Heavy premiered in January 1995 at the
Sundance Film Festival, where Mangold won the Special Jury Prize for directing.
Box office Distributor
Cinépix Film Properties released
Heavy theatrically in the United States after Liv Tyler had received recognition for her starring role in
Bernardo Bertolucci's
Stealing Beauty (1996). The film opened in the United States in the summer of 1996, premiering it in New York City on June 5, earning $14,425 during its opening weekend. The release was
limited, expanding to only 22 screens nationwide. A decade later, Ebert — reviewing Mangold's 2007 remake of
3:10 to Yuma — called
Heavy "extraordinary." Jay Carr of
The Boston Globe praised the film as a "small gem [that] specifies a world and populates it with unerring authority and a sure instinct for character." The
Statesman Journals Ron Cowan similarly lauded the film for its deliberate lack of dialogue, stating that Mangold "often eschews" it, "detailing his story with gestures, glances, and touches. There is no sex, violence, or clichéd action or plot twists, just a sense that you're listening in on real life." The
New York Daily Newss Jami Bernard described the film as a "slice of life" mood piece, praising Tyler's performance as "forceful," adding that "the film moves as carefully as Vincent
[sic] himself, as if afraid to displace too many molecules at once. It's a welcome respite from the crash-bang movies of summer." Barbara Creed of the Australian publication
The Age noted the film as a "delicate and remarkable debut" and likened elements of it to the
Carson McCullers novel
The Ballad of the Sad Café. Critic
James Berardinelli wrote that "Mangold captures the nuances of life perfectly, and, by never cheapening his vision through facile resolutions, he fashions a memorable cinematic portrait." Berardinelli subsequently included the film in his book,
Reel Views: The Ultimate Guide to the Best 1,000 Modern Movies in 2005. Kevin Thomas of the
Los Angeles Times called the film "a small, quiet miracle of a movie in which tenderness, compassion, and insight combine to create a tension that yields a quality of perception that's almost painful to experience", comparing its cinematography to the work of
R.W. Fassbinder and remarking the effectiveness of Thurston Moore's score for the film. Edward Guthmann of the
San Francisco Gate called the film "an act of faith in itself — an argument for the kind of subtle, humanistic traces that used to be familiar on screen but somehow became all too scarce,"
Home media Columbia TriStar Home Video released
Heavy on
DVD on September 21, 1999. ==Accolades==