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{{short description|1985 film by Martin Ritt}} {{Use American English|date=January 2025}} {{Infobox film | name = Murphy's Romance | image = Murphys romance.jpg | alt = | caption = Theatrical release poster | director = [[Martin Ritt]] | producer = [[Laura Ziskin]] | screenplay = [[Harriet Frank Jr.]]<br>[[Irving Ravetch]] | based_on = ''Murphy's Romance: A Novel'' by<br>[[Max Schott]] | starring = {{Plainlist| * [[Sally Field]] * [[James Garner]] * [[Brian Kerwin]] * [[Corey Haim]] }} | music = [[Carole King]] | cinematography = [[William A. Fraker]] | editing = Sidney Levin | studio = Fogwood Films | distributor = [[Columbia Pictures]] | released = {{Film date|1985|12|25}} | runtime = 107 minutes | country = United States | language = English | budget = $13 million<ref name=IMDb-BO>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089643/business Box office / business for ''Murphy's Romance'']. - [[IMDb]]</ref> | gross = $30,762,621<ref name=IMDb-BO/> }} '''''Murphy's Romance''''' is a 1985 American romantic-comedy film directed by [[Martin Ritt]]. The screenplay by [[Harriet Frank Jr.]] and [[Irving Ravetch]] was based on the 1980 novella by [[Max Schott]]. The film stars [[Sally Field]], [[James Garner]], [[Brian Kerwin]], and [[Corey Haim]], and was produced by [[Laura Ziskin]] for Field's production company Fogwood Films. The film's theme song, "Love for the Last Time", is performed by [[Carole King]]. ==Plot summary== Emma Moriarty is a 33-year-old, divorced mother who moves to a rural Arizona town to make a living by training and boarding horses. She becomes friends with the town's pharmacist, Murphy Jones, an idiosyncratic widower. A romance between them seems unlikely because of Murphy's age and because Emma allows her ex-husband, Bobby Jack Moriarty, to move back in with her and their 12-year-old son Jake. Emma struggles to make ends meet, but is helped by Murphy. While refusing to help her outright with charity or personal loan, Murphy gives a part-time job to Jake and buys a horse with her assistance, boarding it with Emma and encouraging others to do the same. He also provides emotional support for Emma and Jake. A rivalry develops between Murphy and Bobby Jack, who is immature and dishonest. Emma and Murphy fall in love despite Bobby Jack's efforts to hamper their romance. Bobby Jack finally leaves town after an 18-year-old he had a fling with appears at the ranch with their newborn twin sons. With him gone, Murphy and Emma are free to pursue a relationship. ==Cast== {{castlist| * [[Sally Field]] as Emma Moriarty * [[James Garner]] as Murphy Jones * [[Brian Kerwin]] as Bobby Jack Moriarty * [[Corey Haim]] as Jake Moriarty * [[Dennis Burkley]] as Freeman Coverly * [[Carole King]] as Tillie * [[Georgann Johnson]] as Margaret * Dortha Duckworth as Bessie * Michael Prokopuk as Albert * Billy Ray Sharkey as Larry Le Beau * Michael Crabtree as Jim Forrest * [[Anna Thomson|Anna Levine]] as Wanda * [[Charles Lane (actor, born 1905)|Charles Lane]] as Amos Abbott * [[Bruce French (actor)|Bruce French]] as Rex Boyd * [[John C. Becher]] as Jesse Parker * [[Henry Slate]] as Fred Hite }} ==Production== Columbia did not want to make the picture at all because it had no "sex or violence" in it. However, Columbia agreed because of the success of ''[[Norma Rae]]'' (1979), with the same star (Field), director, and screenwriting team ([[Harriet Frank Jr.]] and [[Irving Ravetch]]), and with Field's new production company Fogwood Films producing. Columbia then wanted [[Marlon Brando]], or someone with "greater box-office allure", to play the part of Murphy. Field and Ritt fought Columbia to cast Garner, whom then studio viewed at that point as primarily a television actor, despite having enjoyed a flourishing film career in the 1950s and 60s and having co-starred in the box-office hit ''[[Victor Victoria|Victor/Victoria]]'' in 1982.<ref>Cameron, Julia. "Garner Fits Romantic Role, Not Hollywood Pigeonhole."''[[Chicago Tribune]]'', January 19, 1986.</ref><ref>Rosenthal, Phil. "Garner Remains TV's Class Act."''[[Daily News of Los Angeles]]'', February 6, 1994.</ref><ref>Sachs, Lloyd. "Sally Field says what she meansβ'Murphy's Romance' star is not just another perky face." ''[[Chicago Sun-Times]]'', January 19, 1986. Retrieved: 2008-08-03</ref><ref>Laurence, Robert P. "Garner doesn't go by the book in role in 'Breathing Lessons'." ''[[San Diego Union-Tribune]]'', February 6, 1994.</ref> When Ritt gave the [[Max Schott]] story to Harriet Frank Jr. and Irving Ravetch, the same married screenplay team that worked on ''[[Hud (1963 film)|Hud]]'' (1963) with Ritt and [[Paul Newman]], they wanted Newman to be in ''Murphy's Romance''. Field had worked successfully with Newman in 1981's ''[[Absence of Malice]]'', but Newman declined the project, and Garner was the only other actor that Ritt and Field had asked.<ref name=LumenickL-TR-1985-01-17>[[Lou Lumenick|Lumenick, Lou]]. "For Sally Field, A Two-Sided Romance." ''[[The Record (Bergen County)|The Record]]'', January 17, 1986. Retrieved: 2008-08-03</ref> Part of the deal from the studio, which at that time was owned by [[The Coca-Cola Company]], included an eight-line sequence of Field and Garner saying the word "Coke", and having Coke products and signs appear prominently in the film.<ref>Baltake, Joe. "The Packaging of Hollywood of Advertising", ''[[Sacramento Bee]]''. May 13, 1990.</ref><ref>"Blowing Smoke - They've Coma a Long Way, Baby, In pushing Cigarettes on Screen", ''[[Sacramento Bee]]'', January 14, 1996. Retrieved: 2008-08-03</ref> On the A&E television program [[Biography (TV series)|''Biography'']] of Garner, "James Garner: Hollywood Maverick", Field reported that her on-screen kiss with Garner was the best cinematic kiss she had experienced.<ref name=A&E-Biography-JGHM>Nelson, Ted. - "James Garner: Hollywood Maverick." - ''A&E Biography''. - October 2, 2000. - New York, NY: A & E Home Video. - {{ISBN|978-0-7670-3361-9}}</ref> Filming took place on location in [[Florence, Arizona]], and the town's preserved Main Street appears throughout the movie.<ref name=IMDb-Location>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089643/locations Filming locations for ''Murphy's Romance'']. - [[IMDb]]</ref> The film was scheduled for general release during the weekend for 1985 Christmas Day, but Columbia moved it to the weekends of January 17 and January 31, 1986, to avoid competing with the holiday lineup of films. It did a limited, selected, release for the film on December 25, 1985, so that it would qualify for that year's [[Academy Awards]].<ref name=LumenickL-TR-1985-01-17 /> The screenplay is very different from the [[Max Schott]] novella. In the Schott story, Murphy and Emma stay just platonic friends. Murphy marries someone else, and then tries to find Emma a suitable husband.<ref name="LumenickL-TR-1985-01-17" /> The film was one of the final titles to be released on the now defunct [[CED Videodisc]] format in 1986. ==Reception== Reviews were generally favorable. Film critic [[Roger Ebert]] gave the film 3 stars (out of 4), stating "Much depends on exactly what Emma and Murphy say to each other, and how they say it, and what they don't say. The movie gets it all right."<ref>[http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19860117/REVIEWS/601170303/1023 Murphy's Romance] from [[Roger Ebert]]'s ''[[Chicago Sun-Times]]'' website</ref> The film holds a rating of 74% on review-aggregation website [[Rotten Tomatoes]], based on 27 reviews.<ref>{{Rotten-tomatoes|murphys_romance}}</ref> ==Awards and honors== ''Murphy's Romance'' received Academy Award nominations for [[Academy Award for Best Actor|Best Actor in a Leading Role]] (James Garner) and for [[Academy Award for Best Cinematography|Best Cinematography]] ([[William A. Fraker]]). ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{IMDb title|0089643|Murphy's Romance}} * {{tcmdb title|84225|Murphy's Romance}} * {{mojo title|murphysromance|Murphy's Romance}} * {{rotten-tomatoes|murphys_romance|Murphy's Romance}} * [http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8844857220560459276&q=%22James+Garner%22+%22Charlie+Rose%22&total=4&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0 James Garner] interview on the ''Charlie Rose Show'' * [http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=%22archive+of+american+television+interview+with+james+garner%22 James Garner] interview at the [[Archive of American Television]] {{Martin Ritt}} [[Category:1980s American films]] [[Category:1980s English-language films]] [[Category:1985 films]] [[Category:1985 romantic comedy films]] [[Category:American romantic comedy films]] [[Category:Columbia Pictures films]] [[Category:English-language romantic comedy films]] [[Category:Films based on American novels]] [[Category:Films directed by Martin Ritt]] [[Category:Films produced by Laura Ziskin]] [[Category:Films set in Florence, Arizona]] [[Category:Films shot in Arizona]]
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