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Heat and Dust

  • 1983
  • R
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Greta Scacchi, Julie Christie, and Shashi Kapoor in Heat and Dust (1983)
Watch Heat and Dust - 4K Restoration - Trailer
Play trailer1:59
1 Video
42 Photos
Period DramaDramaRomance

Anne is investigating the life of her grand-aunt Olivia, whose destiny has always been shrouded with scandal. As Anne delves into the history of her grand-aunt, she is led to reconsider her ... Read allAnne is investigating the life of her grand-aunt Olivia, whose destiny has always been shrouded with scandal. As Anne delves into the history of her grand-aunt, she is led to reconsider her own life.Anne is investigating the life of her grand-aunt Olivia, whose destiny has always been shrouded with scandal. As Anne delves into the history of her grand-aunt, she is led to reconsider her own life.

  • Director
    • James Ivory
  • Writer
    • Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
  • Stars
    • Julie Christie
    • Greta Scacchi
    • Christopher Cazenove
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Ivory
    • Writer
      • Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
    • Stars
      • Julie Christie
      • Greta Scacchi
      • Christopher Cazenove
    • 19User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    Heat and Dust - 4K Restoration - Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    Heat and Dust - 4K Restoration - Trailer

    Photos42

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Anne (1982 in Satipur Town)
    Greta Scacchi
    Greta Scacchi
    • Olivia, his wife (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur)
    Christopher Cazenove
    Christopher Cazenove
    • Douglas Rivers - The Assistant Collector (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur)
    Julian Glover
    Julian Glover
    • Crawford - The District Collector (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur)
    Susan Fleetwood
    Susan Fleetwood
    • Mrs. Crawford - The Burra Mensahib (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur)
    Patrick Godfrey
    Patrick Godfrey
    • Saunders - The Medical Officer (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur)
    Jennifer Kendal
    Jennifer Kendal
    • Mrs. Saunders (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur)
    Shashi Kapoor
    Shashi Kapoor
    • The Nawab (At the Palace in Khatm)
    Madhur Jaffrey
    Madhur Jaffrey
    • Begum Mussarat Jahan - The Nawab's mother (At the Palace in Khatm)
    Nickolas Grace
    Nickolas Grace
    • Harry Hamilton-Paul (At the Palace in Khatm)
    Barry Foster
    Barry Foster
    • Major Minnies, the Political Agent (At the Palace in Khatm)
    Zakir Hussain
    Zakir Hussain
    • Inder Lal - Anne's Landlord (1982 in Satipur Town)
    Ratna Pathak Shah
    Ratna Pathak Shah
    • Ritu, Inder Lal's wife (1982 in Satipur Town)
    • (as Ratna Pathak)
    Tarla Mehta
    • Inder Lal's mother (1982 in Satipur Town)
    Charles McCaughan
    Charles McCaughan
    • Chid (1982 in Satipur Town)
    Sajid Khan
    Sajid Khan
    • Dacoit Chief
    Amanda Walker
    Amanda Walker
    • Lady Mackleworth
    Praveen Paul
    Praveen Paul
    • Maji
    • (as Parveen Paul)
    • Director
      • James Ivory
    • Writer
      • Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.52.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6christopher-underwood

    Greta Scacchi looks lovely in her first major film

    Very disappointing and drawn out effort that neither gives a realistic or particularly romantic pictures of those seemingly despicable days in India. One or two pretty scenes but low key and seeming dispassionate direction leaves one wondering where the enthusiasm came from to even set this up. Greta Scacchi looks lovely in her first major film but most is overdressed soap opera and Julie Christie seems so lost she must still be wondering why she ever did this.
    6JamesHitchcock

    A Tale of Two Stories

    During the 1980s the British entertainment industry was going through a period of fascination with all things Indian, especially with the Raj. This was the decade of Richard Attenborough's "Gandhi", David Lean's "A Passage to India" and the television version of "The Jewel in the Crown" and this one is another in the same vein. There are two intertwined stories. The first is set in the 1920s and deals with an illicit affair between Olivia, the beautiful young wife of a British colonial official and an Indian Nawab. The second, set in the seventies or eighties, deals with Anne, Olivia's great-niece, who travels to India hoping to find out about her great-aunt's life, and while there also has an affair with an Indian man.

    A similar device was used in another British film of this period, "The French Lieutenant's Woman", which also switched backwards and forwards between a story set in the past and one set in the present day. There is, however, a difference between the two films in that in "The French Lieutenant's Woman" the present-day story was an invention of the scriptwriters and was not found in John Fowles's original novel; it was inserted to provide a cinematic equivalent to Fowles's strong authorial voice and his famous two alternative endings. In "Heat and Dust" the modern scenes were an integral part of Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's book on which the film was based. Her aim seems to have been to compare contemporary attitudes to race and sex with those prevailing in the days of the Raj.

    The trick of cross-cutting between two different stories with only a tangential connection between them can be a difficult one to bring off, in literature as well as in the cinema. Neither "The French Lieutenant's Woman" nor "Heat and Dust" works particularly well in this regard. In both cases the story set in the past is the stronger one, partly because it is filmed in a more sumptuous and visually memorable style, and partly because it is more fundamentally serious. We can empathise with Olivia because of the potentially tragic consequences of the course of action she is pursuing; the romance of Anne and Inder Lal seems trivial by comparison. (Inder Lal is cheating on his wife Ritu, but this fact tends to get overlooked).

    The makers of "The French Lieutenant's Woman" (in my view the better of the two films) appear to have recognised this problem, because they devote much more attention to the Victorian romance of Charles and Sarah than they do to the contemporary one of Mike and Anna. They were also able to provide a semblance of unity to the film by using the same actors, Jeremy Irons and Meryl Streep, to play both sets of lovers. In "Heat and Dust", however, the cross-cutting can be confusing as we constantly move from one story to another. The parallels between the values of the seventies and those of the twenties, which were well brought out in Jhabvala's novel, tend to get lost here, even though she wrote the screenplay herself.

    The other main weakness of "Heat and Dust" is that we never really understand why Olivia becomes entangled with the Nawab. This is no tale of an Anna Karenina or an Emma Bovary, married to a dull older man who neglects her and whom she does not love. Olivia's husband Douglas is young, good-looking and attentive; at the start of the film, indeed, she seems desperately in love with him, preferring to stay with him during the summer heat rather than follow the other memsahibs to the cool of the hill station where they spend the summer away from their husbands. Shashi Kapoor's oily Nawab, by contrast, is an obvious scoundrel, despite the dubious glamour conferred by his royal status. (The British suspect him of being in league with a gang of bandits, allowing them to operate with impunity in exchange for a share of their booty).

    With this reservation, however, the story of Olivia is generally well done. The lovely Greta Scacchi, in her first major role, makes an appealing tragic heroine. (She was to play another adulterous colonial wife a few years later in "White Mischief"). The other parts are generally well played, and there is an amusing cameo from Nickolas Grace as Harry, the Nawab's effeminate but sinister British adviser. The look of this part of the film is attractive, made in Merchant Ivory's normal "heritage cinema" style. Interestingly enough for a film made by an Indian-born producer and an American-born director, its politics seem less concerned with post-colonial guilt than do those of many British productions about the Empire. Although some of the British are obviously racist, such as Patrick Godfrey's doctor, the administrators we see often seem more concerned for the welfare of the Indian population than do their own rulers such as the Nawab.

    The modern story, however, seems like an intrusion into the much more interesting historical one. Julie Christie is normally a gifted actress, but she seems wasted here. There is some fitful humour provided by the character of Chid, the American convert to Hindu mysticism who seems more interested in cheap sex than he does in enlightenment. Otherwise this part of the film can arouse little interest. 6/10
    6bob998

    Not up to David Lean's standard

    I'm seeing this for the first time. Although I have enjoyed Merchant-Ivory films in the past (really want to see The Bostonians again, and A Room With a View), I can't say I was affected very much by this one. Shashi Kapoor gets off some funny lines, but is otherwise pretty bland. Nickolas Grace is the only memorable character--as he was in Brideshead Revisited. Passion just isn't present in this movie. Watch A Passage to India instead.
    6sol-

    My brief review of the film

    As per usual, James Ivory captures a good feel for the period and setting, helped by, as usual, a fitting Richard Robbins score. As a cultural study, it has some things to say, with an insight into the culture of the indigenous Indian population, but it conveys little in the way of messages, as the screenplay is awfully convoluted, not helped by switching between different narrators and time periods. Some of the supporting characters are not defined well either, and there are a few lethargic gaps between events in the tale. The filming on-location is great, and generally it is all rather well made, but it pales against the work that Merchant-Ivory would produce later on, as this simply is not near a perfect film.
    10valleycats

    East, West and Everything In Between : A BONAFIDE CLASSIC --

    Based on Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's Booker Prize winning novel of the same name, this film is not so much as being about India but rather using the country as an effective setting to tell a story spanning approximately 3 generations. Two story lines - one set in the past and one in the present - are juxtaposed and connected by the narrative of a young British woman who seeks to uncover the truth about an ancestor who once caused quite a scandal by having an affair with a local Nawab. The story lines examine the impact of Western and Indian cultures as lifestyles, social mores, and centuries of history clash and collide. A tapestry of India is woven, as seen through the eyes of the narrator, a foreigner, who sincerely attempts to grasp and interpret her observations. The story and the screenplay for this movie speak volumes about Ms. Jhabvala's extraordinary literary and cinematic talents as a social and historical commentator, storyteller, and screenwriter.

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    Related interests

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    Period Drama
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    Drama
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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Producer Ismail Merchant has said of the film's financing problems: "Halfway through the shooting, some of the finance committed to the project failed to materialize, and we found we were suddenly penniless. The cast and crew continued to work despite the fact that they weren't being paid, but that couldn't go on indefinitely. There was the strongest possibility that we would go under. We would lose not just the film but our whole company [Merchant Ivory Productions]". Renowned European banker Sir Jacob Rothschild viewed a rough cut of the unfinished film and in a rescue package acted as a completion guarantor so the picture could be completed.
    • Goofs
      When Douglas gets on his horse near the 39 min mark, it appears to have the saddle on backwards.
    • Quotes

      Olivia, his wife (The Nineteen Twenties in the Civil Lines at Satipur): You have these set notions about what English women are supposed to stand. Why should anybody tell me what I can stand and what I can't stand? Well, if you want to know, the only thing I can't stand is English women. Memsahibs.

    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Never Cry Wolf/Rumble Fish/Heat and Dust/Educating Rita (1983)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 1983 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Cohen Film Collection (United States)
      • Merchant Ivory Productions (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Heat & Dust
    • Filming locations
      • Andhra Pradesh, India
    • Production company
      • Merchant Ivory Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,761,291
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,289
      • Sep 3, 2017
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,772,889
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 10m(130 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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