Elle est journaliste et abandonne sa carrière par amour et pour sa famille. Lui est un chroniqueur de Playboy qui ne peut pas tout à fait abandonner ses anciennes combines. Et si cette relat... Tout lireElle est journaliste et abandonne sa carrière par amour et pour sa famille. Lui est un chroniqueur de Playboy qui ne peut pas tout à fait abandonner ses anciennes combines. Et si cette relation ne génère pas de brûlures d'estomac, rien ne le fera.Elle est journaliste et abandonne sa carrière par amour et pour sa famille. Lui est un chroniqueur de Playboy qui ne peut pas tout à fait abandonner ses anciennes combines. Et si cette relation ne génère pas de brûlures d'estomac, rien ne le fera.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total
- Annie
- (as Natalie Stern)
Avis à la une
Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson play two Washington journalists who meet at a wedding, and seemingly in the next scene are saying their own vows. The developments that follow in their relationship are just as abrupt and just as believable. The rapid-fire pace of their many separations and reconciliations stretches credibility to the limit, and it's hard to generate any interest in these characters when it was never clear what drew them together in the first place.
Streep does a fine job as magazine writer Rachel, but Nicholson's cad is all too familiar in his role of Mark, the womanizing columnist. Supporting players Stockard Channing, Maureen Stapleton, Jeff Daniels and Kevin Spacey, while uniformly excellent, seem underutilized and distract from the main plot.
"Heartburn" is worth watching, if only for its strong cast, but it's as memorable as leftover lasagna.
The story begins when Mark and Rachel (Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep) meeting. Soon they both marry and things seem swell. They have a child and another's on the way when she discovers he's cheating on her. Not surprisingly, the marriage cannot withstand this and the film is about this process of discovery, divorce and, eventually, life going on from there.
The film's star is Streep....and she's in the lion's share of the movie. Nicholson is definitely a secondary character in the story. Together, you have two very fine actors...with capable support from quite a few familiar character actors, such as Steven Hill, Stockard Channing, Jeff Daniels, Catherine O'Hara and quite a few others. It's a very high quality production with lovely acting and is well written. My only complaint, and it's not the film's fault, but the story is depressing and hard to watch. It's definitely a movie to watch with some Kleenex nearby. Well worth seeing if a bit unpleasant. And, perhaps all the more unpleasant because it's mostly true.
By the way, the theme song to this film received TONS of airtime back in the 80s. I remember how overplayed it was on the radio. Sadly, it's also way overplayed in the film...with clips of it being used and re-used and re-used repeatedly. It got to the point where I felt like screaming because it was played way too much.
The acting is superb by the whole cast and what could've become an over-dramatic film has wonderful moments of humor that works so well. Although the story is quite sad in parts the film is balanced out by a lot of humor. I found myself laughing out loud at this film a lot. Meryl Streep, Jack Nicholson are brilliant, and Carly Simon wrote the soundtrack which is also great. It is still well worth watching.
Overall rating: 7 out of 10.
Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson play a couple based on Ephron and Carl Bernstein. They meet, marry, settle in Washington, and have children. Streep's wedding-day jitters, it turns out, were amply justified; she discovers an affair between her husband and a social-climbing hostess.
Streep is so luminous and so natural that one may not realize until the end of the film how completely insipid and devoid of any distinguishing qualities her character is. "Rachel" changes from a wan, nervous divorcee (before meeting Nicholson's character) to an obsessively devoted wife and mother who keeps babbling about how happy she is.
Nicholson is well-cast as the rakish but (initially) endearing husband. The supporting cast reflects the expert hand of Juliet Taylor, Woody Allen's longtime casting director, who peppered it with many familiar faces, including Allen favorites Joanna Gleason, Caroline Aaron, and Karen Akers. Maureen Stapleton is particularly droll as Streep's shrink. Nineties audiences will enjoy seeing Kevin Spacey as a neurasthenic mugger.
The comedy in the film is somewhat uneven, but often extremely engaging, as in a running parody of "Masterpiece Theatre." And compare the spontaneous bravado of Nicholson's lopsided rendition of "Soliloquy" from Carousel (the comic highlight) to the forced quirkiness of Meg Ryan's tone-deaf "Surrey with the Fringe on Top" in When Harry Met Sally...
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMeryl Streep's daughter Mamie Gummer was used as Annie the baby.
- GaffesRachel pays for a flight with a credit card, on board the plane, but this is mostly likely on the Eastern Shuttle, between NYC and DC, which allowed you to pay on board. Remember that this movie was long before 9-11, back when air travel was more relaxed.
- Citations
Mark Forman: [taking a very pregnant Rachel to the hospital] Just keep breathing, you can do it.
Rachel Samstat: [panting] I don't want to do it, honey. Can't we get somebody else to do it?
- ConnexionsFeatured in At the Movies: Vamp/Pirates/Aliens/A Great Wall (1986)
- Bandes originales(When We Are Dancing) I Get Ideas
Written by Dorcas Cochran and Julio C. Sanders (as Julio Sanders)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Heartburn?Alimenté par Alexa
- Chapter Headings, an official version:
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El difícil arte de amar
- Lieux de tournage
- Apthorp Apartments - 2211 Broadway, Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(Rachel's father's apartment building)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 20 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 25 314 189 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 5 783 079 $US
- 27 juil. 1986
- Montant brut mondial
- 25 314 189 $US