Movie Background

Heat

Obsessive master thief Neil McCauley leads a top-notch crew on various daring heists throughout Los Angeles while determined detective Vincent Hanna pursues him without rest. Each man recognizes and respects the ability and the dedication of the other even though they are aware their cat-and-mouse game may end in violence.

Director(s)

Terry Miller

Michael Mann

Douglas S. Ornstein

Ami Canaan Mann

Cate Hardman

Michael Waxman

Where to watch

Netflix

Netflix

Subscription

JioHotstar

JioHotstar

Subscription

Cast & crew

Ashley Judd

Ashley Judd

Charlene Shiherlis

Natalie Portman

Natalie Portman

Lauren Gustafson

Mykelti Williamson

Mykelti Williamson

Drucker

William Fichtner

William Fichtner

Roger Van Zant

Thomas Rosales Jr.

Thomas Rosales Jr.

Armored Truck Driver

Michael Waxman

Michael Waxman

-

Michael Mann

Michael Mann

-

Robert Miranda

Robert Miranda

Cusamano (uncredited)

Ted Levine

Ted Levine

Bosko

Amy Brenneman

Amy Brenneman

Eady

Al Pacino

Al Pacino

Lt. Vincent Hanna

Robert De Niro

Robert De Niro

Neil McCauley

Xander Berkeley

Xander Berkeley

Ralph

Rick Avery

Rick Avery

Armored Guard #2

Diane Venora

Diane Venora

Justine

Tom Noonan

Tom Noonan

Kelso

Tom Sizemore

Tom Sizemore

Michael Cheritto

Kenny Endoso

Kenny Endoso

Bartender

Martin Ferrero

Martin Ferrero

Construction Clerk

Manny Perry

Manny Perry

Grocery Store Cop (uncredited)

Dennis Haysbert

Dennis Haysbert

Donald Breedan

Bud Cort

Bud Cort

Solenko, Restaurant Manager (uncredited)

Jon Voight

Jon Voight

Nate

Cate Hardman

Cate Hardman

-

Jeremy Piven

Jeremy Piven

Dr. Bob

Henry Rollins

Henry Rollins

Hugh Benny

Jimmy Star

Jimmy Star

Restaurant Patron (uncredited)

Mario Roberts

Mario Roberts

Bank Guard #1

Val Kilmer

Val Kilmer

Chris Shiherlis

Terry Miller

Terry Miller

Children's Hospital Nurse

Susan Traylor

Susan Traylor

Elaine Cheritto

Hazelle Goodman

Hazelle Goodman

Hooker's Mother

Wendy L. Walsh

Wendy L. Walsh

News Anchorwoman

Jerry Trimble

Jerry Trimble

Schwartz

Danny Trejo

Danny Trejo

Trejo

Patricia Healy

Patricia Healy

Bosko's Date

Ricky Harris

Ricky Harris

Albert Torena

Tone Loc

Tone Loc

Richard Torena

Paul Herman

Paul Herman

Sergeant Heinz

Viviane Vives

Viviane Vives

Castilian Woman (uncredited)

Kathryn Mullen

Kathryn Mullen

Doreen Daniel, Diner Patron (uncredited)

Dan Martin

Dan Martin

Harry Dieter

Hank Azaria

Hank Azaria

Alan Marciano

Max Daniels

Max Daniels

Shooter at Drive-in

Kevin Gage

Kevin Gage

Waingro

Brian Libby

Brian Libby

Captain Jackson

Gloria Koehn Straube

Gloria Koehn Straube

Beach Walker (uncredited)

Begonya Plaza

Begonya Plaza

Anna Trejo

Iva Franks-Singer

Iva Franks-Singer

Waitress (uncredited)

Heidi Miller

Heidi Miller

Extra (uncredited)

Steven Ford

Steven Ford

Officer Bruce

Niki Haris

Niki Haris

Marcia Drucker

Wes Studi

Wes Studi

Casals

Monica Lee Bellais

Monica Lee Bellais

Nurse (uncredited)

Cindy Katz

Cindy Katz

Rachel

Kim Staunton

Kim Staunton

Lillian

Ray Buktenica

Ray Buktenica

Timmons

Brad Baldridge

Brad Baldridge

Children's Hospital Doctor

Andrew Camuccio

Andrew Camuccio

Dominick

Brian Camuccio

Brian Camuccio

Dominick

Vince Deadrick Jr.

Vince Deadrick Jr.

Driver at Drive-in

Charles Duke

Charles Duke

Cop #5

Thomas Elfmont

Thomas Elfmont

Desk Clerk Cop

Kimberly Flynn

Kimberly Flynn

Casals' Date

Farrah Forke

Farrah Forke

Claudia

Hannes Fritsch

Hannes Fritsch

Miracle Mile Bartender

Amanda Graves

Amanda Graves

Linda Cheritto

Emily Graves

Emily Graves

Anita Cheritto

Ted Harvey

Ted Harvey

Detective #2

Bill McIntosh

Bill McIntosh

Armored Guard #1

Rick Marzan

Rick Marzan

Basketball Player

Paul Moyer

Paul Moyer

News Anchorman

Daniel O'Haco

Daniel O'Haco

Detective #1

Phillip Robinson

Phillip Robinson

Alphonse

Rainell Saunders

Rainell Saunders

Dead Hooker

Kai Soremekun

Kai Soremekun

Prostitute

Rey Verdugo

Rey Verdugo

Vegas Cop

Yvonne Zima

Yvonne Zima

Hostage Girl

Peter Blackwell

Peter Blackwell

Bar Couple (uncredited)

Trevor Coppola

Trevor Coppola

Restaurant Patron (uncredited)

Annette Goodman

Annette Goodman

Prostitute (uncredited)

Mick Gould

Mick Gould

1st SIS Detective in the Hallway (uncredited)

Mary Kircher

Mary Kircher

Police Woman (uncredited)

David Koseruba

David Koseruba

Mustached Cop with Capt. Jackson on Roof (uncredited)

Darin Mangan

Darin Mangan

Grocery Store Employee (uncredited)

Melissa S. Markess

Melissa S. Markess

Police Woman (uncredited)

Andre McCoy

Andre McCoy

Man at Party (uncredited)

Darren Melton

Darren Melton

Bookstore Patron (uncredited)

Jimmy N. Roberts

Jimmy N. Roberts

Road-blockade Cop (uncredited)

Tim Werner

Tim Werner

Bank Guard (uncredited)

Douglas S. Ornstein

Douglas S. Ornstein

-

Ami Canaan Mann

Ami Canaan Mann

-

Details

GenresCrime, Drama, Action
Runtime2h 50 mins
Released on15 Dec 1995
Languageen
Age RatingA
Produced inUnited States of America

Reviews

John Chard

10/10

You don't live with me, you live among the remains of dead people. Heat is written and directed by Michael Mann. It stars Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Val Kilmer, Jon Voight, Tom Sizemore, Diane Venora, Ashley Judd, Amy Brennerman and Danny Trejo. Music is scored by Elliot Goldenthal and cinematography by Dante Spinoti. Big time thief Neil McCauley (DeNiro) is after one last major score before he retires, but hot on his tail is Vincent Hannah (Pacino), a cop equally and methodically as driven as he is himself. In the build up to Heat's release, much was made of it being the first on screen pairing of DeNiro and Pacino. A mouthwatering prospect for sure, it proved to be worth the wait and unfolds as a lesson in restrained acting with two modern greats affording each other the respect that was due. What we didn't realise in the build up to the film's release, was that it would prove to be one of the greatest cops and robbers movies of all time, brought to us by an auteur director whose kink for realism and commitment to research stands him out from much of the modern directing pack. Rarely does a film come together as one, where all the cogs of the engine are in tune, but Heat is one such picture. From cast performances to visual aesthetics, to screenplay and actual substance of story, Heat is as meticulous as it is thrilling. There are a myriad of characters brilliantly stitched together in one de-glamorised City of Angels, as plot develops, and each character and their crumbling relationships come under inspection, we are witnessing a coarse viewpoint of human nature, where people's lives are ended or defined by their choices. Everywhere you look, here, there are folk cracking under the strain of being exposed to high end crime, dreams, hopes and happiness are unlikely to be achieved, and this is on both sides of the law. For Heat, Mann fuses the tonal and visual ticks of Manhunter with that of the adrenalin rushes from Last of the Mohicans, with the former gorgeously born out by Spinoti's pin sharp photography, the latter thrillingly realised by Mann's skill at action set pieces. Once again word of mouth about the key heist and shoot out in the film led to high expectation, and again there is no disappointment. L.A. becomes a battle ground, rapid gunfire punctures the air, cars swerve and crash, bodies fall, visually and aurally it drags you to the edge of your seat, an extended action sequence fit to sit with the best of them. The kicker as well is that because Mann has been so detailed in his characterisations, we care about what happens to all parties, we understand motives and means. Which in a film with such a huge support cast is quite an achievement. There is enough in Heat to fill out a dozen other cops and robbers films, fans of neo-noir and crime films in general are spoilt supreme here. It's not rocket science really, put a group of great actors together, give them an intelligent script to work from and let them be guided by a director who will not sit still, and you get a great film. Heat, the ultimate predator and prey movie, where from beginning to end it refuses to be lazy or cop out, and energy and thought seeps from every frame. 10/10

Gimly

8/10

Partly I'm disappointed in myself for taking so long to watch _Heat_ because it's such a massive influence on one of the best movies ever (_The Dark Knight_), and one my favourite video games ever (_Payday: The Heist_). Mostly though, I'm disappointed in myself for taking so long to watch _Heat_ because I've denied myself for so long the privilege of having seen such a great fucking crime movie. _Final rating:★★★★ - An all round good movie with a little something extra._

The Movie Mob

6/10

**Heat earns its way onto top 25 lists for heist films and 90s action, but its faults keep it low in the rankings.** Heat gets so many things right. The stellar cast continues to surprise me with all the different names and faces I recognize when I watch it. The action is exceptional, especially considering this film is over 25 years old. The shoot-out in the middle of the movie is riveting, raw, and powerfully hard-hitting. The story made it impossible to guess exactly how it would turn out - was the cop going to get his man, or was the mastermind thief going to get away? Heat belongs on best heist and action movie lists but not nearly as high as many lists rank it. Heat carries some annoying faults. The ending of the film is abrupt and unsatisfying. The runtime is at least 45 minutes too long. The biggest frustration was Al Pacino’s performance. He was so over the top that his character felt like he was in the wrong movie. Every other action delivered genuine and serious performances while Pacino was screaming about women’s butts. What? Heat is a good film, but these low points keep it from being great.

tensharpe

9/10

“Heat” directed by Michael Mann is a crime epic based on the exploits of real life criminal Neil McCauley.  Although mostly fictional, with the events and character having real life basis, Mann is able to elevate this crime drama above other films in a similar genre.  Robert De Niro plays Neil McCauley, a knowledgable experienced criminal who’s skill set includes playing cat and mouse with the police. After a robbery ends in a street gunfight McCauley and his gang manage to evade the police. Lieutenant Vincent Hanna ( Al Pacino ) determined to catch the criminals, skilfully assesses the crime scene and immediately “ Heat” begins to draw parallels between the two lead characters.  Filmed entirely on location “Heat” is a gripping, tension filled viewing experience that has the viewer uncertain who to route for throughout the entire proceedings.

Filipe Manuel Neto

8/10

**A good film, with great actors at the highest level, a little different from other action films and that deserves to be revisited these days.** If there's one thing that can be a good pastime, it's an action movie, with ingenious and fearless thieves and police willing to do anything to arrest them. That's what this movie is, basically, and although we've seen many movies with this recipe, neither does it become tiresome, nor do the movies become boring or less interesting. Michael Mann is today a director with solid action credits, thanks in part to this film, but also to “The Insider” and “Collateral”. Before this film, he had shown extraordinary competence in directing “Last of the Mohicans”, a film that I consider an example for harmonizing creative freedom, absolute historical rigor and a great respect for the source material. In this film, Mann does not disappoint and once again gives us solid, consistent, committed and creative direction. For the cast, several great actors with given evidence were called. Of course, it's not possible for everyone to have the same degree of protagonism, but I think that each one of them had the time and material necessary to do a very well done job. Al Pacino and Robert De Niro clearly stand out from the crowd. In addition to having the central characters of the plot, they are both incredibly intense, charismatic, explosive. It's worth watching this duel of the titans. Pacino is the most unlikable and difficult to like because he is constantly on the verge of a nervous breakdown. De Niro is kinder and more human, so it's not hard to root for him. In addition to them, we have the excellent work of Val Kilmer and Jon Voight, and a well accomplished performance of Tom Sizemore. The film also features appearances by Danny Trejo (almost playing himself) and a teenager named Natalie Portman, among many other well-known names. Despite everything, this film has little action, many will say. And really, the priority that was given here is the development of the characters and each of their stories, so that the action is more concentrated in some specific sequences like the anthological sequence of the robbery and shooting in the middle of the street. I liked that, and I liked that this movie tried to be different in a positive way. My only criticism is the slow and tiresome pace that the film assumes most of the time. With a slightly faster pace thanks to some surgical cuts, the film would become lighter. Filmed in Los Angeles, in the city itself (I can only imagine what a logistical nightmare it must have been!), the film couldn't have better sets and costumes, striving for total realism. The special effects work very well, the cinematography is wonderful, and the film is visually very elegant and mature.

CinemaSerf

/10

We know pretty much from the start who is who, here. “McCauley” (Robert De Niro) is a fastidious criminal who uses his gang of regulars to stage intricate robberies with relative impunity. His counter is police lieutenant “Vincent” (Al Pacino) who is trying to track them down - but from a bit of a standing start. These guys never leave any clues! Then, one tiny slip-up during an armoured car robbery gives the tenacious detective a glimmer of hope that might just lead the cops to one of his number. Meantime, on the personal front “Vincent” is having trouble engaging with his wife “Justine” (Diane Venore) who is sick of his constant absences and late shift work, whilst the determinedly bachelor that is “McAuley” befriends a girl in a diner and “Charlene” (Ashley Judd) soon gets under his skin, giving him a new reason to reassess what he wants from life. It’s all going to come down to one last job, and with the police now breathing down their neck it’s going to be a matter of wile, guile and wits as to which might prevail - and Michael Mann manages to build and then sustain quite a degree of tension leading to an exciting last twenty minutes whilst still keeping the jeopardy going right to the end. There are quite a few solid veins of sub-plots contributing here, too, that allow Val Kilmer and Kevin Gage to take some of the limelight and relieve a little of the burgeoning tension between De Niro and Pacino, and though I did think the latter man here did overact annoyingly at times, the whole ensemble delivers a superior heist movie that just goes to show that it’s never the actual robbing that causes the problems, it’s the getting away with it.

JackthePGL

10/10

Heat is known to be one of Michael Mann's masterpiece and in doing a re-review just like I was thinking of some of my older ones I'm going to be redoing just to make them long which is so special to me and all of you guys. Starring a huge amount of cast such as Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer and many more, this is going to be one hell of a ride. Neil McCauley played by Robert De Niro, is a professional thief and he and his crew, Chris Shiherlis, Michael Cheritto, Gilbert Trejo, Waingro who is newly hired, are both set out to rob a million dollars in bearer bonds from an armored car. During the heist, Waingro kills a guard without provocation, forcing the crew to eliminate the other two guards. McCauley prepares to kill Waingro in retaliation for the deaths of the guards, but he escapes. Vincent Hanna played by Al Pacino, and his team investigate the robbery. He has a wife, Justine who he and her had a strained relationship and he struggles to connect with his stepdaughter, Lauren played by Natalie Portman. McCauley however begins a relationship as well with Eady who is a graphic designer. So now the two are going to battle each other to the very end while stop at nothing. I remember seeing Heat at a young age at the right one and in later years back in 2016 since I got an IMDB account and looking at the Top 250 Movies of all time I got pumped. I didn't realise how good the film really is along with the others at that time such as Casino, Se7en, The Thing, The Usual Suspects, L.A. Confidential, American History X and the Alien films. Now I thought I was going to do so by watching it multiple times which I did and it never disappoint. This is what makes a movie so special. It's so impeccable. Seeing Al Pacino and Robert De Niro together in one movie is so mind-blowing. Seeing both two fantastic actors in one movie together is what makes them a duo. I think you'll remember seeing them so young in The Godfather Part II but they never share a scene together but now you see them in here now and next time you'll seeing them again in Righteous Kill and Martin Scorsese's The Irishman. Seeing them for the first time ever in one scene is in the diner scene is what makes the movie so special and you'll know they're bestest best friends for life BTS. Al Pacino is having a blast in this film. His lines is what makes it so memorable, it's crazy. "I'm angry. I'm very angry, Ralph. You know, you can ball my wife if she wants you to. You can lounge around here on her sofa, in her ex-husband's dead-tech, post-modernistic bulls**t house if you want to. But you do not get to watch my f**king television set!" "Why'd I get mixed up with that b***h?" "Cause she's got a GREAT ASS... and you got your head ALL THE WAY UP IT! Ferocious, aren't I? When I think of asses, a woman's ass, something comes out of me." The film however does provides one of the best action scenes in film history even years ago in one morning I'm being told to turn the volume down 'cause they're in bed. Of course I said years ago that the ending chase is thrilling and it sort've reminds me of me staying outside in the dark. Oh, those days. I have no problems with this film, it's so memorable and it's definitely my favorite of the few so here's that. I love everything about this movie, the action scenes, the pacing, the moments of silence even towards the end, just everything no doubt. I love Heat and I love both of these leading actors. Since I have no problem that this is nearly three hours long, I can watch it in one day without a fail like with Casino, Scarface, The Godfather Part I & II, Dances with Wolves, The Wolf of Wall Street and of course, Lawrence of Arabia. This is definitely one of Michael Mann's best films of all time.

daniel_carr

6/10

I'm more of a sci-fi fantasy guy, but the story was good a bit predictable and the movie was very long. They had great actors, good action sequences and kept the viewers attention the whole way through. So enjoyable but not epic. The characters emotional development was done well.

All Trailers

Original Theatrical Trailer

Part of the Series