1984 / Best Actress / Best Director / Best Picture / Best Supporting Actor / Best Supporting Actress

Film #331: Places in the Heart (1984)

Moving on to the concluding part of our Sally Field double bill we come to the film for which she won her second Best Actress Oscar. That film was Places in the Heart in which she played Edna Spalding, who becomes widowed when her sheriff husband is accidentally shot and killed.


Realising that her husband was still repaying money he borrowed to buy the family farm, Edna is faced with the prospect of moving of splitting up her family. Instead of leaving the house, Edna decides to grow cotton on the land with help from black drifter Moze. Edna gets another lodger when the banker who she owes money to suggests that his blind brother-in-law Mr Will moves in. Mr Will is initially hostile to Edna, and even scolds her children, but later he bonds with the Spalding brood. Edna’s new ramshackle family eventually realise that they need to harvest the cotton as soon as possible and get the price for it so Edna can keep the farm. But soon Moze faces difficulty from the racist townsfolk and Will is forced to use all of his facilities to help his new found friend. If this were the only story in Places in the Heart then I may have enjoyed the film a lot more but unfortunately there was a subplot involving Edna’s siter and her philandering husband. Edna’s brother-in-law Wayne is seen to be having an affair with the local schoolteacher Viola and their story plays out alongside Edna’s. However, I found this plot to be utterly pointless and it should have been written out of the film altogether.

In fact one of Places in the Heart’s main issues is its script, so it makes it all the more surprising that the other Oscar it won was for Best Adapted Screenplay. Whilst I understand that the screenwriters wanted to remain faithful to the original story, I found the Wayne subplot really didn’t fit in with what the rest of the film was trying to do. Like Norma Rae, Places in the Heart is another story of a single woman trying to cope in a male-dominated society. The theme of the outcast is quite prevalent throughout as we have a woman, a black man and a blind man all living together and trying to make the best of a bad situation. Although the story is disjointed, Places in the Heart more than makes up for it with some wonderful cinematography. The period detail is wonderfully realised and cinematographer Néstor Almendros shoots the Texas landscape beautifully. I personally feel that Field’s performance isn’t a patch on her turn in Norma Rae and she really didn’t make me care about the character of Edna very much at all. The performance of the film actually came from John Malkovich as Mr Will as I found his transformation to be utterly believable. Danny Glover similarly excelled as the likeable Moze and his turn here was a million miles away from his performance in The Color Purple. Oddly, Places in the Heart’s lasting legacy isn’t anything in the film but rather Field’s Oscar Speech in which she let out the iconic line, “I can’t deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!” Unfortunately, I didn’t like the film as much as the academy like Field’s performance as I found it overly sentimental with a disjointed story albeit one that has some fine supporting turns and some brilliant cinematography.

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