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Au coeur de l'enfer

Original title: Purple Hearts
  • 1984
  • R
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Cheryl Ladd and Ken Wahl in Au coeur de l'enfer (1984)
In middle of the Vietnam War, a Navy surgeon and a nurse fall in love. Their affection for one another provides a striking contrast to the violence of warfare.
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
13 Photos
DramaWar

In middle of the Vietnam War, a Navy surgeon and a nurse fall in love. Their affection for one another provides a striking contrast to the violence of warfare.In middle of the Vietnam War, a Navy surgeon and a nurse fall in love. Their affection for one another provides a striking contrast to the violence of warfare.In middle of the Vietnam War, a Navy surgeon and a nurse fall in love. Their affection for one another provides a striking contrast to the violence of warfare.

  • Director
    • Sidney J. Furie
  • Writers
    • Rick Natkin
    • Sidney J. Furie
  • Stars
    • Ken Wahl
    • Cheryl Ladd
    • Stephen Lee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sidney J. Furie
    • Writers
      • Rick Natkin
      • Sidney J. Furie
    • Stars
      • Ken Wahl
      • Cheryl Ladd
      • Stephen Lee
    • 18User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 2:11
    Official Trailer

    Photos13

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Ken Wahl
    Ken Wahl
    • Don Jardian
    Cheryl Ladd
    Cheryl Ladd
    • Deborah Solomon
    Stephen Lee
    Stephen Lee
    • Wizard
    Annie McEnroe
    Annie McEnroe
    • Hallaway
    Paul McCrane
    Paul McCrane
    • Brenner
    Cyril O'Reilly
    Cyril O'Reilly
    • Zuma
    David Harris
    • Hanes
    Hillary B. Smith
    Hillary B. Smith
    • Jill
    • (as Hillary Bailey)
    R. Lee Ermey
    R. Lee Ermey
    • Gunny
    • (as Lee Ermey)
    Drew Snyder
    Drew Snyder
    • Lt. Col. Larimore
    Lane Smith
    Lane Smith
    • Cmdr. Markel
    James Whitmore Jr.
    • Bwana
    Kevin Alyn Elders
    • CIA Driver
    • (as Kevin Elders)
    Janie Squire
    • Nurse
    • (as Sydney Squire)
    David Brass
    • Lt. Grayson
    • (as David Bass)
    Bruce Guichard
    • Jackson
    • (as Bruce Guilchard)
    Rod Birch
    • 1st Patient
    Joel Escamilla
    • 2nd Patient
    • Director
      • Sidney J. Furie
    • Writers
      • Rick Natkin
      • Sidney J. Furie
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.81.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9whizmaw

    A Movie for the Romantic

    A real feel good movie. The ending is the best, just like I would want this kind of movie to end. I saw this movie when it came out in 1984 and I have been looking for a copy, now that I can afford the price. I finally got one off of E-Bay. I enjoyed the action and the romance. It is really a good movie for the person who is tired of the movies coming out today. Cheryl Ladd is one of the most beautiful women in the business, and a terrific actress, Ken Wahl is also a very strong character and the combat scenes are fantastic. I also noticed that R. Lee Ermey is in this movie playing his best character a Marine Gunnery Sargent. If you get the chance find a copy and watch.
    9ThousandsOfFilms

    A Hidden Gem!

    Purple Hearts is both a war movie and a romantic movie. Regarding the latter, this movie really had an impact on me. On the one hand, I don't claim it's an epic like "Dr. Zhivago". On the other hand, 35 years after seeing it, it's one that I remember most clearly and that drew me into the story most completely. For my friends who served in the Vietnam War, the movie was right on target, super realistic. But I don't like war movies that much, so it was the romance that drew me in. Out of curiosity, I looked at the IMDB rating and saw it was rather low, but I stuck with my experience and gave it a 9. Then I read the reviews and almost all gave it very high praise. But many viewers must have given it a low score. If you're a romantic, it's worth taking a chance and if it's a match, it'll really be worth it. I just saw it again and think it's a GREAT movie. I have NOT seen the recent remake, BUT there was no artistic reason to do a remake, one could not improve on the original!
    8Audie-T

    Love and War, a strong combination.

    A surprisingly good warmovie.

    It has realistic battle scenes, competent acting plus it shows the Vietnam war from the medics' and doctors' point of view. The romance was believable and Cheryl Ladd was always a decent actress (and good-looking).

    Battle scene highlights: the NVA assault on a USMC firebase. Those Marines' bloodlust was on a par with the NVA's!

    I don't like chicks' movies, or *romantic* movies. I do agree however, that nearly all warmovies need a healthy dose of realistic romance. 'Purple Hearts' provides us with just that.
    9IslandMadMacs

    Is there a "Best Special Ops Scene In A Romantic Movie" category?

    First off, this is a much better movie than you would think by just looking at the cast and production.

    Yes, essentially this is a wartime romance with all the tear jerky stuff you would expect. (which I happen to enjoy too) But, and this is where things take a turn toward the interesting, this film properly portrays several elements of the US military during the Vietnam War. Including what I consider an incredibly detailed Navy Seal Ops unit, both in characterization and temperament. It borders on the bizarre that such a nugget of special ops combat would be hidden inside a romantic flick.

    Their mission, of course, is based on the real life US Army Special Forces rescue operation/raid on Son Tay Prison. But the effect is amazing. A sort of "what if" had the Navy been tasked with the rescue.

    Additionally, the firebase hospital scenes were again surprisingly realistic. As well as the actions of the personnel on the naval hospital ship. I'm not sure who the advisors to the movie were, but their on-hand knowledge were well used by both the director and cinematographer.

    This was at the height of star Ken Wahl's career - so it comes as a sad reminder of careers that 'could-have-been'. The acting is well done and the romance with beautiful Cheryl Ladd very tangible.

    Finally, kudos to Lane Smith who portrays the by-the-book Navy doctor, Commander Markel - and R. Lee Ermey as the Marine Gunnery Sergeant. Not surprisingly R. Lee wasn't stretching his acting muscles too much since he is in fact a globe-n-anchor combat vet who did multiple tours in Nam. If you enjoy the berating bark of everyone's favorite jarhead, check out History Channel's "Mail Call" which R.Lee hosts.
    7Sturgeon54

    An Old-Fashioned War Film in the Post-Vietnam Era

    Every single film critic's review of this I could find - Leonard Maltin and Roger Ebert being two of these critics whom I particularly respect - have given it a pitifully low rating. I can't completely figure it out, but I think the reason this movie failed to garner better reviews might have had something to do with the timing of its release; one must remember that the Vietnam War was still an open scab for this country in the mid-'80s, and all the film treatments of the war up until then had been pointed tragedies - from "The Deer Hunter" to "Apocalypse Now", "Coming Home", and even director Sidney J. Furie's other 1978 Vietnam film "Boys in Company C." So, audiences and critics were probably not very open at that time to a film about a romantic relationship in the middle of the war with a semi-happy ending. However, in hindsight this movie deserves a second look, and seems to have received one, as indicated by the positive reviews I have read from virtually every amateur online reviewer, which would qualify this movie as a sleeper 20 years after its original release.

    Essentially, the movie has an old-fashioned storyline with 1980s sensibilities - the type of movie that would have been more at home in the post-WWII era along with such films as "From Here to Eternity" or "The Best Years of Our Lives." I disagree with Ebert's review, which said this was simply one of those ridiculous movies where "the whole world was a stage, and millions of people were fighting and dying so that these two goofballs could swap spit?" Ken Wahl and Cheryl Ladd play fairly likable, 3-dimenional characters - he a shallow Naval surgeon who volunteered for wartime duty for the experience, and she an altrusitic nurse with strong street-smarts. They meet at a Naval base hospital where Wahl has taken an injured soldier for emergency care, but complications ensure when he tries to carry on a relationship with her in the middle of wartime. I thought the film held the utmost respect for military personnel in the war - the attention to technical detail was superb, and the final credits list no less than six military technical advisors. In addition, I was most impressed by the convincing battle scenes, and believe that these scenes might be some of director Furie's best work, easily in the same league of "Boys in Company C" and even "Platoon." Make no mistake: this is a war movie with a romantic story angle, not a romance movie with a war story angle, and I believe director Furie makes this important distinction very clear.

    Furie was right to make a movie about Vietnam with a unique storyline: after all, I am sure there were romantic relationships that developed in that war, with such close contact among medical personnel in trying circumstances. Additionally, he deserves credit for making the first and only film I can think of to portray the service of women in the Vietnam War - the acclaimed TV series "China Beach" is the only other portrayal of similar subject matter. This movie was just released at the wrong time, when audiences were expecting only angry, hard-hitting social commentary. "Purple Hearts" is another example of why Furie is the Rodney Dangerfield of film directors, never receiving any respect when it is due. While no masterpiece, I still recommend this little-seen film.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The picture opens with a dedication to the 347,304 Purple Heart recipients from the Vietnam War.

      "This film is dedicated to the 347,309 Americans who received the Purple Heart awarded for wounds suffered in the Vietnam Conflict."
    • Goofs
      Conover, the door gunner on the Army Huey with Doc Jardian, was wearing a unit patch for the 173rd Airborne Brigade (Army), but was mentioned posthumously as "Lance Corporal Conover". Lance Corporal is a Marine (USMC) rank, not an Army rank.
    • Quotes

      Zuma: Are you going to eat that rice?

      Don Jardian: I had to kill a man to get this rice.

      Zuma: Yeah, and the whole fucking valley heard you do it, too.

    • Crazy credits
      This film is dedicated to the 347,309 Americans who received the Purple Heart awarded for wounds suffered in the Vietnam Conflict
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Sixteen Candles/The Bounty/Alphabet City/Purple Hearts (1984)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 31, 1984 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Vietnamese
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Purple Hearts
    • Filming locations
      • American Lake, Washington, USA
    • Production company
      • The Ladd Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,800,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,075,282
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,075,282
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 56m(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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