Release Date The Heat Jun 28, 2013 Wide
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Actors For The Heat
Sandra Bullock,Melissa McCarthy,Kaitlin Olson,Taran Killam,Raw Leiba,Tony Hale,Bill Burr,Spoken ReasonsGenres The Heat : Comedy
Visitor Ranting & Critics For The Heat
User Ranting The Heat : 4User Percentage For The Heat : 80 %
User Count Like for The Heat : 72,041
All Critics Ranting For The Heat : 6.1
All Critics Count For The Heat : 146
All Critics Percentage For The Heat : 66 %
If You Like this movie you can streaming The Heat movie without downloading HERE
Movie Overview For The Heat
Uptight and straight-laced, FBI Special Agent Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock) is a methodical investigator with a reputation for excellence--and hyper-arrogance. Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy), one of Boston P.D.'s "finest," is foul-mouthed and has a very short fuse, and uses her gut instinct and street smarts to catch the most elusive criminals. Neither has ever had a partner, or a friend for that matter. When these two wildly incompatible law officers join forces to bring down a ruthless drug lord, they become the last thing anyone expected: buddies.TagLine The Heat
Trailer For The Heat
Review For The Heat
If you've never seen the point of Sandra Bullock, watch this.Cath Clarke-Time Out
There are only two reasons to see The Heat. But they are formidable reasons, and they go by the names of Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy.
Peter Travers-Rolling Stone
If you've never seen Sandra Bullock blow a peanut shell out of her nose, and you'd like to, The Heat is your movie.
Stephanie Zacharek-Village Voice
The many formulas never mesh, and some formidable actors stumble trying to keep pace with its out-of-synch meters.
Richard Brody-New Yorker
If this were funny, The Heat would add up to your average buddy-cop comedy. Except that it's not funny, at least not very and not often.
Rick Groen-Globe and Mail
There's an edgy but rewarding chemistry between Bullock and McCarthy that makes me wish they were attached to a less foul-tasting premise.
Andrew O'Hehir-Salon.com
Miss Congeniality shows up The Other Guys in this riotously funny buddy-cop comedy, which overcomes its silly script with the ingenious pairing of Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy.
Rich Cline-Contactmusic.com
The Heat is lean, mean and completely uninterested in anything that isn't funny.
Catherine Shoard-Guardian [UK]
Prepare for some hilarious laugh enforcement, Sandra Bullock proves to be the perfect foil to the uproarious Melissa McCarthy, who is fast becoming the funniest performer in cinema.
Brian Henry Martin-UTV
A good cop/bad cop action comedy with the funniest two-women-above-the-title pairing in memory.
Tim Robey-Daily Telegraph
Bullock and McCarthy have terrific chemistry and elevate the simple-minded material with their riffing and adept physical comedy.
Henry Fitzherbert-Daily Express
Watchable buddy comedy enlivened by a pair of strong comic performances from its two leads, though it's also far too indulgent of McCarthy's ad-libbing and feels a good twenty minutes too long.
Matthew Turner-ViewLondon
The film then lives and dies by how funny each individual scene manages to be. Some hit the mark, others do not.
Joe Cunningham-HeyUGuys
Engagingly acted character comedy takes precedence over the nominal action-comedy plot, which involves the usual mysterious crime kingpin and the whereabouts of a big shipment of drugs.
Nigel Floyd-Film4
The bland visuals and point-and-shoot directorial style mean that not much sticks in the mind, but 'The Heat II' would be an entirely welcome proposition.
Adam Lee Davies-Little White Lies
Good for a few chalk-and-cheese chuckles but no real belly laughs.
Elliott Noble-Sky Movies
A genuinely funny, worthy successor to Bridesmaids, solidifying McCarthy as a rare comedic talent and potentially laying the way for more left-field lady-led comedy.
Emma Dibdin-Digital Spy
Marks another successful barge into Hollywood's boys-only territory from director Paul Feig, who is proving to be the most significant director of women in Hollywood right now.
Paul Gallagher-The List
It takes a while for The Heat to warm up, but after about 30 minutes of straining-for-effect comedy, this buddy cop vehicle for Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy proves a much funnier proposition than the thinness of its premise suggests.
Alistair Harkness-Scotsman
The screenplay, by Parks and Recreation writer Katie Dippold, is gunning to be a female Lethal Weapon or 48 Hours. Unhappily, this includes slovenly plots about tracking down drug lords to warehouse hideouts, and jackhammer banter.
Siobhan Synnot-Scotsman
The cruder gags won't win everyone over, but McCarthy and Bullock's chemistry helps paper over the plot cracks and there's enough situation comedy to entertain.
Anna Smith-Empire Magazine
There's one reason to see this movie, and it's name is Sandrissa McBullock.
Tom Glasson-Concrete Playground
The mismatched chemistry between McCarthy and co-star Sandra Bullock drives the film for the first hour before its gimmick wears off and it eventually falls apart amid a slew of buddy-cop cliches.
Todd Jorgenson-Cinemalogue.com
The script is sharply funny, with the contrasting styles (what is this, "Training Day?," Bullock asks as McCarthy attempts to bond with a drug dealer) of both leads front and center.
Michael A. Smith-MediaMikes
It's down to the two leads to charm their way through the clichés. They half manage it.
Emma Johnston-Total Film
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