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Les saisons du coeur

Original title: Places in the Heart
  • 1984
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Sally Field, Yankton Hatten, and Gennie James in Les saisons du coeur (1984)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:37
2 Videos
70 Photos
Coming-of-AgePeriod DramaDrama

In north Texas in the 1930s, a widow with two small children tries to save her small 40-acre farm with the help of a blind boarder and an itinerant black handyman.In north Texas in the 1930s, a widow with two small children tries to save her small 40-acre farm with the help of a blind boarder and an itinerant black handyman.In north Texas in the 1930s, a widow with two small children tries to save her small 40-acre farm with the help of a blind boarder and an itinerant black handyman.

  • Director
    • Robert Benton
  • Writer
    • Robert Benton
  • Stars
    • Sally Field
    • Lindsay Crouse
    • Ed Harris
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Benton
    • Writer
      • Robert Benton
    • Stars
      • Sally Field
      • Lindsay Crouse
      • Ed Harris
    • 80User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 13 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:37
    Trailer
    Places In The Heart: I Was Afraid You Wasn't Going To Make It
    Clip 1:43
    Places In The Heart: I Was Afraid You Wasn't Going To Make It
    Places In The Heart: I Was Afraid You Wasn't Going To Make It
    Clip 1:43
    Places In The Heart: I Was Afraid You Wasn't Going To Make It

    Photos70

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    + 64
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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Sally Field
    Sally Field
    • Edna Spalding
    Lindsay Crouse
    Lindsay Crouse
    • Margaret Lomax
    Ed Harris
    Ed Harris
    • Wayne Lomax
    Amy Madigan
    Amy Madigan
    • Viola Kelsey
    John Malkovich
    John Malkovich
    • Mr. Will
    Danny Glover
    Danny Glover
    • Moze
    Yankton Hatten
    • Frank
    Gennie James
    Gennie James
    • Possum
    Lane Smith
    Lane Smith
    • Albert Denby
    Terry O'Quinn
    Terry O'Quinn
    • Buddy Kelsey
    Bert Remsen
    Bert Remsen
    • Tee Tot Hightower
    Ray Baker
    Ray Baker
    • Royce Spalding
    Jay Patterson
    Jay Patterson
    • W.E. Simmons
    Toni Hudson
    Toni Hudson
    • Ermine
    De'voreaux White
    De'voreaux White
    • Wylie
    • (as DeVoreaux White)
    Jerry Haynes
    Jerry Haynes
    • Deputy Jack Driscoll
    Lou Hancock
    Lou Hancock
    • Dispossessed Lady
    Shelby Brammer
    • Ruby
    • Director
      • Robert Benton
    • Writer
      • Robert Benton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews80

    7.414.7K
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    Featured reviews

    jo-104

    I went back and remembered

    This is a great film. I remembered just how it was when I was growing up. Every scene is magnificant. This is how Texas was during this era. Edna Spaulding could have been one of my relatives. Sally Field does not act Edna Spaulding, she is Edna Spaulding.
    10bkoganbing

    Our Own Blessed Assurance Of A Beautiful Garden Of Fellowship

    When Robert Benton wrote and directed Places in the Heart he created his own Citizen Kane. Like Orson Welles he will spend the rest of his life trying to better it and won't succeed.

    Places in the Heart takes place in Waxahachie, Texas in 1935 and our director was born there in 1932. The film is a personal vision of his childhood in that small Texas town. It bears a whole lot of resemblance to To Kill a Mockingbird, except that the adult protagonist is not a widower lawyer, but the widowed wife of a sheriff left to fend for herself after her husband is killed.

    Benton creates his characters with a loving hand, but that does not mean he doesn't see the flaws in the people there, the racism, the sexism, the hypocrisy and the pettiness. Field's husband, Ray Baker, is killed by a drunken black man accidentally. Killing a law enforcement official probably would have gotten him legally executed in any event, but the town administers its own brand of justice to the perpetrator.

    That being said, it still doesn't solve the problem of a woman who has no education or training to support herself and her family. Sally gets the idea to grow cotton on the few acres her husband left her and gets a pair of strange allies in John Malkovich and Danny Glover to help her.

    Glover is an itinerant hobo who is the one who if he knows anything knows cotton from his sharecropping background. He's who really holds the family together in the crisis. John Malkovich is a blind man whose brother-in-law is unctuous town banker, Lane Smith, who essentially dumps him on Field because he doesn't want to care for him. Malkovich who was nominated for Best Supporting Actor proves to be a faithful friend.

    Lindsay Crouse was nominated for Best Supporting Actress as Field's sister. There's a subplot in the film involving her and her philandering husband Ed Harris.

    Robert Benton won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay and was nominated for Best Director and Sally Field won her second Oscar for Places in the Heart. Her character isn't as feisty as her first Oscar winner, Norma Rae, but Edna Spalding certainly has the same grit.

    Period country and gospel music make up the soundtrack for Places in the Heart. Old line Protestant hymns Blessed Assurance begins the film and In The Garden is the theme for the surreal ending.

    I can't describe the ending except that it is one of the most beautiful in the history of cinema. It's a vision of what promise we have either in heaven or a utopia we make on earth where the things that divide humankind are washed away and we are in fellowship with each other and our Maker.

    You have to have a heart of diamond if you are not moved by Places in the Heart.
    8roghache

    Memorable Depression era tale of a rural Southern widow

    This was a wonderful film which unfortunately I haven't seen for some years, so forget many of the subtleties. Sally Field is superb in the role of the Depression era Texas widow, Emma Spalding, and deserved her second Oscar which showed that yes, we really do like her. I always love this actress, who is especially compelling in the dramatic Norma Rae and charming in the romantic comedy, Murphy's Romance.

    The film tells the tale of a good, kind, loving, and strong woman, the widow, Emma (who has been left with with two children to raise on her own) and the pair of disparate characters who help her to literally 'save the farm'...the black drifter, Moze, who plants her cotton, and the intriguing blind border, Mr. Will, that she is forced to take on to appease the nasty banker. Because of mortgage difficulties, Emma's farm and in fact, her life are always in the hands of the local bank manager. The unlikely bond between the trio (Emma, Moze, and Mr. Will) and their shared struggle is always the very heart of the film. There are, however, other local small town characters portrayed here, including a sub-plot revolving around a pair of married folk engaged in an adulterous affair.

    It's all so much more meaningful than yet another film about a widow's romance. I don't know that the local couple's affair contributes much to the movie, unless, Hollywood style, there just had to be some sexual implications of some sort or other somewhere. Many others seem to agree that this sub-plot is superfluous.

    The other major roles are well cast, with Danny Glover and John Malkovich sympathetically portraying respectively Moze and Mr. Wills. As for the man involved in the affair, Ed Harris (whom I actually kinda like) always does a brilliant job portraying any sort of somewhat sleazy character!

    Memorable moments...One moving scene has lingered in my mind all these years, when the newly widowed Emma helps prepare the body of her sheriff husband, Royce, for burial. This is of course so alien to us today, when compared with our modern detached funeral parlors. There is an amazing tornado scene, wonderfully photographed, that brilliantly conveys the terror of the characters seeking shelter. Plenty of high drama there! The movie also has anti-racism themes, with a dramatic scenario involving some local Ku Klux Klan members or equivalent, in which Mr. Will plays a pivotal role. And a fabulous, touching scene where Emma dances at a community shindig with her young son, Frank. I recalled it vividly a few years later during a 'first dance' with my own son.

    Certainly not an action flick, but a thoughtful, touching, heartwarming story with very sympathetic characters that will engage you and earn a place in YOUR heart. The movie has a quietly dramatic ending some have questioned, but I personally found it perfect. As another reviewer cleverly noted, it 'seals' the film.
    7runamokprods

    Faded a bit from my memories of it's 1st release, but still a strong film

    I was sad to find I didn't love this as much as I had remembered from its release nearly 30 years ago.

    The acting is terrific, and the film looks great. But the main plot has elements of familiar melodramatic clichés that bugged me more now in a way they didn't in 1984. The race to save the farm, and the 'we'll do it despite the odds!' dialogue felt a little too Hollywood this time around, as did the 'perfect' gallery of downtrodden, oppressed outsiders (the single mother, the African-American, the blind man).

    At the same time, the subplot of the romantic triangle between Ed Harris, Lindsay Crouse and Amy Madigan, while wonderfully acted, really seemed to have very little at all to do with the rest of the film.

    That said, all the acting (Sally Field, Danny Glover, John Malcovich) is terrific, and the details of time and place are rich and vivid is slightly (intentionally) softened by the haze of the passing years (Benton grew up in the town where the story takes place).

    And that wonderful long last shot, which gives the whole film a larger context, is still a powerful and brave way to end a story.
    Bill-308

    A fine movie with a breathtaking final scene

    This is a beautifully told story about life in a small Texas town during the Great Depression. Sally Field's husband dies and it's up to her to raise their children and harvest the cotton crop in time to save the farm. It's a fine story, but at the end, the film springs a surprise. Who'd have thought a movie could have a coda? The last scene of the movie is so powerful that when I left the theater I literally felt like my breath had been taken away. I suspect the scene is unique in the movies, and it affects me every time I see it. I've shown this film on videotape to friends a few times, and I always whisper, "Please don't say anything to me during this last scene." It never fails, though; my friends always begin jabbering away in astonishment right in the middle of the best scene in the movie. It's not a big problem, though. They always shut up in wonder and understanding just before the credits start to roll.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although they first met years earlier, actor Ed Harris and actress Amy Madigan got married after working together on this film.
    • Goofs
      The tornado winds upend cars and cause houses to explode, but Moze's hat stays on his head while he drags Frank into the storm cellar.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Edna Spalding: [seeing her daughter's doll at the dinner table] Possum, put that up now.

      Royce Spalding: Our Heavenly Father, bless this meal and all those who are about to receive it. Make us thankful for Your generous bounty, and Your unceasing love. Please remind us, in these hard times, to be grateful for what we have been given, and not to ask for what we can not have. And make us mindful of those less fortunate among us, as we sit at this table with all of Thy bounty. Amen.

    • Alternate versions
      NBC edited 2 minutes from this film for its 1987 network television premiere.
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: All of Me/Amadeus/Places in the Heart/Until September (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      In The Garden
      Words and Music by Austin Miles

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 20, 1985 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Movie Channel (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En un lugar del corazón
    • Filming locations
      • Waxahachie, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Delphi II Productions
      • TriStar Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $34,901,614
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $274,279
      • Sep 23, 1984
    • Gross worldwide
      • $34,901,614
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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