IMDb RATING
5.5/10
2.6K
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An assassin on a final assignment in Fuerteventura, to kill a man he has never met. When his target is delayed, he finds himself drawn to the island, people and a ghostly shipwreck.An assassin on a final assignment in Fuerteventura, to kill a man he has never met. When his target is delayed, he finds himself drawn to the island, people and a ghostly shipwreck.An assassin on a final assignment in Fuerteventura, to kill a man he has never met. When his target is delayed, he finds himself drawn to the island, people and a ghostly shipwreck.
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Ian McShane was one of those actors that has either "good" or amazing performances. His acting in this beautifully-shot thriller set in the majestic Canary Islands was nothing short of outstanding. His character-acting was one of the finest I've seen in the industry. While his character was the center of this film, the smart acting of the supporting characters complimented so well with the rest because it provided such stability to the quality of the performances which was essential in keeping this slow-burn thriller from being too boring or too overwhelming to watch. The cinematography was one of the bests I've seen this year.
I really hate giving a film that has nice scenery and Ian McShane a bad review. McShane puts in yet another seasoned performance and sells this empty script as best he can. This should have been within a 30 minute TV show time slot but is needlessly extended almost 2 full hours.
In short, an aging hitman comes to an island and waits for the target to arrive. Dullness ensues and an eventual confrontation. While it ends poetically it wasn't too well thought out. There was one scene which really shouldn't have happened if this film was to be what it tries to sell and it doesn't sell what it purports to sell very well either. Instead, it resorts to absolute minimalism and lets you, the audience, try to fill in the huge blanks and empty spaces it leaves. And for 2 hours, that's a major chore as you wait for signs of something to happen. We got the point that we're on Island time but that doesn't mean the audience needs to eperience it in full.
The real problem - no back story so why should you care about any of the characters. Even the main character reveals precious little about himself and it's nothing more than skin deep. You're not missing much and the actors elevate a lazy script.
In short, an aging hitman comes to an island and waits for the target to arrive. Dullness ensues and an eventual confrontation. While it ends poetically it wasn't too well thought out. There was one scene which really shouldn't have happened if this film was to be what it tries to sell and it doesn't sell what it purports to sell very well either. Instead, it resorts to absolute minimalism and lets you, the audience, try to fill in the huge blanks and empty spaces it leaves. And for 2 hours, that's a major chore as you wait for signs of something to happen. We got the point that we're on Island time but that doesn't mean the audience needs to eperience it in full.
The real problem - no back story so why should you care about any of the characters. Even the main character reveals precious little about himself and it's nothing more than skin deep. You're not missing much and the actors elevate a lazy script.
I'm not sure why this has a low rating. It's actually very well shot, the acting is very good, and while slow it's correctly paced for the genre.
The story is pretty rudimentary but it's handled well. The director does a great job framing the scenes and the setting is really beautiful.
This isn't an action movie so I guess the low ratings are from people who expected a man in his 70s to be doing Jason Statham level fight scenes?
It's a hitman story and it's a good one. The villain is played well too and the story does crash together at the end in an interesting way.
If you like hitman movies and appreciate slower paced, character driven and building stories you'll likely enjoy this.
The story is pretty rudimentary but it's handled well. The director does a great job framing the scenes and the setting is really beautiful.
This isn't an action movie so I guess the low ratings are from people who expected a man in his 70s to be doing Jason Statham level fight scenes?
It's a hitman story and it's a good one. The villain is played well too and the story does crash together at the end in an interesting way.
If you like hitman movies and appreciate slower paced, character driven and building stories you'll likely enjoy this.
McShane builds into the role throughout this metaphor of waiting. Waiting to let go of the things in his life and coming to terms with whatever was killing him slowly, military life, loss, divorce, family, shame, childhood dreams, joy. It's a backdrop for the end for the lead, where dialogue becomes less meaningful, his sunken dreams washed up, perhaps mythically on an abandoned shoreline. Ultimately he has followed orders to the end, perhaps even beyond into purgatory itself.
American Star seems a misleading title somewhat, but it's an interesting and captivating narrative for those more introspective evenings.
American Star seems a misleading title somewhat, but it's an interesting and captivating narrative for those more introspective evenings.
McShane is as great as ever in this quiet, almost somber movie about a hitman waiting for a job in Fuerteventura.
The direction is very promising from Gonzalo Lopez who, from what I can see has done nothing of note but here seems to be inspired by The Hit or The American. It's artistic rather than arthouse and had me hooked for the first forty minutes or so. The movie then drifts a little before its climax and ending that will keep you guessing.
The cinematography of the the Canary Island is great and the supporting cast is excellent.
As said there are slow segments, but stay with it. I think it's worth it.
The direction is very promising from Gonzalo Lopez who, from what I can see has done nothing of note but here seems to be inspired by The Hit or The American. It's artistic rather than arthouse and had me hooked for the first forty minutes or so. The movie then drifts a little before its climax and ending that will keep you guessing.
The cinematography of the the Canary Island is great and the supporting cast is excellent.
As said there are slow segments, but stay with it. I think it's worth it.
Did you know
- TriviaAmerican Star is the second movie between the actor Ian McShane and the director Gonzalo López-Gallego, the first one was The Hollow Point (2016).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Música para aeropuertos: Ambientes geométricos (2024)
- SoundtracksSling Shot
written by Roger Wickham
performed by Chip Wickham
- How long is American Star?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Американська зірка
- Filming locations
- Production companies
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Box office
- Budget
- €5,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $14,523
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $9,376
- Jan 28, 2024
- Gross worldwide
- $15,848
- Runtime1 hour 47 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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