right here, that was when it started, in my humble opinion.
❤👌👍
Watching him in "Body Heat" you can imagine great things happening for him that somehow never really materialized.
He played all of his roles so differently, very good acting skills - amazing. magnetic persona. there's really something about him that stayed with him to this day i can't really tell what is it. I've watched Angel Heart yesterday (cool film, entertaining, but a bit too obvious) and I thought that he was better than this movie - like he did too good job for this film. One of last scenes with "I know who I am" was incredible. He acted his gut out in it.
watch rumbke fish
Watch Bar Fly
Watch Harley Davidson and the Marlboro man 🤣🤣🤣🤣😂
Rourke's scenes were outstanding, especially the 'lockup' scene is memorable about 'the look on their faces'. Superb acting.
Mickey Rourke pulling of a V neck T-shirt in the 80s swag for days...
And a star is born...---Kevin Whelan
"There are fifty ways you can fuck up. If you think of 25, you're a genius... and you ain't no genius." Words to love by right there.
Mickey was so badass in this movie, I think he totally stole the William Hurt presence in about 5 minutes. He was charismatic + handsome actor back in the days. I still like him anyway.
They should have MICKEY WRITE THE SCREENPLAY on "What happens to
Mick's character from BODY HEAT." Mick just exploded after this role - holy crap.
Ahhh Mickey, such an outstanding actor...and he's actually convincing. He makes it effortless, not like the actors today. Those assholes can never hold his jockstrap.
There are certain actors, that come around that have it all. Movie star looks and incredibly great acting chops. Rourke had the whole package, but refused to fall into the game of just taking any role
Mickey is awesome in this. To quote Vincent gallo " Sean Penn wishes he was mickey Rourke!" LOL. So true mickey Def has that " it " factor that rarely comes along.
I love this scene; one of the best in this film.
This was so well made! Movie was fantastic. Superb acting I've seen about 4 times.
mickey rourke was excellent in this
Nelson Walker yes, he certainly was.
Mickey Rourke pretty much excellent in every role that he has ever performed in.
Body Heat is one of those movies where EVERYONE nailed their part, even the bit actors.....sheer excellence all the way around.
he was only in those 2 scenes, what made it so memorable was that in the movie pretty much everyone is lying and double-crosssing. the wife pretends to love her husband while plotting his murder; she enlists the aid of a local lawyer, someone not adverse to telling the convenient lie; and he in turn is lying to his colleagues and policeman/friend. the only one telling the truth straight up is the ex-con, mickey Rourke. he gives him the advice probably the whole audience was thinking--don't do it. probably the whole audience was thinking that, but then lost their mind when Kathleen turner came on screen....
"Are you listening to me axxhole? Because I like you." lol
pingkai I was just going to type this in -- thank you
Great movie. Great cast. No weak links at all. Mickey Rourke was sensational. It's a shame that scripts like this don't come along very often.
It was obvious Mickey was a great actor in this little scene.
"any time you try a decent crime, you got 50 ways you can fuck up, if you can think of 25 of them then you're a genius and you ain't no genius."
I loveee Mickey Omg its crazy how his voice has matured lol
He sounds like a kid here, very handsome and excellent acting...wow I miss his boyish charm. .❤❤😉😍
To compare Lawrence Kasdan's directoral debut with Body Heat to that of Orson Wells with Citizen Kane might be a bit lavish, but Body Heat is a great film with uniformly excellent performances. I can find no real flaws anywhere and have come back to enjoy this movie again year after year.
Bannington same here, this movie inspires me to write
Me too. Greatest movie of all time
This movie is essentially a remake of Billy Wilder's "Double Indemnity" and it pales in comparison. Hurt, Turner and Danson can't compare to MacMurray, Stanwyck and Edward G Robinson.
@@fosbury68nobody remembers that movie for good reason
What a great entrance for Mickey. You don't forget him. Key line from Mickey. "She had me how her how to rig it to a door -- with a little delay."
Kathleen Turner stunning. Home run right out of the
box - just an incredible turn for KT. Stunning performances
like being inside an Elmore Leonard novel.
Saw this movie when I was a kid on Showtime in 1982. Loved it.
he was blessed with excellent looks and talent.
Mickey Rourke the earlier years,he was a handsome man with natural good looks
It was and still is a great joy to watch these two key scenes after I discovered Rourke in Rumble Fish and The Pope of Greenwich Village back in high school.
He could do no wrong for a while until he did go wrong with Wild Orchid and Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man. I remember being completely devastated after that when it seemed like it was all over for him. Much like Brando in the 60s. But thankfully he clawed his way back with the Wrestler.
I wish he didn't fuck up his face though. I would have killed to have a face like that. Imagine the women he must have had in his day chasing him.
Mickey Rourke is not acting, he IS the great Teddy Lewis.
Huge talent--that Oscar should have been his!
I loved this movie, and this one one of my favorite scenes. Mikey WAS cool!! But so was william hurt, kathleen turner, richard crenna, ted danson, j.a. preston.... and all the rest. What a cool movie.
Agreed! I saw an interview from 1994 online and he sounds almost like he does now.....over time, including smoking, his voice grew deeper.
Spellbinding. If he didn't self destruct he would've been the greatest actor of all time without question. His career (even in shit films) from 81-86 were spellbinding.
Like they say. There are no small roles.
Two great actors. It shows you what great actors can do with a great script. We all know what happens when you give them a shit script.
his voice was way different
This was during his Marlon Brando phase, plus smoking 2 packs of cigarettes for 40 years certainly didn't help the voice either. ;-)
@@pacovl46 Exactly. He does the narration for the Bob Lazr movie and you'd hardly recognize him the way he sounds today.
he spoke very softly, which ironically gave his words more weight...
*Kudos sir...You posted him singing The Bob Seger ...Feels like a Number!!!..Yes!!!*
Love Mickey Rourke, so handsome in this one, and others 😘
He's so soft spoken
Mickey is so good in many roles I've seen him in. He kinda reminds me of James Dean or a little Brando. Dean's impact came after his death but Rourke was lovmmmfng it superstardom
wow, just like in Rumble Fish, he got so wonderful and soft voice! Love that:)
"I feel like a number". Great song. Great performance. All of them. Check out Rumble Fish with Mickey Rourke It's very cool. He was a soft way of speaking that's commanding. Nice work .
Ahh, so good. Makes Pitt, Norton and Co. look like hams.
It does. Everyone had high hopes for Edward Norton, that could bring back something from the old days of real acting, real dialogue, real scripts, his dinner scenes in American History X are still riveting, like it is so intense I feel like an eavesdropper. He hasn't made a film in years, and who can blame him for not wanting to play comic book characters. Brad Pitt, meh. The last director to make good use of him was Guy Richie.
A lot of similarities between Rourke and Norton...two extremely-talented "heir apparent" method actors who ruled for about a 6-year period and really captured the zeitgeist of their respective eras, but were ultimately undone by hubris and bad decisions.
Mickey is cooler than the other side of the pillow!
Gotta admit, Mickey had a small role to play in the movie and he aced it like a veteran player. Man was a charmer.
I love Mickey Rourke's film work
plus he has had several surgerys to repair the damage to his nose from boxing and it all takes a toll..but he will always be BRILLIANT....Mickey Rourke rocks !!!!
Como Mickey Rourke era lindo
Q homem maravilhoso
Just about my fave ever movie scene 'this arson is a serious business' - I love it!!!! Thanks for posting - saves me re-winding my DVD continuously...
William Hurt such a delicate performance - and you HURT for him
at the end. We didn't want him to lose.
they don't make them like this anymore.
They really don't...
MICKEY ROURKES THE HOTTEST PERSON IN THIS FILM!!! WOW!
he is adorable in this. Mickey is that is.
Mickey was so young here...very handsome!
Like a lot of movie fans who first saw Mickey in "Diner" and then "Body Heat" I was dead certain I had just seen the next Deniro, Pacino and Nicholson all rolled up into one amazing actor.
THE COOLEST AND JUST NATURAL
Now you reminded me, Mickey Roarke was great in this
I absolutely agree with you. I don't know what it is, but I'm falling in love with Mickey Rourke. He was absolutely gorgeous back in the day, but he's still a good actor. And how his voice has gone deeper over the years...heck, I wasn't even born yet when this movie came out, LOL. ;p
The song is called "Feel like a Number" by Bob Seger.
Playing on the big screen Hollywood Theater Portland Oregon next week! ❤❤❤
William Hurt won't need to concern himself with explosives anymore after today.
William Hurt must've been thinking: "Who's this punk actor stealing every scene we do together?"
Mickey Rourke makes acting look easy in this film. Very few people have a gift like that. Glad to see Mickey back in the business again. We can all look forward, hopefully, to more from Mr. Rourke.
O'Roark didn't steal this scene because its his scene. Count the words. Kasdan the Director was also Kasdan the writer. He created this scene for the O'Roark character. O'Roark has more to say and more to do here than Hurt. It's simply a matter of Hurt "giving stage" and O'Roark "taking stage".
What a scene What a scene Never forgot this film
Check out his cameo in The Pledge, it'll tear your heart out. BTW IMO it's Jack's best movie.
This is right. up there for the best neo-noir film ever. I'd stack it right beside the Dennis Hopper directed 'Hot Spot' starring Don Johnson (his best role ever) and the amazingly hot Jennifer Connolly , Last Seduction with Linda Fiorentino and Peter Berg as well ... the list goes on and on ...
classsic snene unreal mickey rourke off the charts and so unreal good looking
1:40 "What the f..k are you doing?? This not s..t for you to be messing with! Any time you try a decent crime, you've got 50 ways you can f..k up. If you can think of 25 of 'em, you're a genius."