Murphy's Romance


1h 48m 1985
Murphy's Romance

Brief Synopsis

A divorced woman and her son move to small town to take on a horse ranch.

Film Details

Also Known As
Romance de Murphy, El
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Romance
Release Date
1985
Distribution Company
Sony Pictures Releasing
Location
Florence, Arizona, USA

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 48m

Synopsis

A mother and her young son move to Arizona to start a new life and meet an older pharmacist with whom the mother falls in love.

Crew

Lou Adler

Music Producer

Ray Alba

Sound Effects Editor

Dick Alexander

Sound

James Alexander

Sound

David Richard Campbell

Original Music

David Richard Campbell

Music

Dianne Crittenden

Casting

David Diano

Camera Operator

Dennis Dion

Special Effects

Dana Dru Evenson

Stunts

Jack Finlay

Sound Effects Editor

Jay K. Fishburn

Wrangler

William Fraker

Director Of Photography

Harriet Frank Jr.

Screenplay

Les Fresholtz

Sound

Rick T Gentz

Art Director

Robert Gutknecht

Sound Effects Editor

Lee Harmon

Makeup

Jeannie Jeha

Production Coordinator

George Justin

Unit Production Manager

George Justin

Associate Producer

Steve Kelso

Stunts

Brian Kerwin

Song Performer

Carole King

Music

Carole King

Song

Carole King

Song Performer

Nikita Knatz

Production

Richard J Lawrence

Set Designer

Sidney Levin

Editor

Aggie Lyon

Costumes

Bill Marx

Music Supervisor

Bill Marx

Other

Karl Miller

Animal Trainer

Joanne Christy Pierce

Song Performer

Vern Poore

Sound

Aldric Porter

Assistant Director

Pinki Ragan

Production Assistant

Tom Rankin

Location Manager

Irving Ravetch

Screenplay

Ken Rinker

Choreographer

Martin Ritt

Executive Producer

Tina Ritt

Assistant Director

Ervin W Rose

Costumes

David Sanborn

Music

David Sanborn

Song Performer

Joel Schiller

Production Designer

Max Schott

Source Material (From Novel)

Ilene Starger

Casting Associate

Erin Stewart

Production Assistant

Philip Thomas

Production Assistant

Joe I Tompkins

Costume Designer

Jim Van Wyck

Associate Producer

Jim Van Wyck

Assistant Director

Ken Wannberg

Music Editor

George Wilbur

Stunt Coordinator

Bruce Wright

Adr Editor

Stephen Yaconelli

Camera Operator

Janice Yarbrough

Production Associate

Laura Ziskin

Producer

Film Details

Also Known As
Romance de Murphy, El
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Romance
Release Date
1985
Distribution Company
Sony Pictures Releasing
Location
Florence, Arizona, USA

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 48m

Award Nominations

Best Actor

1985
James Garner

Best Cinematography

1985

Articles

Murphy's Romance


The chemistry between Sally Field and James Garner in the comedy-drama Murphy's Romance (1985) proved so potent that both stars were nominated for Golden Globes, and Garner scored a surprise Oscar® nomination - his only one to date - as Best Actor. Her intensity and verve contrast wonderfully with his laid-back demeanor. The two actors share skillful comic timing in this quirky romance, and their final scene together is genuinely moving.

Field plays Emma Moriarty, a divorced woman with a 12-year-old son (Corey Haim) who moves to a small Arizona town where she tries her hand at boarding and training horses. Garner is Murphy Jones, the widowed town druggist who steers business Emma's way and begins a gradual courtship even though he is decades older. When Emma's shiftless ex (Brian Kerwin) shows up, her son is conflicted because he has grown to like Murphy but wants his father back in his life.

Despite the age difference, Emma finds Murphy's gentle ways hard to resist after he declares that he has found love "for the last time in my life." Carole King sings the theme song inspired by this line, "Love for the Last Time." Although Murphy admits to being 60, Garner's real age at the time was 57.

The screenplay was adapted by Harriet Frank Jr. and Irving Ravetch from a 1980 novel by Max Schott. The married screenwriting team made several significant changes in the novel's story, with the central couple retaining a platonic relationship and Murphy marrying someone else.

The director of Murphy's Romance is Martin Ritt, who had guided Field to an Oscar® in Norma Rae (1979) and directed her again in Back Roads (1981). He described her as "one of the best, perhaps the best, actress I've ever worked with... She's simply astounding." Ritt enjoyed seven other collaborations with Frank and Ravetch including The Long, Hot Summer (1958), Norma Rae and Stanley and Iris (1989).

Field produced Murphy's Romance through her new production company, Fogwood Films, but she and Ritt had difficulty convincing Columbia Pictures to green-light the production. Studio executives were hesitant because the homespun story included no sex or violence, but capitulated after considering the track records of the star/director/screenwriters team, especially the success of Norma Rae.

The next hurdle was the casting of Garner, still considered by some as basically a television personality despite film successes ranging from The Great Escape (1963) to Victor/Victoria (1982). The studio preferred Marlon Brando, while the screenwriters asked that the role be offered to Paul Newman. When Newman declined, Field and Ritt were able to go with their first choice.

In reflecting upon her costar, Field commented that "If men only knew what's appealing to a woman is how a man makes her feel about herself. Jim is funny and dear, and he laughs at my jokes. That's what makes Jim sexy; it doesn't change with years." She would also say that her kiss from Garner in Murphy's Romance was the best she ever had onscreen.

William A. Fraker earned an Oscar® nomination for his cinematography of the rustic locales. Location filming took place in Florence, Arizona, whose preserved Main Street is featured prominently. The bar set used in Murphy's Romance was auctioned off to a restaurant in Glendale, Arizona, where it remained until 2004, when it was sold to a private collector. At the time of filming, Columbia was owned by the Coca-Cola Company, and product placement included the use of the word "Coke" in the dialogue and on frequently glimpsed signs.

Murphy's Romance, originally rated R because of the single use of a vulgarity for sexual intercourse, became one of the few films to successfully appeal its MPAA rating, getting it changed to PG-13. Although originally scheduled for a general release on Christmas Day weekend of 1985, the film was instead given a limited holiday release and went wider in late January 1986.

Critic Roger Ebert summed up the appeal of Murphy's Romance when he wrote that "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."

Producer: Laura Ziskin
Director: Martin Ritt
Screenplay: Max Schott (story); Harriet Frank Jr., Irving Ravetch
Cinematography: William A. Fraker
Music: Carole King
Film Editing: Sidney Levin
Cast: Sally Field (Emma Moriarty), James Garner (Murphy Jones), Brian Kerwin (Bobby Jack Moriarty), Corey Haim (Jake Moriarty), Dennis Burkley (Freeman Coverly), Georgann Johnson (Margaret), Dortha Duckworth (Bessie), Michael Prokopuk (Albert), Billy Ray Sharkey (Larry Le Beau), Michael Crabtree (Jim Forrest).
C-107m.

by Rogert Fristoe
Murphy's Romance

Murphy's Romance

The chemistry between Sally Field and James Garner in the comedy-drama Murphy's Romance (1985) proved so potent that both stars were nominated for Golden Globes, and Garner scored a surprise Oscar® nomination - his only one to date - as Best Actor. Her intensity and verve contrast wonderfully with his laid-back demeanor. The two actors share skillful comic timing in this quirky romance, and their final scene together is genuinely moving. Field plays Emma Moriarty, a divorced woman with a 12-year-old son (Corey Haim) who moves to a small Arizona town where she tries her hand at boarding and training horses. Garner is Murphy Jones, the widowed town druggist who steers business Emma's way and begins a gradual courtship even though he is decades older. When Emma's shiftless ex (Brian Kerwin) shows up, her son is conflicted because he has grown to like Murphy but wants his father back in his life. Despite the age difference, Emma finds Murphy's gentle ways hard to resist after he declares that he has found love "for the last time in my life." Carole King sings the theme song inspired by this line, "Love for the Last Time." Although Murphy admits to being 60, Garner's real age at the time was 57. The screenplay was adapted by Harriet Frank Jr. and Irving Ravetch from a 1980 novel by Max Schott. The married screenwriting team made several significant changes in the novel's story, with the central couple retaining a platonic relationship and Murphy marrying someone else. The director of Murphy's Romance is Martin Ritt, who had guided Field to an Oscar® in Norma Rae (1979) and directed her again in Back Roads (1981). He described her as "one of the best, perhaps the best, actress I've ever worked with... She's simply astounding." Ritt enjoyed seven other collaborations with Frank and Ravetch including The Long, Hot Summer (1958), Norma Rae and Stanley and Iris (1989). Field produced Murphy's Romance through her new production company, Fogwood Films, but she and Ritt had difficulty convincing Columbia Pictures to green-light the production. Studio executives were hesitant because the homespun story included no sex or violence, but capitulated after considering the track records of the star/director/screenwriters team, especially the success of Norma Rae. The next hurdle was the casting of Garner, still considered by some as basically a television personality despite film successes ranging from The Great Escape (1963) to Victor/Victoria (1982). The studio preferred Marlon Brando, while the screenwriters asked that the role be offered to Paul Newman. When Newman declined, Field and Ritt were able to go with their first choice. In reflecting upon her costar, Field commented that "If men only knew what's appealing to a woman is how a man makes her feel about herself. Jim is funny and dear, and he laughs at my jokes. That's what makes Jim sexy; it doesn't change with years." She would also say that her kiss from Garner in Murphy's Romance was the best she ever had onscreen. William A. Fraker earned an Oscar® nomination for his cinematography of the rustic locales. Location filming took place in Florence, Arizona, whose preserved Main Street is featured prominently. The bar set used in Murphy's Romance was auctioned off to a restaurant in Glendale, Arizona, where it remained until 2004, when it was sold to a private collector. At the time of filming, Columbia was owned by the Coca-Cola Company, and product placement included the use of the word "Coke" in the dialogue and on frequently glimpsed signs. Murphy's Romance, originally rated R because of the single use of a vulgarity for sexual intercourse, became one of the few films to successfully appeal its MPAA rating, getting it changed to PG-13. Although originally scheduled for a general release on Christmas Day weekend of 1985, the film was instead given a limited holiday release and went wider in late January 1986. Critic Roger Ebert summed up the appeal of Murphy's Romance when he wrote that "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." Producer: Laura Ziskin Director: Martin Ritt Screenplay: Max Schott (story); Harriet Frank Jr., Irving Ravetch Cinematography: William A. Fraker Music: Carole King Film Editing: Sidney Levin Cast: Sally Field (Emma Moriarty), James Garner (Murphy Jones), Brian Kerwin (Bobby Jack Moriarty), Corey Haim (Jake Moriarty), Dennis Burkley (Freeman Coverly), Georgann Johnson (Margaret), Dortha Duckworth (Bessie), Michael Prokopuk (Albert), Billy Ray Sharkey (Larry Le Beau), Michael Crabtree (Jim Forrest). C-107m. by Rogert Fristoe

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter December 25, 1985

Began shooting February 11, 1985.

Fogwood Films is Sally Field's production company.

Released in United States Winter December 25, 1985