June 10, 2006 |

BODY HEAT

Rated (R)

This film goes to: 8


Directed by: Lawrence Kasdan

Starring: William Hurt, Kathleen Turner, Ted Danson

Written by: Lawrence Kasdan

Produced by: Fred T. Gallo, Robert Grand, George Lucas



113 minutes

Warner Bros.

1981

Aside from the over abundance of rather large glasses and sweaty actors, "Body Heat" succeeds fabulously, not only as an excellent example of a classic film noir but as a solidly executed production in its own right. This 1981 thriller is set in steamy south Florida and features adept acting by William Hurt as inept small-town lawyer, Ned Racine and Kathleen Turner (in her first film) as his very hot but very married lover, Matty Walker. Early in the film, proverbial horn-dog Ned catches sight of Matty and pretty much all hell breaks loose.


Both are greedy and neither is willing to leave well enough alone when there is money at stake, which, it turns out, it most certainly is. Matty's husband is quite wealthy but forced her to sign a prenuptial agreement in which she gets little in the event of a divorce and only half if the poor bastard were to somehow die. Say, in an unfortunate accident… Grifters will be grifters but there is actually a lot more to this film than apparent at first glance.


"Body Heat" stays quite true to the genre, which provides moments early on where I found it walking fairly familiar ground in theme, style and character development. Frankly, anyone who has spent time with film noir will quickly find comfort in writer/director Lawrence Kasdan's masterful craftsmanship of unlikable characters you can't seem to help but like treading in murky waters they have themselves created. We are not talking about high-quality citizens here (for the most part) and Kasdan's exploration of the worst aspects of human nature works well to provide suspense and intrigue throughout even if part of you wants them all to jump off a cliff.


Did I mention "hot"? Kasdan definitely doesn't shy away when scenes get steamy which is one notable departure from classic film noir from the 40s and 50s. Fortunately, "Body Heat" was developed in the early 80s and was not subject to earlier decades' lame Blue Laws. "Body Heat" is an exciting ride that deserves a spot in the catalog of film worthy of a second look and excels in providing a tantalizing, well-scripted and filmed escape from much of the currently available stock.


DVD Details:

The 2-sided disc provides both wide (anamorphic 1.85:1 aspect ratio) and full screen versions from which to choose and provides English and French soundtracks in Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0 respectively. Unfortunately, the DVD is fairly bare-boned in the extras department with only written production notes and the original theatrical trailer included.

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Clear thinking, honest perspectives, and experience shaped by years of doing the work. No shortcuts, no borrowed opinions, just lessons learned by showing up, solving problems, and following ideas all the way through.

March 12, 2026
As you’re probably aware, I’m a big fan of protecting Colorado’s open spaces. You may know Relish is involved with 1% for the Planet, but I think it’s also of interest that I’ve chosen to live deep in the forest of Colorado’s Front Range. It’s fair to say environmental stewardship is engrained in what I do. That’s why this episode of Relish This was so much fun. I got to chat with two people—Stephanie Weber and David Taft—who work with the San Juan Mountains Association . The organization was started in the Durango area, and since their inception, they’ve expanded their reach. Now they preserve and protect forests with a solid ambassador program, education program, and volunteer program. All of these initiatives help people who are enjoying the forests understand the importance of protecting these pristine locations. SJMA now impacts more than half of Colorado’s wilderness areas! This episode focused on helping SJMA hone their message and expand their reach and engagement with stakeholders. Through social media, email, and general community networking, we look at strategies and ways to answer the question, “How do you reinforce all the good you are doing?” This was a fun conversation with a group doing some real good for Colorado’s public lands and forests. I hope you enjoy the show. — Link: SJMA Action ask: Get involved in your own backyard to protect public lands. — Listen to the podcast here: Hone Your Message To Reinforce The Work You Do With Stephanie And David From SJMA This episode features two great people from San Juan Mountains Association . They are doing some great work touching over half of Colorado’s wilderness forest areas with their influence and benefit. They have this great organization down in the Durango area that started as a focus on the San Juan Mountains and the forest down there to help preserve and protect a lot of that area from use. They have a cool educational program, ambassador program, volunteers and donors. They are doing some fantastic stuff. We talked a lot about ways that they can help hone that message, show up more effectively to people who know them and expand their reach through social media and email. There are some good gold nuggets of information that we were able to unearth. This is a fantastic episode. I’m excited to share it with you and I hope you have a great time reading it. Have a good one. — Stephanie and David, how are you doing? We’re doing great. Thank you both so much for joining me on the show. I’m excited to learn a lot more about your organization and what you guys are doing there at San Juan Mountains Association . You’re both in the Durango area. Is that correct? We are, yes. Is San Juan Mountains Association headquartered in Durango? Our offices are based out of the public land center, which is the home base for the San Juan National Forest. At this point, we have staff spread from Monte Vista over to the furthest West and up to Montrose. We’re looking for a new staff person in the town of Norwood as part of the Norwood District for the Grand Mesa Uncompahgre and Gunnison National Forests. I was fortunate enough to do some work on Grizzly Peak Trailhead with the Volunteers for Outdoor Colorado , which is over in your zone by Lake City. It’s a gorgeous part of the state. It’s one of my favorite places to be. I grew up in Gunnison. I have been fortunate to spend a little bit of time in the San Juan’s down there. It’s an amazing country. I commend you for all the work that you’re doing to help preserve things. Tell us all a little bit more about what you do there at your organization and how you’re helping to protect those forest lands and public spaces. San Juan Mountains Association was born out of a community effort to be more involved in caring for public lands. A lot of that started out with the idea of conservation education and providing visitor information. A lot of the folks who are on SJMA staff are front desk folks in public land offices. We started with the San Juan National Forest here in Durango and we also have folks in Dolores and Pagosa Springs. We have been expanding our partnerships with other forests and with the BLM as well. Another component of that is with our conservation education. SJMA merged with Durango Nature Studies right before everything shut down due to COVID-19 in 2020. That strengthened both organizations’ environmental education efforts. We start young. We start with preschoolers and kindergarteners through elementary, middle school and high school, believing that when we are exposed to the natural world, we learn to understand it. From that understanding comes appreciation and from that appreciation comes the desire to protect it. That sums up a philosophy that carries through everything that we’re doing with San Juan Mountains Association. The area where we have grown is in some of the stewardship efforts and Dave, being the Conservation Director, can speak to that in much more detail. SJMA started their stewardship and field conservation programs through the volunteer program, primarily through the San Juan National Forest but also working with the BLM and the Canyon of the Ancients National Monument. That also expanded beyond San Juan to the Rio Grande over time. Our flagship volunteer program is our Volunteer Ranger Program, which started as our Wilderness Information Specialists, in which volunteers would suit up in a forest service uniform.
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February 20, 2026
In case you hadn’t seen these (and also for my friends at Adventure Film ), here are a couple of must-see running movies from Joel Wolpert:  Geoff Roes: Slogging to the Top
By Relish February 9, 2026
Well, this weekend's activities took me to The Summit Course at Cordierra in Edwards which proceeded to kick my sorry ass and let me know that I am not only a poor excuse for a golfer but a bit of a fish-out-of-water when it comes to hangin' with the social elite. I was deemed the first person to sport a chain wallet and earrings (gender: male) to grace the links at Cordierra and am certain that I would have been booted from the joint post-haste had I not been among the company of aforementioned "social elite". It was like caddy "day" at the pool in Caddyshack. Without the boobs and Baby Ruth, of course. I shot about 150 (if you don't count the 73 Mulligans) and managed to donate about 36 balls to the surrounding wilderness. I am definitely no Danny and try as I might, I simply couldn't bring myself to "be the ball". I did carve some wicked divots, however… so the groundskeeper is assured a job for a few more weeks at least. After doing my damnedest to bring shame to my family (both Ma and Pa are excellent golfers), I took in the new film Blue Crush which is not going to win any awards (unless, of course, the Academy is adding "Best Fat Man in a Speedo" or "Teeny-Weeniest Bikini" to their agenda). Which, come to think of it, might not be such a bad idea…