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Heaven

  • 1998
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
910
YOUR RATING
Heaven (1998)
Trailer
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
61 Photos
Dark ComedyCrimeThriller

Robert's wife is divorcing him for gambling etc. A strip club owner offers him work redesigning his club. Robert befriends a dancer there, who has premonitions.Robert's wife is divorcing him for gambling etc. A strip club owner offers him work redesigning his club. Robert befriends a dancer there, who has premonitions.Robert's wife is divorcing him for gambling etc. A strip club owner offers him work redesigning his club. Robert befriends a dancer there, who has premonitions.

  • Director
    • Scott Reynolds
  • Writers
    • Chad Taylor
    • Scott Reynolds
  • Stars
    • Martin Donovan
    • Daniel Edwards
    • Richard Schiff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    910
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Scott Reynolds
    • Writers
      • Chad Taylor
      • Scott Reynolds
    • Stars
      • Martin Donovan
      • Daniel Edwards
      • Richard Schiff
    • 31User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Heaven (1998)
    Trailer 1:41
    Heaven (1998)

    Photos60

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Martin Donovan
    Martin Donovan
    • Robert Marling
    Daniel Edwards
    Daniel Edwards
    • Heaven
    • (as Danny Edwards)
    Richard Schiff
    Richard Schiff
    • Stanner
    Joanna Going
    Joanna Going
    • Jennifer Marling
    Patrick Malahide
    Patrick Malahide
    • Melrose
    Karl Urban
    Karl Urban
    • Sweeper
    Michael Langley
    Michael Langley
    • Sean Marling
    Jeremy Birchall
    • Tree
    Clint Sharplin
    • Nicely
    Barry Spring
    • Wibber
    Jon Brazier
    Jon Brazier
    • Billy
    Dean Stewart
    • David
    Jane Fullerton-Smith
    • Candy
    • (as Jane Fullerton Smith)
    Jean Hyland
    • Mrs. Daniels
    Valerie Williams
    • Claire
    Kirsty Brown
    • Nightclub Dancer
    Samantha Keen
    • Nightclub Dancer
    Darren Taylor
    • Nightclub Dancer
    • Director
      • Scott Reynolds
    • Writers
      • Chad Taylor
      • Scott Reynolds
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.5910
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    Featured reviews

    fanaticita

    Amazing!

    Okay, I am a Martin Donovan fan first of all, and Heaven was an incredible vehicle for Martin to show us once again his great acting skills. In fact, the entire cast did a great job. Yes, the sequence of the film was a bit confusing, but then became very surprising and enjoyable -never predictable. Martin is a master of subtlety and watching him perform is pure delight. Next to the Book of Life, this is my favorite Donovan film.
    7jrgirones

    Marvelous

    Last night I watched "Heaven" on television. I was about to skip it because I hadn't heard nothing about it. Luckily, I stayed tuned. And I say luckily because it's one of the best films that I've seen lately.

    "Heaven" is a marvelous conjunction of neo-noir drama with a surprising touch of magic realism. The story-line is so original that caught me in a while. The film construction is puzzling, but never confusing, and helps the film to be even more thrilling and fascinating than it's promising premise allowed us to expect. The editing job here is really remarkable; I'd dare to say it is, along with "Pulp Fiction" and "Memento", one of the most coherent and creative works seen in the nineties American filming.

    Martin Donovan is excellent, as well as the rest of the cast, but if you look for one unforgettable character, the travesty Heaven, sweet, strong in her weakness and with the surprising ability to anticipate the fate of those who surround her, will immediately catch your eye.

    After watching "The ugly" and this extraordinary piece of film art, I'm really looking forward to see Scott Reynold's new project.
    9herbqedi

    Fascinating neo-noir thriller triumphs over rough edges

    Danny Edwards, Martin Donovan, and Richard Schiff as the starring threesome have indescribably excellent interwoven chemistry. The director shows us things in non-chronological order, but unlike the overblown Pulp Fiction, most definitely not random, and ties it all up beautifully before all is said and then. The seamy soundtrack, classic set-up antihero with an heroic heart, and dark alleyways and dance club make a perfect backdrop for the films neo-noirist construction. The fast pacing is also a plus.

    The only nit I feel compelled to pick are two actors who clearly were not on the same page with the rest of the film. The actor playing the unscrupulous psychiatrist does everything but twirl a mustache to let you know he's evil before we're even supposed to realize that. And, the young actor playing Martin Donovan's son seems to be looking at the camera, not his father, far too often. Everyone else was absolutely terrific. Danny Edwards is magnificent in the "Crying Game" type role.
    bros

    Heaven is a violent film, a clever film and an original film.

    This film, shown at both the Montreal and Toronto film festivals, is

    so original that its merits passed over the heads of the busy

    reviewers.

    Scott Reynolds uses a very clever device to allow the viewer to

    suspend disbelief that one of the characters could accurately

    foretell the future. Heaven, the seer, is a transvestite stripper in a

    regular strip club. The viewer focuses on this improbability and

    lets the improbability that someone can foresee the future slip into

    the film's reality.

    Having created a believable character that can and does foretell

    the future, Reynolds is then faced with another problem. How to

    keep the viewer from knowing the future. He accomplishes this

    with a series of carefully staged flashbacks (and flash forwards)

    that, although accurate, are out of sequence and therefore lead the

    viewer to believe in a series of events that is not accurate.

    I have never seen a more cleverly thought up, worked out and

    executed script.

    With his plan in place, Reynolds creates one of the most

    improbable plots imaginable, but because we have moved beyond

    suspending disbelief and become believers, one that seems very

    probable.

    Richard Schiff superbly portrays the character of the strip club

    owner, Stanner. Stanner has hired Heaven and brought him/her

    under his wing because he has turned Heaven's ability to foretell

    the future into profits. Stanner, however, is also involved with

    Robert Marling, played by Martin Donovan (II). I would continue to

    say superbly, but the fact is, the acting in the film is first rate all

    around.

    Marling is going through a bitter divorce with the stunning Joanna

    Going as Jennifer Marling. Jennifer is seeing the sleazy

    psychiatrist Dr. Melrose played by Patrick Malahide.

    And in the pivotal coincidence, Heaven is also seeing the

    unbelievably evil (but nonetheless believable) Dr. Melrose

    because Heaven's visions of the future trouble him/her deeply (the

    visions, not the sexual ambiguity).

    Marling is a down and out gambling addict, an architect who is

    designing a new club Stanner has commissioned with the

    millions he has earned from following Heaven's visions of the

    future. Marling is forever losing money to Stanner in poker games.

    Heaven sets the plot in motion by foreseeing Marling saving him

    from being viciously murdered by two sadistic thugs. Heaven sets

    out to reward Marling by using his/her foretelling abilities to feed

    Marling information on how the cards will fall in his poker hands

    with Stanner.

    Evil Dr. Melrose discovers this in his sessions with Heaven. He

    seduces Jennifer. Advising her on her divorce settlement, the bad

    doctor tells Jennifer to hold out for the fortune her husband is

    about to come into as a result of Heaven's foretelling, intending to

    take the fortune for himself.

    Stanner has plenty of cash but can't resist playing the angles,

    deciding to burn down his club to make way for the new one

    designed by Marling. He hires two homicidal maniacs to do the

    task for him, the same two sadists Heaven foresees murdering

    him, and it is these two who initiate the mass slaughter that

    makes the film so violent.

    This film is a sleeper. It will be discovered, its clever features

    copied and it will become a classic. Scott Reynolds does not have

    a large body of work, but any director or writer would be proud to

    have this film to their credit.
    7The_Void

    Offbeat and interesting thriller

    Scott Reynolds may not exactly be well known; but his excellent 2001 thriller When Strangers Appear really took me by surprise, and while Heaven is not as accomplished as the aforementioned film, it's still a very good thriller that takes in multiple different elements, which are somehow combined into a mostly coherent whole. Like many post-Pulp Fiction crime thrillers, this one features a fragmented plot which is told through various flashbacks. The main character is Robert Marling; a man with a gambling addiction. He is recovering from a nasty split with his wife Jennifer, who also wants custody of their son. Robert is friends with Stanner; the proprietor of a strip club and employer of transvestite dancer Heaven. Heaven has an unusual ability to see into the future and takes a shine to Robert when she recognises him from one of her premonitions. The plot thickens when it emerges that the psychologist treating Robert is having an affair with his wife and also treating Heaven...

    Most of the film is kept within the realms of possibly; the only exception to this being the mystical abilities of the title character, which comes off as being a little strange despite being integral to the plot. Initially, I had the film pegged as a rip-off of The Crying Game; but actually it doesn't make a meal of its gender-bending lead character at all. The plot does flow surprisingly well considering that it is put forward in a fragmented manner; the strong screenplay manages to put everything across in such a way that it all makes sense. There's no shortage of memorable characters, with strip club owner Stanner standing out most in that respect. The strip club itself is very well done and the director ensures that it has a fantastically sleazy atmosphere; it's just a shame that it isn't featured more! The ending is suitably strange and ambiguous; therefore suiting the film well. All in all, this is not quite a brilliant thriller; but it's well made and gripping for the duration and therefore I recommend it.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Miramax theatrical trailer contains several shots that aren't in the film, including:
      • Jennifer and Robert arguing about his 'friendship' with Stanner while driving.
      • A love scene between Robert and Jennifer.
      • Tree and Nicely wearing animal masks in one of Heaven's visions.
      • Heaven asleep in a movie theater.
    • Quotes

      Jennifer Marling: Can you say it yet? "My name's Robert Marling, and I'm a gambling addict."

    • Connections
      Referenced in Père et fille (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Something for the Cat
      (Henry Mancini)

      Famous Music Corporation

      Performed by Henry Mancini

      Under license from BMG Australia

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Heaven?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 30, 1999 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • New Zealand
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Пророцтво
    • Filming locations
      • Auckland, New Zealand
    • Production companies
      • Miramax
      • Midnight Film Productions Limited
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,838
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,983
      • May 2, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,838
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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