Crazy Heart


title: "Crazy Heart" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["2009-films", "2009-american-films", "2009-directorial-debut-films", "2009-drama-films", "2009-independent-films", "2009-musical-films", "2000s-english-language-films", "2000s-musical-drama-films", "american-independent-films", "american-musical-drama-films", "country-music-films", "dune-entertainment-films", "english-language-independent-films", "english-language-musical-drama-films", "films-about-alcoholism", "films-based-on-american-novels", "films-directed-by-scott-cooper", "films-featuring-a-best-actor-academy-award–winning-performance", "films-featuring-a-best-drama-actor-golden-globe-winning-performance", "films-produced-by-scott-cooper", "films-scored-by-t-bone-burnett", "films-set-in-tucson,-arizona", "films-set-in-colorado", "films-set-in-new-mexico", "films-set-in-texas", "films-shot-in-new-mexico", "films-that-won-the-best-original-song-academy-award", "films-with-screenplays-by-scott-cooper", "fox-searchlight-pictures-films", "satellite-award–winning-films"] topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crazy_Heart" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

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FieldValue
nameCrazy Heart
imageCrazy heart poster.jpg
captionTheatrical release poster
directorScott Cooper
producer{{Plainlist
screenplayScott Cooper
based_on
starring{{Plainlist
music{{Plainlist
cinematographyBarry Markowitz
editing{{Plainlist
studio{{Plainlist
distributorFox Searchlight Pictures
released
runtime112 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
budget$7 million
gross$47.4 million
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| name = Crazy Heart | image = Crazy heart poster.jpg | caption = Theatrical release poster | director = Scott Cooper | producer = {{Plainlist|

Filming took place in 2008 throughout New Mexico, as well as Houston and Los Angeles. Original music for the film was composed by T Bone Burnett, Stephen Bruton, and Ryan Bingham. It was dedicated to Bruton, who died the same year the film was made. The film was produced by Country Music Television and was originally acquired by Paramount Vantage for a direct-to-video release, but was later purchased by Fox Searchlight Pictures for theatrical release.

Crazy Heart opened in theaters in the United States on December 16, 2009. From its $7 million budget, it amassed domestic earnings of $39.5 million plus $7.9 international for a worldwide total of $47.4 million. The film was met with critical acclaim and received three nominations at the 82nd Academy Awards, winning Best Actor for Bridges and Best Original Song for "The Weary Kind", written by Bingham and Burnett.

Plot

Otis "Bad" Blake is a 57-year-old alcoholic singer-songwriter who was once a country music star. He now earns a modest living by performing in small-town bars across the southwestern United States. Having a history of failed marriages (four that he admits to, although a reference is made to a fifth he does not discuss), Blake is without a family. He has a son, aged 28, with whom he has not had contact in 24 years. He is mostly on the road performing, staying in cheap motels, and travelling alone in his 1978 Chevrolet Suburban. The film opens with his arrival at a bowling alley for a show.

In Santa Fe, he meets Jean Craddock, a young journalist after a story, divorced and with a four-year-old son, Buddy. She interviews Blake one evening after his gig, and then as they become close, Jean visits again ostensibly to gather more material, and the two enter into a relationship. Jean and her son become a catalyst for Blake to get his life back on track. In doing so, he lets himself be pushed into renewing a professional relationship with Tommy Sweet, a popular and successful country music star he once mentored, and plays as the opening act at one of his concerts, despite his initial balking and wounded pride at being the opening act to his former student. He asks Tommy to record an album with him, but Tommy says his record company insists on a couple more solo albums before a duet project can be recorded. He instead suggests that Blake concentrate on writing new songs that Tommy can record solo, telling him he writes better songs than anyone else.

Blake's drinking soon gets out of control and he ends up running off the road while driving drunk. In the hospital, the doctor informs him that although he only sustained a broken ankle from the crash, he is slowly killing himself, and must stop drinking and smoking and lose 25 pounds if he wants to live more than a few more years. Blake's relationship with Jean makes him start to rethink his life. While in Houston, he calls up his son to make amends, only to learn that his mother, Bad's ex-wife, has died. Jean and her son begin to visit more frequently, but after Blake briefly loses Buddy at a shopping mall while drinking at a bar, Jean breaks up with him.

Blake resolves to quit drinking, and after going through a treatment program at a rehab center, with support from an Alcoholics Anonymous group and old friend Wayne, he finally manages to get sober. Having cleaned up his act, he tries to reunite with Jean but, despite congratulating him on getting sober, she tells him that the best thing he can do for her and Buddy is to leave them alone. Later, Blake finishes writing a song that he thinks is his best ever, "The Weary Kind", and sells it to Tommy.

Sixteen months later, Tommy plays "The Weary Kind" to an appreciative audience while Blake watches backstage, as his manager presents him with another of the large royalty checks for the song. As Blake is leaving, Jean approaches him, saying she has come to the show as writer for a large music publication. As they catch up, Blake sees an engagement ring on Jean's finger and tells her that she deserves a good man. He offers her the money from the royalty check for Buddy to have on his 18th birthday, which Jean initially refuses but eventually accepts after Blake says the song would not exist without her, and states that "it isn't money". Jean asks if Blake would like to see Buddy again, but Blake declines, saying it might be too unsettling for the boy. The film ends with Jean asking Blake for another interview, after which they walk away happily, chatting with each other.

Cast

Production

Development of original novel

The New York Times said the novel, written by Thomas Cobb, "also functions as a shrewd and funny running critique of contemporary country music." Cobb based the character "Bad" Blake on country music entertainer Hank Thompson, Ramblin' Jack Elliott and Cobb's doctoral advisor in graduate school, Donald Barthelme; Cobb studied with Barthelme in a creative writing class in the University of Houston in the 1980s. When Cobb struggled between using an "upbeat" ending and a "downbeat" ending, Barthelme suggested that Cobb use the "downbeat" ending. The nickname "Bad" came from a sentence that popped into Cobb's mind, "Bad's got the sweats again." The name "Blake" came from W. Glenn Blake, a friend from graduate school who is now a senior editor at Boulevard magazine, and some people Cobb knew in Tucson, Arizona. The book, which was out of print since its original publication, went into print again when the film was released.

Pre-production

The process of creating a film adaptation took many years because the concept was optioned, but was never produced into an actual adaptation until director Scott Cooper produced the film. Cobb assumed that the film would use a more upbeat ending, because the Hollywood film industry often prefers "things that are generally positive". According to Cobb, he had nothing to do with the making of the film. The shooting of a sequence depicting the novel's ending—in which Bad falls off the wagon and dies of a heart attack—occurred; Cooper wanted to use it as the ending, but he did not get final authority to do so. A sequence of Bad Blake visiting his son in Los Angeles was also cut from the final film.

Bridges initially passed on the role when he was first offered it. He explained to Vanity Fair that although he liked the script, he realized that the songs would make or break it and at the time the film had no musical attachments. A year later he talked with T Bone Burnett, who was approached to work on the film's soundtrack; together they both agreed to work on the film, and Bridges joined the project.

Music

Main article: Crazy Heart (soundtrack)

The album entitled Crazy Heart: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released in 2009 to accompany the film. The 23-track album contains many songs written by Burnett, Bruton, and Bingham, but also some by John Goodwin, Bob Neuwirth, Sam Hopkins, Gary Nicholson, Townes Van Zandt, Sam Philips, Greg Brown, Billy Joe Shaver, and Eddy Shaver.

The songs are performed by various artists including actors Bridges, Farrell, and Duvall, as well as singers Bingham (who sings the theme song "The Weary Kind" and plays Tony in the film), Buck Owens, The Louvin Brothers, Lightnin' Hopkins, Waylon Jennings, Townes Van Zandt, and Sam Philips.

At the 82nd Grammy Awards, the theme song "The Weary Kind" by Ryan Bingham won for Best Song Written For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media and the soundtrack also won for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media.

Reception

Critical response

Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports that 90% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 212 reviews, with an average score of 7.40/10. The consensus reads, "Thanks to a captivating performance from Jeff Bridges, Crazy Heart transcends its overly familiar origins and finds new meaning in an old story." On Metacritic the film holds a score of 83 out of 100 based on 32 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".

Critics mainly praised the performance of Jeff Bridges as Bad Blake, with many claiming he elevated the film above its seemingly conventional story and languid pace. Tom Long from Detroit News writes, "It's a bit too easy, a bit too familiar, and maybe even a bit too much fun. But the easy magic Bridges brings to the screen makes it all work." The *Toronto Star*s Linda Barnard attests that "some goodwill evaporates in the final reel, when a few false endings lead to a choice that's not the best one for Crazy Heart, but the generosity of Bridges' performance puts us in a forgiving mood."

Jeff Bridges' performance earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor, as well as Best Actor prizes from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, Broadcast Film Critics Association, Golden Globe Awards, Screen Actors Guild and the Independent Spirit Awards. Bridges also received nominations from the Chicago Film Critics Association, London Critics Circle, Online Film Critics Society and the Satellite Awards. Gyllenhaal was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance. The song "The Weary Kind" earned Ryan Bingham and T Bone Burnett the 2009 Academy Award for Best Original Song and a Golden Globe.

Accolades

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YearAssociationCategoryNominated workResult
2009Satellite AwardSatellite Award for Best Actor – Motion PictureJeff Bridges
Satellite Award for Best Original Song"The Weary Kind"
Los Angeles Film Critics AssociationLos Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best ActorJeff Bridges
Las Vegas Film Critics SocietyLas Vegas Film Critics Society Award for Best Song"The Weary Kind"
Chicago Film Critics AssociationChicago Film Critics Association Award for Best ActorJeff Bridges
2010Academy AwardAcademy Award for Best ActorJeff Bridges
Academy Award for Best Supporting ActressMaggie Gyllenhaal
Academy Award for Best Original Song"The Weary Kind"
British Academy Film AwardBAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading RoleJeff Bridges
BAFTA Award for Best Film MusicT Bone Burnett, Stephen Bruton
Broadcast Film Critics Association AwardBroadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best ActorJeff Bridges
Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Song"The Weary Kind"
Golden Globe AwardGolden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture DramaJeff Bridges
Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song"The Weary Kind"
Independent Spirit AwardIndependent Spirit Award for Best First FeatureScott Cooper
Independent Spirit Award for Best Male LeadJeff Bridges
Screen Actors Guild AwardScreen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading RoleJeff Bridges
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Home media

The film was released on April 20, 2010, on DVD and Blu-ray. The single-disc DVD's special features included six deleted scenes, while the two-disc Blu-ray set contained eight deleted scenes (including one in which Bad reunites with his son), plus two alternative music cuts and a short documentary in which the stars discuss "What Brought Them to Crazy Heart".

References

References

  1. (December 21, 2009). "''Crazy Heart'' (15)". [[British Board of Film Classification]].
  2. "Crazy Heart". [[IMDb]].
  3. Cobb, Thomas. (1987). "Crazy Heart". Harper & Row.
  4. Lewis, Randy. (December 2, 2009). "Hank Thompson: 'Crazy Heart's' real-life Bad Blake". Los Angeles Times.
  5. Cieply, Michael. (November 1, 2009). "A Surprise Gets Buzz for Oscars". The New York Times.
  6. Honeycutt, Kirk. (November 2, 2009). "Crazy Heart – Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter.
  7. "Fox Searchlight Pictures Acquires 'Crazy Heart'". Content.FoxSearchlight.com.
  8. "Oscar Watch: 'Crazy Heart'{{'s}} Bridges Joins Actors Fray". Anne Thompson/Blogs.IndieWire.com.
  9. Garner, Dwight. (2010-01-29). "The Reading Life: Jeff Bridges and 'Crazy Heart': Channeling Donald Barthelme?".
  10. Rourke, Bryan. (November 2, 2009). "Foster author's 'Crazy Heart' gets reprint now that movie is on the way". The Providence Journal Co.
  11. Johns Hopkins University Press website. [https://jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu/title/old-and-lost/author-bio Glenn Blake author biography for short story collection ''The Old and the Lost.'']
  12. Hoinski, Michael. "[https://archive.today/20130205141647/http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/archives/2010/03/qa_crazy_heart.php Q&A: Crazy Heart Author Thomas Cobb on His Character Bad Blake, Deer Tick, and Why Chet Atkins Killed Country] ." ''[[The Village Voice]]''. Thursday March 4, 2010. Retrieved on July 31, 2010.
  13. Smith, Krista. (December 22, 2009). "Jeff Bridges: The Vanity Fair Interview".
  14. "Crazy Heart". [[Fandango Media.
  15. "Crazy Heart Reviews". [[Metacritic]].
  16. "Review: Jeff Bridges and memorable music elevate 'Crazy Heart'". Detroit News.
  17. Barnard, Linda. "Crazy Heart: Hurts so good". Toronto Star.
  18. (2010). "Oscar nominations announced".
  19. "Nominations and Winners 2009". Hollywood Foreign Press Association.
  20. [http://content.foxsearchlight.com/inside/node/4373 "Buy now."] {{webarchive. link. (April 4, 2010 by Thomas Dodson, Fox Searchlite movie Web site, March 29, 2010. Retrieved April 20, 2010.)

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