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The American Friend
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by Starz / Anchor Bay
Sales Rank: 48445
Price: $22.49

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A thriller that's nearly devoid of thrills? That's not a complaint--it's what makes <I>The American Friend</I> one of the most stylish (and, at the time, most expensive) films to emerge from the New German Cinema of the 1970s. Loosely adapting Patricia Highsmith's mystery novel <I>Ripley's Game</I>, director Wim Wenders shifted priority from plotting to character, emphasizing a richly colorful and atmospheric approach to locations in Hamburg, where a picture-framer (Bruno Ganz) is lured into an assassination scheme involving a mysterious Frenchman (Gerard Blain) and the titular American friend, Tom Ripley (played by Dennis Hopper, a far cry from Matt Damon's portrayal of the same character in <I>The Talented Mr. Ripley</I>). The plotting is vague to the point of irrelevance; Wenders prefers to maintain the <I>aura</I> of mystery, as opposed to generating any conventional suspense, and expresses his affection for American movies by casting favorite directors Nicholas Ray and Samuel Fuller in pivotal supporting roles. The result is an intoxicating example of cinematic cross-pollination. <I>--Jeff Shannon</I>
Viewer Reviews This film is at a line between humor or drama. Some of the action and situations remind of films like "High Risk" in which the criminals are just bad at what they are doing. This film is really not Dennis Hopper's best acting, but the German acting of Bruno Ganz really makes up for that. The ending is a surprise, but may well be the best part of the film. There are subway rides to a death, and train rides to a killing, but the mob in this film is just comedy relief? The story is about an honest man tricked by bad people into doing what he doesn't really want to do. The film might well be an allegory on the Bush administration?
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The American Friend
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