Heatwave! (TV Movie 1974) Poster

(1974 TV Movie)

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5/10
The end of the world on a tight budget
mls41822 December 2021
Well, now we know the first sign that the end is near: restaurants limit customers to one glass of water.

This is a better than average 70s TVM. I don't know if it was inspired by the blossoming environmental movement or the disaster film craze. In 2021, I find it comforting to watch old disaster films from a more civilized era.
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6/10
Nice little disaster movie
bensonmum23 June 2017
Two things you could easily find in the 70s were disaster movies and made-for-TV movies. Heatwave! (I love the added exclamation point) combines the two. The end result is a nice, little, enjoyable film. The movie focuses on Frank and Laura Taylor (Ben Murphy and Bonnie Bedelia) as they try to cope with and survive an unrelenting heatwave. Complicating matters, Laura is seven months pregnant. They decide to try to escape the heat and general nastiness of the city and head to Laura's parent's cabin in the mountains. But the heat and nastiness follow them. They are forced to hike the last several miles, which is rough on the pregnant Laura. Fortunately, one of the few remaining residents on the mountain is an old doctor. Laura prematurely goes into labor. With no modern medical equipment, no power, and no way to get back to civilization, will the baby survive?

Unlike modern films with their overblown special effects, Heatwave! is a much smaller, more intimate movie. It's the kind of movie that I'm not sure you could make today. The movie works primarily due to some outstanding acting and writing. The two leads, Murphy and particularly Bedelia, are great. There were times when Murphy got on my nerves, but that had more to do with his character than him as an actor. The supporting cast is strong. Lew Ayres, David Huddleston, John Anderson, and Dana Elcar are all veterans and more than capable. The script is well-written and provides a good amount of tension and suspense. The run-ins that Frank and Laura have with other people are interesting. I'm sure the message here is that we are all living in a world that is just one small disaster away from breaking down into chaos. Frank's encounter with the old man on the road is proof of that. There were, however, moments of manufactured tension that didn't quite work. I got a chuckle out of Laura's overly dramatic encounter with a raccoon. This was a 70s made-for-TV movie so the happy ending should come as no surprise. Still, the ingenious way they all pull together in the end to save the baby, however improbable, was nice.
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5/10
Not Red Hot but Good
Waiting2BShocked27 December 2010
Struggling independent young couple Murphy and Bedelia - he's a lowly clerk, she's pregnant - are two of the more memorable residents of a small town whom the heat is upon, where personal emotions and intensities are rising along with the temperature.

There's dramatically nothing new here, and it isn't new on a TV budget. But in saying that, the TV disaster cycle spawned by the success of the big-screen genre in the 70s was often to be found to be far more briskly entertaining than its bombastic big-budget counterparts. In fact, in Heat Wave! in particular, the tack factor remains pretty low and preposterousness is kept to a minimum, in favour of building tensions amidst characters and their situation.

It's a shame that these films aren't shown TV anymore, as in their way they can be a more thoughtful yet entertaining watch than today's mindless blockbusters, and often at half the length.
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Hot, Hot Hot!
WSAP130323 January 2003
There probably isn't another movie out there that could make you thirstier than this one. Plot follows a young couple and their newborn through a devastating heat wave. Everyone's looking for water as the towns supply dries up. Things get tough especially on the baby. Look for the makeshift incubator. (Great Idea!) Reminds me of the Twilight Zone episode where the Earth shifts and heads towards the sun as the temperature keeps climbing. Acting is O.K. Worth a look on late night TV.
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7/10
If You Can't Take The Heat, Stay Out Of This Made-For-TV Kitchen
virek21317 August 2015
One really would not think that extreme heat would make for the premise of a movie, at least not in the mid-1970s on TV, because it is a silent threat that one only feels, though it is one that can kill. And yet that's what happens in the 1974 made-for-TV melodrama HEATWAVE!, which, while it can't be called a masterpiece in the TV film genre by any stretch of the imagination, does a good enough job with a premise that, due to the lack of special effects, probably shouldn't work as well as it does.

The story basically centers on an isolated Southern California mountain community facing the ravages of a devastating heat wave in which the daytime temperatures climb rapidly towards 120 degrees. Among the residents in danger are a young couple, played by Ben Murphy (who had appeared in the TV series "Alias Smith And Jones") and Bonnie Bedelia (who had appeared in the 1969 Sydney Pollack film THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY?, and would later be Bruce Willis' wife in the 1988 blockbuster DIE HARD). Bedelia, as it so happens, is pregnant; and the extreme heat is putting both her and her soon-to-be-born in a hell of a lot of danger. Such a fairly uncomplicated premise, which, as another reviewer has said, is probably derived from a "Twilight Zone" episode (specifically "The Midnight Sun"), is made nevertheless fairly uncomfortable because of the way the heat affects the emotional behavior of those involved. The film includes such actors as Lew Ayres (ADVISE AND CONSENT), John Anderson (RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY), Dana Elcar (THE STING), and Richard Bull (HOUR OF THE GUN).

On a fairly low budget, director Jerry Jameson (who would specialize in many a made-for-TV disaster film for much of the rest of the 1970s, and direct a big-budget film in the genre, 1977's AIRPORT '77) and his cast do a fairly good job with the notion of a silent killer such as heat. And lest anyone think that this can't happen in real life as it did in this film, it should be noted that summers here in Southern California have gotten progressively hotter, with heat waves either lasting longer or being more severe over time.

In short, you have been warned. HEATWAVE! Will get a '7' rating from me.
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7/10
We're having a heat wave...
planktonrules1 November 2016
When the film begins, it's inexplicably hot in California. This heat wave isn't just hot...but unrelenting. In fact, it's so bad that through the course of the movie, Frank and Laura Taylor (Ben Murphy and Bonnie Bedelia) find that society is breaking down--folks are out of work, supplies start running thin and chaos is breaking out. In an effort to get away from the crazy city, they head to a family mountain retreat in the mountains...but things are so bad that they are soon attacked and their car stolen. Could it be any worse? Well, Laura is pregnant!! Will they survive or are they completely screwed?

"Heatwave" is a very competently made film and it has some interesting things to say about human nature...at its best as well as at its worst. However, the film does pull its punches a bit...especially at the very end of the picture. Worth seeing but not among the best of the series.
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5/10
A little too under-played for a disaster movie
Red-Barracuda30 September 2016
During an extreme heat wave, a couple with relationship difficulties leave the sun-baked city and head for the mountains in the hope of cooler temperatures.

Heatwave is an example of that very 70's genre of film, the disaster movie. Although this is one of the ones that was made for TV, not the cinema. Consequently, it is much more modestly budgeted. To be fair though, heat is a phenomenon that requires a lot less money on screen than earthquakes or blazing buildings! So in order for it to really work it has to be conveyed principally by acting and while the dramatics are serviceable enough here, it's just too low-key to really make very much of an impact. For me, a better idea would have been to have never had the characters leave the city in the first place as it is within this environment that the effects of the heatwave can more interestingly be explored. As it is, once the couple head for the hills, things do slacken off somewhat. In summary, this is a little too underplayed to make the most of its premise, it's more of a low-key drama with a heatwave in the background creating an obstacle and I guess I was hoping for more of the disaster element to be at the forefront of this one.
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6/10
Heatwave is a little to hot for me!
mm-398 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Heatwave is a little to hot for me! Well not really. Heatwave is more like a soap opera. A stock broker and pregnant wife must deal with a heatwave so bad the couple goes up to the mountains. With a premature child the father must save his son. There is many plot twists, and characters. Heatwave is okay directed, and acted, but and there is a but here! The story drags. It picks up for the ending. Problem try to solve the problem and then fix problem again story. 6 stars.
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1/10
Yawn Fest
Rainey-Dawn9 December 2019
If you are looking for a film to put you to sleep - you got one right here. Usually I enjoy the 1970s TV movies and the disaster flick but this one was just drawn out and boring. Took them half the film to get to the small isolated town but the problems began from the start.

1/10
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5/10
An Average Disaster Movie for This Particular Era
Uriah4331 May 2017
This film begins with a man named "Frank Taylor" (Ben Murphy) and his pregnant wife "Laura" (Bonnie Bedelia) lying in bed drenched in sweat due to a severe heatwave which has swept Los Angeles and indirectly caused massive brownouts all over the city. Eventually, with city resources strained to the breaking point and tempers flaring up as well, chaos erupts which in turn prompts Frank and Laura to leave Los Angeles and head to their parent's cabin in a more remote part of California. But even there the conditions aren't much better and not long afterward the impact of the weather crisis results in both Frank and Laura having to make major adjustments--along with some other equally tough decisions--in order to survive. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this made-for-television movie had some slow parts which caused it to drag a bit here and there. Fortunately, things improved near the end sufficiently enough for me to rate this movie a little higher. Average.
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8/10
WITH exclamation point!
Coventry8 February 2017
You know a disaster movie is serious businesses when there's an exclamation point in the title! Adding an exclamation means that the title, which is generally speaking just the type of disaster featuring in the film, still isn't powerful enough to underline how hopeless the situation is for the poor people in the story. Jerry & David Zucker understood this principle when they made their brilliant disaster movie parody "Airplane!" and Jerry Jameson cleverly understood the added value of the exclamation point as well, especially since his film is "only" a modestly budgeted made- for-TV production from the early 70s. After all, let's be honest: "Heatwave" merely sounds as if it's going to be a little hot & sweaty, whereas "Heatwave!" immediately rises the impression that people will die the heat! And they are damn right to add the exclamation point, because at one point in the film, there's an outside thermometer showing a temperature of 118°F. I'm from Europe, so I had no idea how warm that is, but I looked it up and convert to °C (Celsius) … And you know what, fellow Europeans? That's almost 50°C!

Personally I really liked "Heatwave!" and I truly appreciated that it's a small-scaled but intense, honest and compelling story rather than a massive blockbuster with fancy special effects or expensive fake set pieces. Unlike "The Towering Inferno", "The Poseidon Adventure" or any other Irwin Allen production, "Heatwave!" entirely relies on script, atmosphere and acting performances. This works wonderfully well, and I was particularly impressed with how realistically these ordinary and usually good-hearted people turned into monsters due to the unendurable temperatures. Throughout the entire movie, I kept thinking about a famous line of dialogue spoken by the almighty Jack Nicholson in "A Few Good Men"… There he says at one point: "I'm a decent guy, but this (swearing) heat is driving me absolutely crazy!" Too true, and the strongest quality of "Heatwave!" is how the film masterfully depicts how regular city people suddenly become very selfish, aggressive, cowardly and even violent. In the midst of all this, we have a young couple, Frank and Laura Taylor, trying to cope with the heatwave that now lasts for two weeks already. The girl is seven months pregnant and needs to take good care of herself, but there isn't any fresh food or bottled water left anywhere. When then also the power supplies, like electricity and gas stations, are switched out, they decide to head out to her family's holiday retreat up in the mountains. The journey turns out long, difficult and full of unforeseen obstacles, and the circumstances in the little mountain village aren't any better. The worst is yet to come when Laura goes into labor two months too soon. "Heatwave!" has everything I've come to expect from an adequate disaster movie… Extreme circumstances, genuine drama, some characters you care for and many others you wish will suffer, a handful of very memorable scenes and a (admittedly forced) happy ending. Great performances are coming from the entire cast, with specific compliments to Ben Murphy (?) and the unbelievable ravishing Bonnie Bedelia, that both carry the entire film without effort. After seeing her here and in "The Strange Vengeance of Rosalie", I honestly don't comprehend why Bedelia didn't become one of the most successful and desirable actresses of the late 70s and 80s.
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4/10
Gee, weren't 70's TV movies uplifting and fun?
mark.waltz10 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
No electricity, no water, no gas and an impending food shortage. Sound familiar? But there's plenty of Bronson's beer, and manufactured David Huddleston will chew your ear off to remind you of that, the big blowhard. If his seeing wasn't enough to make you hate this movie then the way society acts will certainly make you depressed. They already have problems in their marriage, but young Ben Murphy and the pregnant Bonnie Bedelia will end up suffering a great deal in this TV movie that gives us a glimpse into a society that we have always prayed we'd never see, but tidbits of little which we have.

You see the temperature rise from 112 to 116 in a matter of minutes, and at Murphy's broker-dealer, boss Dana Elcar is informed that the air conditioning will need to be shut down. The opening scene of the young couple waking up shows shows them sweating profusely in bed, and lima beans in the grocery store and laundromat show how chaos has already run rampant. The couple decides to head to the mountains to find cooler weather but run into a lot more obstacles on the way including the theft of their car.

The one good thing about many TV movies of the early 1970's is that they only clock in at 90 minutes with commercials so you could deal with the depression knowing that it wouldn't be taking up a lot of your time. But in general, TV movies tended to show the worst of humanity, and that is quite obvious here. The leading actors are very good, showing their despondence over the situation, and working together to make it. The challenge to make it through this is to watch it in its entirety without reaching for a bottle of wine because indeed, it doesn't make you feel good about our future.
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Minor Entertainment
Michael_Elliott24 August 2015
Heatwave! (1974)

** (out of 4)

ABC Movie of the Week has a large city battling one of the worst heatwaves the country has ever seen. Frank (Ben Murphy) and his pregnant wife Laura (Bonnie Bedelia) decide to jump in their car and try to make it to the top of a mountain where they hope to find a doctor as well as cooler temperatures but they hit one roadblock after another.

HEATWAVE! is a pretty bland movie from start to finish that's biggest flaw is its screenplay, which offers some rather unappealing characters as well as too many predictable moments. One of the biggest issues that I had with the film is how every single turn led the couple to another major issue. I'm not going to ruin some of the plot points here but let's just say that everything imaginable happens to the two but not for a second did I believe it. I also never really felt that the script was putting either of them into any real danger so that means there's no drama or suspense to be had.

Bedelia does turn in a good performance in the role of the 7 month pregnant woman who finds herself battling the heat. Murphy is also good in his role but his character is a major jerk, which is a turnoff as well. Lew Ayres shows up as a county doctor and it was fun seeing him and David Huddleston is also fun in his role as a beer salesman.

HEATWAVE! thankfully runs only 72 minutes or else it would have been more of a chore to sit through. As it is, it's mildly entertaining but there are just too many flaws for it to work.
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3/10
LOVE IS LIKE A HEATWAVE!
dillynmykal23 June 2022
I watch this whenever there's a heatwave. That's my tradition. Lol it gets worse everytime I watch it, but I've grown fond of it. The first 10 minutes are the best because it captures the lethargy and stickyness of a heatwave that you can do little about.

I don't know why I made it a tradition but now I'm stuck with it ⭐⭐
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10/10
Heatwave Makes You Sweat!
climbingivy16 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I just watched this movie again last week and I forgot what a good story that it is for a made for television movie.The movie has an excellent cast.Bonnie Bedelia,Ben Murphy and Lew Ayres are excellent actors.This story reminds all of us what it is like to live in the summertime without the benefit of a good air conditioner in your home or in the car.I was reminded of what it was like when I was expecting a child in the month of August and it was miserable without air conditioning.If you want to see a good story with excellent actors then check this one out.This movie is appropriate for the entire family.I have this movie.
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"Can't They Plan Anything Right?!"...
azathothpwiggins13 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
HEATWAVE! Is not only about the unprecedented scorcher of the title, it's a jumbo pack of a made-for-TV disaster movie. It includes: A food and water shortage, wildfires, and the breakdown of the electrical grid! With temperatures well over 110 degrees, brownouts turn into blackouts,, and bickering turns into sheer panic!

In the midst of this growing catastrophe, Frank and Laura Taylor (Ben Murphy and Bonnie Bedelia) are already having financial problems, and have a baby on the way.

All of this happens within the first 20 minutes!

When Frank and Laura decide to escape to a cooler location in the mountains, they discover that their troubles aren't so easily left behind.

HEATWAVE! Is filled with human drama and adventure, turning into a desperate survival story. It's one of the best of its sub-genre, a cautionary tale with real-life implications. It may be from the 1970's, but it's certainly relevant for any era...
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Alcohol and pregnancy
PaulJ746028 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Not a bad movie for its time and these ABC movies of the week seem to have covered every imaginable force of nature, heatwaves, hurricanes, rain storms, you name it. It's interesting to note one scene in particular where Laura (Bonnie Bedelia) and Frank (Ben Murphy) take a swig of beer in a restaurant scene because the "new" policy is "one glass of water per person." A man sitting in a booth nearby overhears the conversation and wants the couple to try his new beer called "Bronson." Of course, being so dehydrated, they take it never alluding to the fact that Laura is pregnant and can't have alcohol. I would bet this scene would be cut out today so as not to encourage pregnant woman to drink.
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