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Heart and Souls

 
Movies:

Heart and Souls

  • Director: Ron Underwood
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Comedy, Heaven-Can-Wait Fantasies
  • Themes: Reincarnation, Ghosts
  • Main Cast: Robert Downey, Jr., Charles Grodin, Alfre Woodard, Kyra Sedgwick, Tom Sizemore
  • Release Year: 1993
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 104 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Director Ron Underwood follows up his crowd-pleasing hit City Slickers (1991) with this likable, feel-good comedy drama about a selfish businessman who discovers that he's permanently being followed by a group of ghosts. In 1959, a bus accident links the spirits of four fatally injured passengers to a newborn baby whose birth is caused by the crash. For 25 years, Milo (Tom Sizemore), Harrison (Charles Grodin), Penny (Alfre Woodard) and Julia (Kyra Sedgwick) remain bound to Thomas Reilly (Robert Downey Jr.), who believes the quartet to be imaginary childhood friends that have long since disappeared. When the four spooks suddenly realize that they are meant to use Thomas as a conduit to bring closure to their unfinished corporeal lives, they reemerge, causing Thomas to think that he's gone insane. As he becomes reattached to his supernatural companions, however, Thomas' innate decency asserts itself and he begins helping them to right the wrongs in their lives, allowing them to possess his body to achieve their goal of settling accounts and moving on into the afterlife. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Review

Much can be said about the career of Robert Downey Jr., but the one thing that can never be denied is the fact that, no matter what the project, he always puts everything into his role. Chaplin comes to mind and even Only You could support the idea, but perhaps no film illustrates Downey's ethos better than Heart and Souls. From a slightly above-average script and adequate direction from Ron Underwood, Downey almost single-handedly turns the film into a memorable and satisfying effort. As Thomas, a role any other actor could easily get away with phoning in, Downey turns in an Oscar-worthy performance that often outshines the film itself. Additionally, credit must also be given to the ensemble that make up Thomas' ever-present heavenly entourage. Alfre Woodard, Charles Grodin, Tom Sizemore, and Kyra Sedgwick bring the sort of effectiveness to their supporting roles that audiences have come to expect from them. Heart and Souls probably should have just been a pretty good movie, but with another marvel of a turn by Robert Downey Jr., it's nearly great. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide

Cast

David Paymer - Hal the Bus Driver; Elisabeth Shue - Anne; Eric Lloyd - Thomas Reilly--Age 7; Bill Calvert - Mr. Frank Reilly; Lisa Lucas - Mrs. Eva Reilly; Richard Portnow - Max Marco; Wren T. Brown - Sgt. Wm. Barclay; John Durbin - Stage Manager; Tony Genaro - Man at Farmhouse; John Goodwin - Security Guard; Michael Halton - Motorcycle Cop; Ed Hooks - Jim; Ernie Hudson - Barry; B.B. King - Himself; Janet MacLachlan - Agnes Miller; George Maguire - Music Director; Bob Newhart; Sean O'Bryan - John McBride; Eric Poppick - Mr. Polito; Richard Roat - Anne's Dad; Janet Rotblatt - Mrs. Brodsky; Kurtwood Smith - Jeffrey Patterson; Lorinne Vozoff - Anne's Mom; Luana Anders - Records Bureaucrat; Marc Shaiman - Piano Accompanist; Janette Caldwell - Woman in Cadillac; Chasiti Hampton - Shirley Washington, age 7; Will Nye - Frank's Football Buddy; Pam Dixon

Credit

Lauren Polizzi - Art Director, Dan Webster - Art Director, Dixie J. Capp - Associate Producer, Adam Shankman - Choreography, Gregory Hansen - Co-producer, Jean-Pierre Dorleac - Costume Designer, Ron Underwood - Director, O. Nicholas Brown - Editor, Marc Shaiman - Composer (Music Score), Richard Bryce Goodman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Ken Chase - Makeup, John Muto - Production Designer, Michael W. Watkins - Cinematographer, Sean Daniel - Producer, Dirk Petersmann - Producer, James Jacks - Producer, Nancy Roberts - Producer, Anne H. Ahrens - Set Designer, John H.M. Berger - Set Designer, Lauren Polizzi - Set Designer, S.S. Wilson - Screen Story, Brent Maddock - Screenwriter, S.S. Wilson - Screenwriter, Gregory Hansen - Screenwriter, Eric Hansen - Play Author

Similar Movies

All of Me; Always; Beyond Tomorrow; Chances Are; The Dybbuk; Ghost; Heaven Can Wait; Here Comes Mr. Jordan; The Horn Blows at Midnight; Topper; Wonder Man; The Return of Peter Grimm; Angels; L'Amico Immaginario; Les Anges Gardiens; To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday; Meet Joe Black; Curtain Call; Down to Earth
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Heart and Souls

Promotional one-sheet poster.
Directed by Ron Underwood
Produced by Nancy Roberts
Sean Daniel
Written by Gregory Hansen
Starring Robert Downey, Jr.
Charles Grodin
Kyra Sedgwick
Elisabeth Shue
Tom Sizemore
David Paymer
Alfre Woodard
Music by Marc Shaiman
Cinematography Michael W. Watkins
Editing by O. Nicholas Brown
Distributed by Universal Studios
Release date(s) June 24, 1993
Running time 93 min.
Country  United States
Language English

Heart and Souls is a 1993 fantasy/comedy film about the souls of four deceased people who are trapped on earth and can only be seen by a single living human being who is recruited to help them take care of their unfinished business. The movie was directed by Ron Underwood and was filmed in San Francisco.

Contents

Plot

In 1959, Eva and Frank Reilly are on their way to the hospital, as Eva is about to have their first child. Their car collides with a bus, and the bus is run off a bridge. Harrison (Charles Grodin), Julia (Kyra Sedgwick), Milo (Tom Sizemore), and Penny (Alfre Woodard) were passengers on the bus and they are all killed. Each one had unfinished business in their lives, and instead of going to heaven, they find themselves as ghosts, tied to the newborn Thomas Reilly.

Only Thomas is able to see them, and they act as his guides and guardian angels. However, when people show concern over Thomas' "imaginary" friends, they decide to hide themselves from him to avoid trouble. Thomas is devastated. Thirty years later, after finally learning that they were supposed to use their internment on Earth to resolve their remaining issues, they make themselves visible to Thomas (Robert Downey, Jr.) once more. By now, he is a cold, distant businessman having problems with his girlfriend Anne (Elisabeth Shue). Though reluctant at first, he eventually agrees to help each of them fulfill their final task. As they succeed (despite varying levels of difficulty) in tying up their decades-old loose ends, they are individually brought to heaven by the bus driver (his punishment for crashing the bus) in an emotional moment.

Milo, a petty thief, regrets a decision he made to steal valuable stamps, a family heirloom, from a child before he died. He possesses Thomas and steals the stamps back from his former boss, who still has them. He returns the stamps anonymously to their overjoyed owner.

Harrison was a would-be singer who was very talented, but had severe stage fright. He died shortly after giving up at an audition, unable to perform. After encouragement from Thomas and the others, he finally works up the nerve to sing the National Anthem at a B. B. King concert when Thomas sneaks on stage, and he is a big hit. Thomas is detained by the police, but he is satisfied that Harrison's final act was a success.

Penny had been spending her time with Thomas trying to discover the fate of her children. She hears that her daughters were adopted and are living happy lives, but can find nothing about her son Billy. In a chance encounter, the policeman who Thomas has had constant run-ins with sings a song to his baby daughter, the same song that Penny invented to sing to her son. She realizes that this cop is Billy, and possesses Thomas to tell Billy that she loves him. Billy is disoriented and not fully convinced by Thomas's weak cover story, but the message seems to get across. Penny's work is done.

Finally, Julia had been on the way to tell her ex-boyfriend she loved him, and that she had decided to marry him, when the bus crashed. Thomas takes her to the last-known location of the man, trying to outrun the ghost bus which has come for her. She takes control of him when they arrive and writes a letter to give to her fiancée under the cover that he found it. However, when he knocks on the door, the man who lives there reveals that her boyfriend died seven years ago. Thomas and Julia are stunned at the unfairness of it, until she realizes that coming here was meant to show Thomas that he shouldn't squander his relationship with Anne. The bus driver is pleased with this explanation and takes Julia away, leaving Thomas to patch things up with Anne.

Cast

Awards

Saturn Award - Robert Downey Jr. (Best actor in a leading role)

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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