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IMDbPro

Breezy

  • 1973
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
6.2K
YOUR RATING
William Holden and Kay Lenz in Breezy (1973)
A carefree young hippie, Edith Alice "Breezy" Breezerman, meets Frank Harmon, a divorced, middle-aged real estate agent. They fall in love, and each teaches the other a little about life.
Play trailer2:26
1 Video
71 Photos
Coming-of-AgeFeel-Good RomanceDramaRomance

A young girl runs away from home and meets a grouchy older man who reluctantly takes her in. Eventually they develop a romantic and affectionate relationship.A young girl runs away from home and meets a grouchy older man who reluctantly takes her in. Eventually they develop a romantic and affectionate relationship.A young girl runs away from home and meets a grouchy older man who reluctantly takes her in. Eventually they develop a romantic and affectionate relationship.

  • Director
    • Clint Eastwood
  • Writer
    • Jo Heims
  • Stars
    • William Holden
    • Kay Lenz
    • Roger C. Carmel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    6.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Clint Eastwood
    • Writer
      • Jo Heims
    • Stars
      • William Holden
      • Kay Lenz
      • Roger C. Carmel
    • 105User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:26
    Trailer

    Photos71

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    + 65
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    Top cast37

    Edit
    William Holden
    William Holden
    • Frank Harmon
    Kay Lenz
    Kay Lenz
    • Breezy
    Roger C. Carmel
    Roger C. Carmel
    • Bob Henderson
    Marj Dusay
    Marj Dusay
    • Betty Tobin
    Joan Hotchkis
    Joan Hotchkis
    • Paula
    Jamie Smith-Jackson
    Jamie Smith-Jackson
    • Marcy
    • (as Jamie Smith Jackson)
    Norman Bartold
    Norman Bartold
    • Man in Car
    Lynn Borden
    Lynn Borden
    • Overnight Date
    Shelley Morrison
    Shelley Morrison
    • Nancy Henderson
    Dennis Olivieri
    Dennis Olivieri
    • Bruno
    Eugene Peterson
    • Charlie
    Lew Brown
    Lew Brown
    • Police Officer
    Richard Bull
    Richard Bull
    • Doctor
    Johnnie Collins III
    • Norman
    Don Diamond
    Don Diamond
    • Maitre'D
    Scott Holden
    • Veterinarian
    Sandy Kenyon
    Sandy Kenyon
    • Real Estate Agent
    Jack Kosslyn
    Jack Kosslyn
    • Driver
    • Director
      • Clint Eastwood
    • Writer
      • Jo Heims
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews105

    7.06.2K
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    Featured reviews

    9beachneth

    Sticks in my mind

    William Holden is always a good reason to watch a film. I thought he was wonderful in this. And even though his face looked much older, his body certainly did not!!Nice!! He gave a terrific performance and was very cute in the cotton candy scene and when he was rolling up her sleeves(love that scene and dialogue). Kay Lenz was so natural and I thought their relationship was very believable. It's always nice to see a heart open up and let the happiness take over. No matter what your age, or differences. This is such a nice quiet movie and it really stays with me for days after watching it. Can't wait to buy it and watch it anytime.
    6bkoganbing

    Soured on the Female of the Species, until...........

    When William Holden took the part of Frank Harmon in Breezy it was a dress rehearsal for the same kind of role in Network where he was the older man who had fallen out of love with his wife and looking for something new and different. Of course his taste in women is a whole lot different. In Network Holden falls for the chic Network news executive Faye Dunaway and in Breezy he's entranced by the free spirited young hippie chick in the title role which Kay Lenz got her breakout role. These two women are about as different as they come.

    One thing that the story and director Clint Eastwood failed to do is give us all that much information about Breezy and how her character developed as it did. She's a type that was quite common in 1973 and it's assumed by the audience that the Vietnam War and the counterculture of free love makes her typical of young people. So when she drops into Holden's life by kind of forcing him to give her a lift in his car after a night of sex with Dennis Olivieri who picked her up.

    Holden's gone through a bitter and nasty divorce and we also are not quite sure about the whys and wherefores there. But Eastwood kind of takes care of it from his end when Holden and Lenz at a fancy restaurant encounter his ex-wife Joan Hotchkiss who's there with a date. Her one scene with Holden and Lenz is Breezy's most unforgettable point. This is one bitter and drunken women and while we don't really know what went wrong, it's clear why Holden wanted out of the marriage and why he's soured on the female of the species.

    There was a 33 year age difference between Holden and Lenz and most wouldn't give odds for this lasting, but you never know.

    Both Holden and Lenz give a good account of themselves making up for some plot deficiencies in Breezy.
    8foursticks-ypers

    Love can be found anywhere......

    I saw "Breezy" last night on the Universal HD channel. I hadn't seen it since the '70s when I saw the TV version. One would expect to enjoy a film such as "Star Wars" in HD-you wouldn't immediately think that a film like "Breezy" would benefit from this treatment. However, the crystal-clarity of the presentation brings back the look of Southern California of the early Seventies in all of its glory that can only really be appreciated by those who lived here back then. Seeing the locations in Topanga Canyon, Malibu, and the Valley; the hippies, the straights in their suits and ties, and the way the Generation Gap (back in the day when there REALLY was one) is treated is definitely a trip down memory lane.

    Anyone who has ever had a love that has dissolved into sadness with the passing of time (most of us) can fully relate to this film. This is a story about a young woman who has so much to share: her exuberance, her unique way of looking at the world, her evolving femininity, her inner and outer beauty. It's also about a powerful and successful man who is at the crossroads in his life. It is a film is about two people that, for a brief moment, are able to look beyond the constraints of societal disapproval and just simply appreciate what the other has to give.

    When I first saw this film, I was the same age as Breezy. Now thirty three years later, I'm getting close to Frank's age. Nobody prepares you for the passing of time. They don't teach you how to handle it in school, there's no handbook that you can refer to as the years slip away. No, the greatest challenge in life is something you can't prepare for, you can only live through it, and each person's journey is different from the rest. In that aspect, this film is a wise and knowing look at real life. Sure, there's some stilted dialogue, and some of the scenes are a bit too predictable. but if you scratch the surface, you'll find a diamond underneath.

    I am fortunate to be able to say that I see Kay Lenz frequently. I'd like everyone to know that she still has a unique beauty that is greatly unaffected by the passing of the years. Sure, she's not twenty anymore, but who is? She has an easy, graceful way about her that is a pleasure to experience, and just hearing her angelic voice, which has changed only slightly through the years, brings me back to that world of beach walks, undeveloped L.A. canyons, and six bedroom houses in the Valley that cost $88,000 (!!). For you non-actors out there, remember, Kay was playing a role. Breezy was a character, not a real person. However, if you were smitten with that character, you would not be disappointed to see the real Kay today. If anything, she is even more endearing in 2006 than she was in 1973.

    Let's face it folks, growing old stinks. Falling out of love is even worse. This film handles both of these issues with a grace and acceptance that is missing from most of the films made about these themes. I truly believe that there is something in this film for all who care to look for it.
    8AdamKey

    Wisdom & Happiness

    One of Clint Eastwood's early yet still obscure directorial efforts, `Breezy' gently and charmingly explores the nature of wisdom, which can be present in the most unusual of people and the real meaning of happiness, which is usually found in the oddest and least-expected of places, usually when one is not looking for it.

    Amid the smoldering cultural wreckage of the recently-ended 1960s with its nagging remnants of the shrill `don't trust anyone over 30' crowd and the seemingly still-unbridgeable `generation gap,' the odd and quirky relationship between the youthful, Ophelia-like Edith Alice `Breezy' Breezerman (Lenz) and the middle-aged Frank Harmon (Holden) successfully and simultaneously reveals several very simple but still frequently-ignored truths; that shrewdness and insight are not necessarily the sole province of the `aged' and that a carefree, happy spontaneity isn't and shouldn't be automatically restricted to the `young.' And, more subtly, we also are quietly reminded that neither wisdom nor happiness can realistically exist isolated from one another and that the bitter memories of our own respective pasts can often tragically prevent us from getting what we truly need the most.

    Like the Italian neo-realist director Sergio Leone under which Eastwood successfully toiled in the 1960s, the personalities of the film's characters are deliberately and slowly intensified but not over-presented or stereotyped, which adds to the power, insight and poignancy of this understated and well-produced film.
    big_bellied_geezer

    Great 70's movie from the Eastwood library of films...

    I have to echo some of the other comments here and say that this great film SHOULD BE RE-RELEASED ON VHS AND DVD!! ARE you listening Mr Eastwood??! A wonderful cross generational love story that doesn't ring a false note, I'm glad I was able to find a copy of the unedited for TV version since I've only seen a TV edited version some years ago and it stuck in my head....it's that good a film and I recommend it to all!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Danny Peary in his book "Guide for the Film Fanatic" (1987) states "not many people paid attention to the film upon release" while Richard Schickel in his book "Clint: A Retrospective" (2012) states that this movie in theaters "came and went virtually without notice". In a later interview, Eastwood would blame Universal for not marketing this film correctly, leading it to be a flop at the box office - even with its relatively low budget of only $750,000.
    • Goofs
      When Frank takes Breezy to the Pacific Ocean so she can see it for the first time, it is early morning. When they arrive, the sun is clearly behind the ocean, casting shadows onto the beach, not away from it, so the scene was shot at sunset, not sunrise. In the next scene, Breezy is seen in bright sunlight with the sun high in the sky.
    • Quotes

      Frank Harmon: I'm sorry... is that better?

      Breezy: I know I'm being a baby. So, don't say anything.

      Frank Harmon: I wouldn't think of it.

      Breezy: No lectures on maturity, either.

      Frank Harmon: Not a word shall pass my lips. I'll let you in on a secret... nobody matures. They just grow tired.

      Breezy: Y'know, Davy and Marcy have been living together for almost six months now. But, they don't have this... what we have. Davy tells her he loves her all the time, but... the words by themselves don't mean a hell of a lot. Marcy says that she loves him, but I think she has to say it because... then she doesn't realize how really alone she is.

      Frank Harmon: Maybe sometimes it's better to be alone.

      Breezy: Sure. Just like if you have something incurable, it's better to be dead.

      [chuckles]

    • Connections
      Referenced in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson: Orson Welles/Orson Bean/Carol Lawrence/Kay Lenz (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      Breezy's Song
      Lyrics by Marilyn Bergman and Alan Bergman

      Music by Michel Legrand

      Vocal by Shelby Flint

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 26, 1975 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Begegnung am Vormittag
    • Filming locations
      • 4946 Vanalden Avenue, Tarzana, California, USA(Frank Harmon's house, known at the 'Kimball House' or the 'Triangle House')
    • Production company
      • The Malpaso Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $750,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $17,753
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    William Holden and Kay Lenz in Breezy (1973)
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