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Desert Hearts

  • 1985
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
8K
YOUR RATING
Desert Hearts (1985)
A woman leaves behind her life in New York to find herself in Reno in this trailer
Play trailer2:03
1 Video
57 Photos
Period DramaTragic RomanceDramaRomance

While waiting for her divorce papers, a repressed professor of literature is unexpectedly seduced by a carefree, spirited young lesbian.While waiting for her divorce papers, a repressed professor of literature is unexpectedly seduced by a carefree, spirited young lesbian.While waiting for her divorce papers, a repressed professor of literature is unexpectedly seduced by a carefree, spirited young lesbian.

  • Director
    • Donna Deitch
  • Writers
    • Jane Rule
    • Natalie Cooper
  • Stars
    • Helen Shaver
    • Patricia Charbonneau
    • Audra Lindley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Donna Deitch
    • Writers
      • Jane Rule
      • Natalie Cooper
    • Stars
      • Helen Shaver
      • Patricia Charbonneau
      • Audra Lindley
    • 62User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Desert Hearts
    Trailer 2:03
    Desert Hearts

    Photos57

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Helen Shaver
    Helen Shaver
    • Vivian Bell
    Patricia Charbonneau
    Patricia Charbonneau
    • Cay Rivvers
    Audra Lindley
    Audra Lindley
    • Frances Parker
    Andra Akers
    • Silver
    Gwen Welles
    Gwen Welles
    • Gwen
    Dean Butler
    Dean Butler
    • Darrell
    James Staley
    James Staley
    • Art Warner
    Katie La Bourdette
    • Lucille
    • (as Katie LaBourdette)
    Alex McArthur
    • Walter
    Tyler Tyhurst
    • Buck
    Denise Crosby
    Denise Crosby
    • Pat
    Antony Ponzini
    Antony Ponzini
    • Joe
    Brenda Beck
    • Joyce
    Sam Minsky
    • Best Man
    Patricia Frazier
    • Change Girl
    Sheila Balter
    • Roadside Waitress
    Tom Martin
    • Red Cap
    Joan Mankin
    • Casino Waitress
    • Director
      • Donna Deitch
    • Writers
      • Jane Rule
      • Natalie Cooper
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews62

    7.17.9K
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    Featured reviews

    Seething

    This movie made me come to terms with my own sexuality

    I was 17 when I first watched this movie and I had never seen a lesbian film before which treated the lesbian characters with such respect. Also, I had never seen such a passionate love scene between two women, needless to say after that scene I could no longer deny my own lesbianism. Great use of Patsy Cline's music.
    10friend_city

    The best romantic movie

    It was a really beautiful movie. The director really captures the beauty of 2 women and 2 women finding true love in 1950's in the least expected situation. As you watched the film, your emotions just followed the main characters'. It is a very touching, tender, romantic movie. This is my favorite movie. I have been watching it many times since I got it.

    Thumbs up for Patricia Charbonneau for her stunning performance esp. this was her first performance on films. She played this young, dark haired, beautiful, free spirited, and passionate woman, Cay, who compelled Helen Shaver to look into her heart and finally allowed herself to admit her feelings for Cay. Patricia is really HOT in this movie. Her beautiful smile, her sparkling eyes, her sexy voice, and every move of hers is really attractive and charming. How can anyone not fall for her? I wonder why she didn't become a star after this movie?! She is absolutely Gorgeous and she can really act. It is a shame that she didn't get enough recognitions for her talents as she deserves in the film industry. Helen Shaver did an excellent job as well. She played a repressed English professor, Vivian, who went to Reno for a quick divorce. After closing herself up for years, meeting and knowing Cay finally forced her to face her true emotions and admitted her feelings for Cay. These 2 characters' personalities are really opposite of each other. One enjoys order and the other is free spirited but somehow they are able to find true love with each other. This movie described really well how Helen Shaver struggled with her own feelings and the society's expectations, and the hardship the society and Cay's family gave to the same sex couple. Yet, Cay is very courageous, facing her true feelings, and chasing after who she wants, Vivian. Although there was no clear ending for these 2 women, it is still hopeful since Patricia got on the train with Helen. One can only hope for the best for these 2 women and May they live happily ever after.

    The scenery views are quite beautiful. The mountain, the lake views and horses running are extra plus. The other characters are quite good such as Frances Parker, Cay's step mother. The love scene between these 2 is amazing. You can feel these 2 women's desires for each other. Vivian is initially repressed but once she follows her heart, you can feel these 2 women are truly in love and enjoy being intimate with each other. There is Great chemistry between Patricia and Helen, which makes this movie very real. The glances they exchanged with each other, the way they look at each other, and the way they talk to each other are very convincing that they are in love with each other. I love to watch the scenes between them over and over. I think they build up a strong foundation with each other, which then leads to a very believable, amazing, and erotic love making at the end.

    The director, Donna Deitch, did an outstanding job. The script is nicely written. The display of emotions is appropriate in 1950's. There are wonderful background musics. Donna Deitch is really successful bringing out the outstanding performance of these 2 lead actresses. It is not easy to direct a film such as this one in 1980's and she had to raise the fund for this movie herself. Overall, it is an excellent movie, something you can watch over and over. Highly recommended.
    rmax304823

    Kind of Sweet

    "Desert Hearts" has quite a bit going for it. It captures 1950s Reno and environs, the biggest little city in the world, pretty well: great old cars, red earth, dried twisted windspent driftwood, fragrant summer sagebrush, the noisy 7/24 casinos with 99 cent meals, suntanned faces, rickety ranch motels on the outskirts of town, snow-veined Sierras, and the pop music that is no worse than what we listen to. The story pulls one in.

    Aura Lindley is the matriarch of the ranch and has bonded with one of her tenants. A new one arrives, an Eastern sophisticate, who refers to herself as a "distinguished author," and has a lot of books schlepped into her room. Discord! Helen Shaver, the professor, is rather neat and in addition to her books carries around a lot of savoir-faire. She doesn't look bad either. The movie also has going for it the presence of Patricia Charbonneau, who must have one of the most interesting crania on the planet, and the soft parts to match. She is possessed of a sinewy yet feminine figure and carries herself with presence. Her hair and her irises are the color of glowing anthracite. ("Charbonneau", indeed.) And those dazzling big choppers, appalling and appealing. She outs herself on a walk with Shaver who responds momentarily, impulsively. Jealous, Lindley throws Shaver out, suspecting something more intimate has happened than actually has.

    The intimacy follows in a later scene when Charbonneau tracks Shaver to her downtown hotel room and initiates a long, erotic love scene which isn't at all pornographic or exploitative. The two women love one another, but one is after all an uptight distinguished author and the other, though equally intelligent, goes with the flow, as they say, and has been "kicked out of college for unnatural acts."

    The film ends ambiguously. Can they get together? Can they compromise their life styles? Can a distinguished author carry on an affair with another woman in the 1950s? Not including Gertrude Stein? Can our desert wildflower find a home as a potted plant surrounded by geraniums on a windowsill on MacDougall Street in the Village? Will an author find happiness with a woman after her marriage to a man has ended in boredom and disaster? Will -- I forgot what the original rhetorical question was.

    This is an easy movie to get through. Nothing in it leaps out at you. It doesn't pound you over the head with its modern sensibilities. We're not invited to condemn those morons back in the 50s for their attitudes towards gays, nor are we urged to feel guilty because we are accused of some lingering distaste ourselves. The movie sort of shrugs at these issues and says, well, that's the way it was. Not exactly a time that embraced gays but, at least on the outskirts of Reno, not exactly a time of torture either. One wishes Shaver and Charbonneau well as they ride off on the train into the sunset.
    8lastliberal

    I don't act this way to change the world. I act this way so that the world won't goddamn change me!

    The setting for this film is absolutely perfect. Gorgeous landscapes, and music (Patsy Cline, Elvis, Buddy Holly, Jim Reeves, and so much more) perfect for the period. Natalie Cooper wrote a great script that feels just right.

    Patricia Charbonneau is just perfect as Cay, a free spirit that just wants to fly. She lights up the room every time she enters. She was the perfect tonic for the repressive Helen Shaver's ailment.

    What I really liked was that this was a realistic love story. It wasn't about sex, but about two people finding out what they really want. It didn't end in a neat package, but with promise. It mirrored life in that respect; it just featured two women, that's all.

    Audra Lindley was great as Cay's stepmother, and added more realism to the story. Andra Akers was really cool as her friend. Jeffrey Tambor was also featured in a bit part.

    I just wish that I had six weeks to spend in the desert. It was so beautiful.
    9kosmasp

    Love is where the ... desert is?

    When it comes to love movies - usually we get a man loves a woman and hopefully vice versa. In this case we get two women ... or at least one that is quite sure what she wants and who she loves. At a time when love like that was more than just forbidden .... and even those who may have feelings of ... well let's just say even they had issues to deal with those things.

    A womans touch - no pun intended - something the movie really needed and profited from. I'm not saying that a man wouldn't have done a solid job with the source novel, but you feel that it was crucial to have a woman for this. Not just for the intimate scenes. This really is an underrated movie, with superb performances - not just for the time it was made, but in general.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The $350,000 budget for the film was raised independently with limited partnerships.
    • Goofs
      Toward the end of the movie, when Vivian and her divorce lawyer are walking down the steps of the courthouse, you can see an older woman with a straw hat walk up the stairs by them. When Vivian & the lawyer reach the door to walk outside, you can see the same woman walking in.
    • Quotes

      Vivian: I wouldn't know what to do.

      Cay: You can start by putting the 'Do Not Disturb' sign on the door.

    • Alternate versions
      The US DVD release is 5 minutes shorter than the theatrical version (91 as opposed to 96 minutes). The most noticeable cut is in the sex scene which is slightly briefer than the original.
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Desert Hearts/Mona Lisa/Letter to Brezhnev (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Leavin' on Your Mind
      Written by Wayne Walker and Webb Pierce

      Performed by Patsy Cline

      Courtesy of MCA Records

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 7, 1986 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Criterion Collection
      • HBOMAX (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Issız Kalpler
    • Filming locations
      • Reno, Nevada, USA
    • Production companies
      • Desert Hearts Productions
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,250,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,492,088
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,492,995
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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