49
Metascore
11 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Washington PostPaul AttanasioWashington PostPaul AttanasioHeartburn is a masterpiece, a collaboration of mature artists at the peak of their craft, and something of a summing up for Mike Nichols, who, more successfully than any other American director, has staked out the terrain where men and women meet as his own. Here it is -- a movie that is seriously funny.
- 50Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertThis is a bitter, sour movie about two people who are only marginally interesting.
- Unhappily, the movie begins to show signs of wear even before the marriage does.
- 50Chicago TribuneGene SiskelChicago TribuneGene SiskelEphron delivered an incredibly flimsy script based on her novel about her former husband's repeated infidelity during their marriage and her pregnancies. Nicholson isn't given a character to play. He just lumbers onto the screen and cheats off-camera.
- 50Miami HeraldBill CosfordMiami HeraldBill CosfordHeartburn doesn't have enough good inside semi-fiction to be of much interest to the Washington cognoscenti, and it's not enough of a movie to stay in the memory of the outside-the-beltway crowd more than an hour or two. What it is is a chance to see our two most celebrated actors at work for a while between films. [25 July 1986, p.D1]
- 50The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Jay ScottThe Globe and Mail (Toronto)Jay ScottThe script, based by Ephron herself on her own tua culpa memoir of her marriage, is spread wide, but the film never goes deeper into its subject - estrangement and adultery - than a bent dipstick. Heartburn is gentrified Neil Simon. [25 July 1986, p.D1]
- 50The New YorkerPauline KaelThe New YorkerPauline KaelThe film is rich in fillips--smart little taps and strokes. But after a while you start asking yourself, what is this movie about? (You're still asking when it's over.)
- 40Los Angeles TimesSheila BensonLos Angeles TimesSheila BensonYou can fret at Heartburn's flimsiness, may even find it insufferably smug in its portrait of our set, but you probably won't be bored by it. And it is peopled with adults, these days enough to make you whimper in gratitude. If only these talents were in the service of something.
- 40TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineThe film is based on the Ephron novel detailing her marital break-up with journalist Carl Bernstein; but although the book had a distinctive bite, the film is a colorless adaptation.
- 40NewsweekDavid AnsenNewsweekDavid AnsenHeartburn deflates before your eyes: it's less a slice of life than a slice of lifestyle. [28 July 1986, p.70]