Charles Williams wrote a screenplay version of his own novel with Nona Tyson in 1962. It was intended for
Robert Mitchum. Many years later, Dennis Hopper found the script and updated it. A bedroom scene originally called for Madsen to appear naked, but she decided to put on a
negligee because she felt that, "Not only was the nudity weak storywise, but it didn't let the audience undress her". Hopper later admitted that Madsen was right. Johnson found Hopper's approach to filmmaking "a little disappointing". He later recalled:
Mike Figgis had written a script called
The Hot Spot, and it was a heist movie. Three days before we started shooting, Dennis Hopper came to all of us, he called a meeting on a Sunday, and he said, "Okay, we're not making that script. We're making this one." And he passed a script around the table that had been written for
Robert Mitchum in the '60s... or maybe it was the '50s... and it was based on a book called
Hell Hath No Fury. And that was the movie that we ended up making. This was three days before we started shooting! So he was kind of looking around the table at everybody and saying, "Well, you know, if Don Johnson bails, we don't have a movie." [Laughs.] And I read the script, and I said, "Wow!" I mean, the Figgis script was really slick and cool, and it was a heist movie, but this was real noir, the guy was an amoral drifter, and it was all about how women were going to take him down. Hopper shot the film on location in Texas during what he described as the "hottest, steamiest weather you could imagine". The primary locations were in
Taylor, Texas, especially its iconic downtown area, locations around and in
Austin as well as in
Luling. The swimming scenes were filmed at the
Hamilton Pool Preserve west of Austin. In part of the skinny-dipping scene, Madsen was body doubled by Heather Cruikshank, who was working in a strip club when she was cast. ==Reception==