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The Heat (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2013 American buddy cop action comedy film by Paul Feig
This article is about the 2013 comedy film. For other films titled Heat, seeHeat (disambiguation) § Films.

The Heat
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPaul Feig
Written byKatie Dippold
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRobert Yeoman
Edited by
Music byMichael Andrews
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • June 23, 2013 (2013-06-23) (New York City)
  • June 28, 2013 (2013-06-28) (United States)
Running time
117 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$43 million[3]
Box office$229.9 million[3]

The Heat is a 2013 Americanbuddy copaction comedy film directed byPaul Feig and written byKatie Dippold. It starsSandra Bullock andMelissa McCarthy, withDemián Bichir,Marlon Wayans,Michael Rapaport, andJane Curtin in supporting roles. The film centers onFBISpecial Agent Sarah Ashburn andBoston Detective Shannon Mullins, who must take down a mobster inBoston.

The film was released in the United States on June 28, 2013. It received mixed to positive reviews from critics and was a success at the box office, grossing $229 million worldwide against a $43 million budget.

Plot

[edit]

FBISpecial Agent Sarah Ashburn is an expert federal criminal investigator inNew York City. Her supervisor, who is considering her for promotion, assigns her to a mission inBoston. She meetsBoston Police DepartmentDetective Shannon Mullins. Their professional styles clash during their attempt to interrogate adrug dealer as well as their personality traits. Ashburn reluctantly agrees to work with Mullins. While Ashburn comes across as a level-headed professional, Mullins approaches every hassle in a hot-headed way with boorish manners which puts off Ashburn.

Ashburn and Mullins tail a nightclub manager to his business, Club Ekko, and place abug on his phone to get information on drug lord Simon Larkin. Leaving the club, Ashburn and Mullins are confronted byDEA Special Agents Craig and Adam, who have been working the Larkin case for months. A surveillance video in the DEA agents' van shows that Mullins's brother, Jason, whom Mullins had herself busted for drug-crimes and has recently been released from prison, appears to be connected to Larkin.

Ashburn convinces Mullins to visit her parents' home to ask Jason for information on Larkin. The family is angry with Mullins for arresting her brother, but Jason tips Mullins off about the body of a murdered drug dealer. Chemicals on the victim's shoes lead the women to an abandoned paint factory, where they witness a drug dealer being murdered by Julian Vincent, second-in-command of Larkin's organization. They apprehend Julian, but get no information on Larkin's whereabouts.

The women spend the evening bonding in a bar. A drunk Ashburn reveals that her history as afoster child is to blame for her bad attitude. The next morning Ashburn discovers that she has given her car away to a bar patron, but when he starts the car, it explodes.

Julian has escaped from custody and intends to harm Mullins' family, so Mullins moves them into a motel. Jason tries to join the Larkin organization in to help Mullins solve the case. He gives her a tip about a drug shipment coming in. Despite Mullins' reluctance, Ashburn calls in the FBI, which discovers that it is only a pleasure cruise ship. Larkin shoots Jason for informing the FBI about the supposed drug shipment. Jason is rendered comatose. Mullins and Ashburn fall out, with Mullins vowing to bring her brother's attacker to justice. They reconcile after arresting several drug dealers while trying to ascertain Larkin's whereabouts.

The women equip themselves with assault weapons from Mullins's personal arsenal, and infiltrate one of Larkin's warehouses, but are captured and bound. Julian is about to torture them when he gets called away by Larkin. Before leaving, Julian stabs Ashburn in the leg and leaves the knife in the wound. Mullins removes the knife and uses it to cut the rope binding her hands. Before she can cut the rope around her feet, they hear someone coming and Mullins puts the knife back in Ashburn's leg. It is Craig and Adam who enter. Craig begins to untie the two women, but when they reveal Jason is alive, Adam shoots Craig before revealing he is Larkin. Adam/Larkin has been working on his own case from inside the DEA for months.

Julian returns and Larkin orders him to kill Ashburn and Mullins while he visits the hospital to kill Jason. Mullins had put her arms behind her chair so she looks tied up. After Larkin leaves, Mullins frees herself, grabs the knife and attacks Julian. Ashburn throws herself to the floor whilst tied to her chair and he falls. Julian then grabs Ashburn and threatens to slit her throat as Mullins raises a gun. Ashburn head butts Julian backwards and incapacitates him. The duo race to the hospital to save Jason.

There, Mullins searches for Jason; Ashburn, hindered by her stab wound, lags behind. Mullins finds Jason's room, but is disarmed by Larkin, who is about to kill Jason. Ashburn, however, subdues Larkin by shooting him in the genitals. Ashburn requests to stay in theFBI's Boston field office, and has developed a strong friendship with Mullins.

Jason fully recovers from his coma. Mullins receives a commendation from the Boston Police Department. Members of her family are present, and they all cheer for her. Mullins has signed the back of Ashburn's yearbook, "Foster kid, now you have a sister".

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

The Heat is screenwriterKatie Dippold's feature film debut.[4] Dippold wrote thespec script on the side while fulfilling writing duties onParks and Recreation and, ultimately, it sold to producerPeter Chernin for $600,000 prior to even being presented to prospective bidders.[5] Inspired by thebuddy cop film genre, primarily examples such asRunning Scared (1986) andLethal Weapon (1987), Dippold set out to write a film in which the leads were portrayed by women.[6] As Dippold explains: "[In]Running Scared, they go down to the Caribbean and there's this montage of them on scooters, and there's a different hot girl on the back every time it cuts back to the scooter. And it just felt like, I don't want to be the girl on the back of the scooter. I want to be the awesome cop doing this stuff."[7]

Despite the success ofBridesmaids (2011), studio executives were still uncertain of an action film with a female-led cast. "There were people suspicious of this attempt, who thought girls won't want to see a cop action movie and guys won't want to see two girls holding guns and we'd cancel out our potential audience," said producerJenno Topping. "But we really believed, at the end of the day, it wouldn't be about gender as much as it would be about delivering a courageous action comedy with some heart to it."[8]

I don't like women acting like men; then it's not serving anybody. That's whyThe Heat was really important to me. Because I didn't want to do a romantic comedy. EvenBridesmaids had the romantic elements to it with theChris O'Dowd relationship, which worked great. What I liked about this one was that it didn't have any of that. It's just two professional women in the workforce who are great at their jobs and who are on this adventure.

Paul Feig, explaining what drew him to the film[9]

On May 19, 2012, directorPaul Feig and actressesSandra Bullock andMelissa McCarthy signed on to the film, after previously struggling to close deals due to scheduling and payment conflicts.[10] At this time, the film was calledThe Untitled Female Buddy Cop Comedy.[9]

Principal photography forThe Heat began on July 5, 2012, at then-Dudley Square (nowNubian Square) inBoston,Massachusetts.[11]

Music

[edit]

The soundtrack is composed byMichael Andrews who previously scored Feig'sBridesmaids andUnaccompanied Minors (2006).[12] A soundtrack album containing songs featured in the film was released on June 25, 2013, byLakeshore Records.[13] Of these songs, the album includes a brand new track entitled "Rock This" bySantigold.[14] Describing why he chose the songs featured in the film, Feig said: "My favorite part of filmmaking is finding the perfect music to complement what's happening on screen. And I wantedThe Heat to feel like a party. I wanted the audience to have fun. And since I have to watch a movie hundreds of times as I'm making it, I wanted to use music that I wouldn't get tired of. Every song in this film is a desert island song for me. I will never get sick of them."[15]

Release

[edit]
Bullock at the UK gala screening ofThe Heat in June 2013

While originally intended to be released on April 5, 2013, Fox pushed back the release date to June 28, 2013.[16] The film held its world premiere inNew York City on June 23, 2013.[17] It was released to theaters in the United States on June 28, 2013.

Marketing

[edit]

The first official full-length trailer of the film was released on October 27, 2012.[18]

Home media

[edit]

The Heat was released onDVD andBlu-ray Disc on October 15, 2013. The Blu-ray features an unrated version of the film, along with severalaudio commentaries: one with McCarthy and director Feig; one with the actors who portray the Mullins family; and one with the originalMystery Science Theater 3000 crew.[19]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

The Heat grossed $159.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $70.3 million internationally, for a worldwide total of $229.9 million, against a production budget of $43 million.[3]Deadline Hollywood calculated the film made a net profit of $61.8 million, when factoring together all expenses and revenues.[20]

The film earned $39.1 million in its opening weekend, finishing second at the box office behindMonsters University.[21]

Critical response

[edit]

OnRotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 65%, based on 182 reviews with an average rating of 6.2/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "The Heat is predictable, but Melissa McCarthy is reliably funny and Sandra Bullock proves a capable foil."[22] OnMetacritic, the film has a score of 60 out of 100 based on reviews from 37 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[23] Audiences polled byCinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.[24]

Positive reviews lauded Bullock and McCarthy's comedic performances. CriticChristy Lemire wrote: “the first produced script fromKatie Dippold gives her a smart, inspired and wickedly funny foundation from which to work, and she and Bullock enjoy gangbusters chemistry with each other.”[25]

Wesley Morris wrote inGrantland: “My skepticism going in had to do withThe Heat being a movie with two female characters that easily could have been played by a pair of men. But these two are like workplace sexism’s toxic side effects. Ashburn is the ambitious professional who lives only for promotions. Mullins is the anti-feminine ballbuster. Nobody likes either of them. And they don’t like each other until they do. This is generic genre stuff with a realish female friendship at its center: It’s a bra-mance.”[26]

Owen Gleiberman ofEntertainment Weekly gave the film a grade of B and wrote: “The director,Paul Feig, possesses a highly developed radar for the alternating currents of competition and camaraderie in female relationships. As he proved inBridesmaids (2011)…Feig understands how women who don’t like each other express their antipathy — in ways both more direct and less direct than what men do. InThe Heat, Feig stages scenes likeRichard Donner (Lethal Weapon) with a touch ofGeorge Cukor (The Women). He has made a piece of smash-and-grab policier pulp that, through the interplay of Bullock and McCarthy, spins to its own snarly/confessional feminine beat.”[27]

In contrast,Mick LaSalle ofThe San Francisco Chronicle called the film both formulaic and inspired, but acknowledged "the inspiration is in the combining of these two actresses."[28]In another mixed review, Keith Uhlich ofTime Out said Bullock and McCarthy deserved better material, and also criticized the trailer for giving the impression that this was a less funny film.[29]

Accolades

[edit]
AwardCategoryRecipient(s)Result
Alliance of Women Film JournalistsActress Most in Need of a New AgentMelissa McCarthyNominated
American Comedy AwardsBest Comedy Actress - FilmSandra BullockNominated
Melissa McCarthyWon
Funniest Motion PictureNominated
Teen Choice AwardsChoice Summer Movie Star: FemaleSandra BullockWon
Melissa McCarthyNominated
Choice Movie ChemistrySandra Bullock
Melissa McCarthy
Won
Choice Summer Movie ComedyNominated
Choice Movie: Hissy FitMelissa McCarthyNominated
Critics' Choice Movie AwardsBest Actress in a ComedyNominated
Sandra BullockNominated
Best Comedy MovieNominated
Golden Trailer AwardsDon LaFontaine Award for Best Voice Over20th Century FoxNominated
Best Comedy TV Spot20th Century Fox
Open Road Entertainment
Nominated
MTV Movie AwardsBest Comedic PerformanceMelissa McCarthyNominated
People's Choice AwardsFavorite Comedic MovieWon
Favorite Comedic Movie ActressMelissa McCarthyNominated
Sandra BullockWon
Favorite Movie DuoSandra Bullock
Melissa McCarthy
Nominated
St. Louis Gateway Film Critics AssociationBest Film-ComedyNominated
Women Film Critics CircleBest Comedic ActressMelissa McCarthyWon

Cancelled sequel and proposed spin-off

[edit]
"The Heat 2" redirects here; not to be confused withHeat 2.

Shortly after the film's release, director Feig announced that the film would be followed by asequel.[30][31] In October 2013, Bullock stated that she will not return for the sequel and the project itself was put on hold.[32][33] Instead, the sequel was reportedly being replaced by a spin-off film that will centre aroundJamie Denbo andJessica Chaffin's characters Beth and Gina from the first film.[34][35]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"The Heat (2013)".AFI Catalog of Feature Films. RetrievedFebruary 19, 2021.
  2. ^"THE HEAT (15)".British Board of Film Classification. April 26, 2013. Archived fromthe original on May 4, 2013. RetrievedDecember 17, 2018.
  3. ^abc"The Heat (2013)".Box Office Mojo. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  4. ^Fleming, Mike Jr. (April 3, 2013)."'The Heat' Scribe Katie Dippold Makes 7-Figure Sale To Chernin Entertainment".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  5. ^Zakarin, Jordan (June 27, 2013)."How To Become Rich And Successful By Playing "GoldenEye" On N64".BuzzFeed. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  6. ^Rosen, Christopher (June 27, 2013)."Katie Dippold On 'The Heat' & How Concussions Helped Her Write The Summer's Funniest Action-Comedy".The Huffington Post. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  7. ^Czajkowski, Elise (June 27, 2013)."Talking to Katie Dippold About 'The Heat', Female Camaraderie, and Lots of Swearing".Splitsider. Split Sider. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  8. ^Kohen, Yael (April 3, 2013)."It's Kind of a Funny Story".Marie Claire. p. 3. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  9. ^abRosen, Christopher (June 24, 2013)."Paul Feig On 'The Heat' & Post-'Bridesmaids' Hollywood: 'We're Not Advancing As Much As We Should'".The Huffington Post. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  10. ^Sneider, Jeff (May 19, 2012)."Bullock, McCarthy tapped for cop pic".Variety. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  11. ^Mark Shanahan; Meredith Goldstein (July 6, 2012)."'The Heat' with Sandra Bullock begins filming in Dudley Square".The Boston Globe. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  12. ^"Michael Andrews Scoring Paul Feig's 'The Heat'". Film Music Reporter. October 10, 2013. RetrievedJune 28, 2013.
  13. ^"'The Heat' Soundtrack Details". Film Music Reporter. May 27, 2013. RetrievedJune 28, 2013.
  14. ^Rahman, Ray (June 24, 2013)."Hear Santigold's 'Rock This' for the Sandra Bullock/Melissa McCarthy comedy 'The Heat'- EXCLUSIVE".Entertainment Weekly. RetrievedJune 28, 2013.
  15. ^"THE HEAT Soundtrack to be Released 6/25". BWWMoviesWorld. June 6, 2013. RetrievedJune 28, 2013.
  16. ^Han, Angle (January 29, 2013)."Paul Feig's 'The Heat' Moves to Summer"./Film. RetrievedJune 27, 2013.
  17. ^"Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy Hit NYC for "The Heat" Premiere".ABC News Radio.KMBZ. June 24, 2013. RetrievedJune 28, 2013.
  18. ^"'The Heat' Trailer: Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy Star as Awkward Police Duo".The Hollywood Reporter. November 16, 2012. RetrievedNovember 21, 2015.
  19. ^"News: Heat, The (US - DVD R1 | BD RA)".DVDActive.ServInt. September 4, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 15, 2013.
  20. ^D'Alessandro, Anthony (July 18, 2016)."'Ghostbusters': How Its $46M Opening Creates A Quandary – Weekend Box Office Postmortem".Deadline Hollywood. RetrievedApril 11, 2018.
  21. ^Subers, Ray (June 30, 2013)."Weekend Report: 'Monsters' Repeats, 'Heat' Sets Fire to 'White House'".IMDb.Box Office Mojo. RetrievedJuly 28, 2013.
  22. ^"The Heat (2013)".Rotten Tomatoes.Fandango Media. RetrievedMay 8, 2025.
  23. ^"The Heat reviews".Metacritic.CBS Interactive. RetrievedJuly 8, 2013.
  24. ^"CinemaScore".cinemascore.com. Archived fromthe original on December 20, 2018. RetrievedDecember 18, 2018.
  25. ^Lemire, Christy (June 28, 2013)."The Heat".Christy Lemire. RetrievedMay 14, 2022.
  26. ^Morris, Wesley (June 27, 2013)."Capital Ideas".Grantland. RetrievedMay 14, 2022.
  27. ^Gleiberman, Owen (July 10, 2013)."The Heat".EW.com. RetrievedMay 14, 2022.
  28. ^Mick LaSalle (June 27, 2013)."'The Heat' review: Action, comedy, buddy pic in 1 - SFChronicle.com".San Francisco Chronicle.
  29. ^Keith Uhlich."The Heat: movie review2013, directed by Paul Feig".Time Out New York.
  30. ^Bradford, Evans."There's Already a Sequel for 'The Heat' in the Works",SplitSider, Retrieved on April 23, 2013.
  31. ^MovieInsider"The Heat 2", 04-03-2013.
  32. ^Rosen, Christopher."Sandra Bullock Says She's Not Doing A Sequel To 'The Heat'",Huffington Post Retrieved October 2, 2013.
  33. ^Lang, Brent."Sandra Bullock Says She's Not Doing A Sequel To 'The Heat': I've Done Two Horrible Ones Already",The Wrap Retrieved October 1, 2013.
  34. ^Puchko, Kristy."Forget The Heat 2 - A Spinoff Is In The Works",Cinema Blend Retrieved November 15, 2013.
  35. ^Fleming, Mike Jr."Paul Feig Hatches 'The Heat' Spinoff, Focusing On Jamie Denbo and Jessica Chaffin's Characters From Melissa McCarthy-Sandra Bullock Comedy",Deadline Retrieved November 15, 2013.

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