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Chilly Scenes of Winter

Original title: Head Over Heels
  • 1979
  • PG
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Chilly Scenes of Winter (1979)
Working for the Utah state government as a report writer, Charles Richardson reminisces about his past love affair with Laura Connolly, with who he was immediately attracted upon first sight when she worked in the file section of his office. Their relationship was despite Laura then being married to ex-football player Jim, nicknamed Ox, he bringing an adolescent daughter, Rebecca, into their blended family. When she and Charlie met, Laura was already on a trial separation from Ox, which always tainted Laura and Charlie's relationship in her sense of guilt as Ox never did anything bad to precipitate that separation. Charlie can't help but think about Laura as he is still in love with her and wants to get back together with her, their relationship which ended when she returned to Ox, who never knew about Charlie in her life. Charlie's thoughts about Laura are only one complication in his life, those other complicating people being: his perpetually "half glass full sister" Susan, who shares the house he inherited from their grandmother; his longtime best friend Sam Maguire, a men's garments salesman who is even less motivated with work than Charlie; his mother Clara, whose eccentricities and suicidal tendencies may solely be a cry for attention; Clara's current husband Pete, who wants a bromance with Charlie despite knowing Charlie doesn't much like him; his boss, Mr. Patterson, who continually uses him as a guidance counselor in issues related to his teenage son; and his typist Betty, who is attracted to Charlie herself not knowing about his and Laura's past relationship, and who Charlie consciously and unconsciously uses in knowing she still is in touch with Laura.
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Romantic ComedyComedyDramaRomance

Charles, a bored civil servant struggling through a harsh Utah winter, spends most of his time reflecting on his romance with Laura, a coworker who left him to return to her husband, an A-Fr... Read allCharles, a bored civil servant struggling through a harsh Utah winter, spends most of his time reflecting on his romance with Laura, a coworker who left him to return to her husband, an A-Frame salesman.Charles, a bored civil servant struggling through a harsh Utah winter, spends most of his time reflecting on his romance with Laura, a coworker who left him to return to her husband, an A-Frame salesman.

  • Director
    • Joan Micklin Silver
  • Writers
    • Ann Beattie
    • Joan Micklin Silver
  • Stars
    • John Heard
    • Mary Beth Hurt
    • Peter Riegert
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joan Micklin Silver
    • Writers
      • Ann Beattie
      • Joan Micklin Silver
    • Stars
      • John Heard
      • Mary Beth Hurt
      • Peter Riegert
    • 39User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:36
    Trailer

    Photos67

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    Top cast20

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    John Heard
    John Heard
    • Charles
    Mary Beth Hurt
    Mary Beth Hurt
    • Laura
    Peter Riegert
    Peter Riegert
    • Sam
    Kenneth McMillan
    Kenneth McMillan
    • Pete
    Gloria Grahame
    Gloria Grahame
    • Clara
    Nora Heflin
    • Betty
    Jerry Hardin
    Jerry Hardin
    • Mr. Patterson
    Tarah Nutter
    • Susan
    Mark Metcalf
    Mark Metcalf
    • Ox
    Allen Joseph
    Allen Joseph
    • Blindman
    Frances Bay
    Frances Bay
    • Mrs. Delillo
    Griffin Dunne
    Griffin Dunne
    • Dr. Mark
    Alex Johnson
    • Elise
    Beverly Rowland
    • Woman in Park
    • (as Beverly Booth Rowland)
    Oscar Rowland
    Oscar Rowland
    • Man in Store
    Ann Beattie
    • Waitress
    Angela Phillips
    • Rebecca
    Margaressa Peach Taylor
    • Dancing Nurse
    • Director
      • Joan Micklin Silver
    • Writers
      • Ann Beattie
      • Joan Micklin Silver
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews39

    7.02K
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    Featured reviews

    9shark-43

    Funny, Powerful Film On Obsession

    This is one of my favorite films and the lead performance by John Heard is sterling. It is one of the most honest, heartbreaking performances I have ever seen on someone's obsession with another person. Heard plays a state government worker who happens to meet a pretty girl who is on the rebound. They have amazing times together until she decides to move back in with her husband and the young stepdaughter (who she misses). Heard won't let it be over and plans and plots on various ways to get her back. The film is based on Ann Beattie's brilliant novel, CHILLY SCENES OF WINTER (which is the title the movie was released as). I prefer that title to the generic HEAD OVER HEELS. I own a copy of this film and have watched it so many times. Aside from Heard, there is an amazing cast of supporting players: the late, great Ken McMillian, Gloria Grahame (as his crazy mother), Peter Riegert as his deadbeat friend and even Mary Beth Hurt gives a strong performance (I'm not usually a fan of hers). This movie is worth seeking out.
    jaykay-10

    Something missing

    The pivot on which this story turns is Laura's character; unfortunately, that character is drawn less thoroughly than one might wish. How are we to understand her vacillations? (We have to guess, because the picture doesn't explain them, and she herself is apparently unable to explain them.) Saying that she is confused by her choices tells us nothing worthwhile about her character. Does she - out of a sense of guilt - feel compelled to draw away whenever her lover draws nearer? An interesting enough concept, but it isn't brought out in the film, so such an interpretation is no more than speculation. If Laura's attachment to her daughter is so strong, how was she able to walk away? (There is, by the way, little in the film itself to suggest that the two were especially close.) As for the men in her life: her husband seems no better or worse than average, and her lover - except for his persistence - also seems unremarkable. As for the ending: the one in the version I saw (running, running, running faster in the park) is no ending at all. It just happens to be the last scene of the picture.
    8Gerry-12

    Quiet comment on an intense love affair

    I am a little unclear about what moves the female protagonist to act as she does, but since a woman wrote the novel and another woman wrote the screen play and directed the film, who am I to quarrel with that? The male protagonist is older than I was when I suffered the way he does. I sympathize with his pain, and the movie makers are right about the common response to it - trivial violence, rather than the tragedy of commonplace film.

    I think it is a very good film. My only reservation is that an excessive amount of it occurs in the man's car, but I guess that's life in Salt Lake City.
    sullivanjoseph

    Wow

    I am a huge movie fan, and usually am a huge fan of John Heard, but this movie was one of the most depressing I've ever seen. Heard plays a semi-psychotic stalker type character that is extremely unnerving. They need to lock this up and throw away the key. I still think John Heard did a wonderful job of capturing the insanity and depression of the main character though.
    8rcedison

    Original was sweet and poignant, the re-cut for video a disappointment

    I first saw this film in Berkeley around 1982 or '83, wasn't aware until now that it had been made 3 years earlier. At the time, I had already read and was a fan of Beattie's Chilly Scenes of Winter, upon which this is based, and was confused as to why Silver had retitled it "Head Over Heels", but it's not uncommon, and I thoroughly enjoyed the film, especially as it was true to the book. I then heard that Silver had been unsatisfied with the ending, re-cut it for video, and changed the name back to "Chilly Scenes of Winter". I rented the video to see the changes, and discovered that she had cut the last ten minutes or so of the film, which totally changed it from the way the book ends, and, incidentally, lessens the quality of the film. Thus, it went from a 9 to an 8 for me. As for the previous poster, Mary Beth Hurt was in fact in a relationship with William Hurt, to whom John Heard bears a resemblance; MB and William were married for 10 years.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ann Beattie: the author of the original novel, plays a waitress in a diner scene and was paid $26 for the non-speaking part. (A speaking part would have paid $225.)
    • Quotes

      Blind Man: What do you want?

      Charles: [laughing crazily] What do I want? I wanna marry Laura. I thought everybody knew that. I'd even settle for living with her. What do I want? Let's talk about what I have. You know what I have? I have, I have... an unemployed jacket salesman living in my spare room, I have a mother that won't get out of the bathtub, I have a sister that always wants me to be happy, I have a stepfather that wants me to take disco lessons and I have a secretary that wants me to throw parties so that she can make dips. And I have this boss that wants *me* to give his son advice on his sexual problems!

      Blind Man: You've been up all night. That only makes things look worse.

      Charles: Yeah? I really thought I was having a nervous breakdown for a second there.

      Blind Man: [sympathetically] Oh, sure!

    • Alternate versions
      Head over Heels was released in 1979 and flopped as a mainstream release. After it flopped, the producers took the film, reedited it, added a new ending that was faithful to the original novel by Ann Beattie (who appears as a waitress at the beginning of the film), and released the new version as Chilly Scenes of Winter (the same title as the original novel) in 1980 in film houses.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Running/Head Over Heels/Skatetown, U.S.A./The Legacy/Yanks (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      Get It While You Can
      Written by Jerry Ragovoy (as Ragovoy) and Mort Shuman (as Schuman)

      Performed by Janis Joplin

      Courtesy of CBS Records

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 15, 1982 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Head Over Heels
    • Filming locations
      • Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
    • Production company
      • Triple Play Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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