The American Friend Movie Review
The American Friend Review
"The American Friend" Overview

Rating: NR
1977
Cast and Crew
Director : Wim WendersProducer : Wim Wenders
Screenwiter : Wim Wenders
Starring : Dennis Hopper,Bruno Ganz,Lisa Kreuzer,Gérard Blain,Nicholas Ray
Ripley's Game the third novel (of five) in Patricia Highsmith's Tom Ripley
series, and thus it marks a semingly strange choice for Wim Wenders to jump
right into the mythology. (The Talented Mr. Ripley and Purple Noon are both
based on the first book.) Then again, Ripley's Game will become a feature film
again later this year, starring John Malkovich.
On the other hand, the book stands on its own fairly well, namely because it
doesn't have an awful lot to do with Ripley himself. As the story goes: We find
Ripley (played by a cowboy hat-toting Dennis Hopper) later in life, working a
career in art sales/forgery. He makes the acquaintance of a dying picture
framer named Zimmermann (Bruno Ganz - dig the 'stache!), and eventually coerces
him (through asssociates) into performing a contract murder for a large sum of
money, meant to set up his family after his death.
Naturally, complications arise.
Directed by Wim Wenders (Wings of Desire), The American Friend is as deliberate
as The Talented Mr. Ripley is frenetic. It's a much different pace than you'd
expect from this kind of material but which Wenders knows all too well. The
film ends up as a set piece for Ganz, with Hopper playing a considerably
smaller role than you'd expect. Wenders just never generates the desperation
Zimmermann needs to make this story work. The result is a slow burn that slowly
peters out instead of grows into a bonfire.
The cinematography is both bleak and pretty -- bouncing between Paris and
postwar Germany. The editing is appropriate, though it lets the scenes drag on
too long. Watch for directors Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without a Cause) and Samuel
Fuller (Shock Corridor) in small roles.
Newly released on DVD, Wenders and Hopper add a commentary track, plus the disc
adds over half an hour of deleted scenes (with optional commentary as well),
all run together and, interestingly, set to the movie's thriller-ish theme
music. It's almost a mini-film of test shots and side stories that sort of
stands on its own.
Aka Der Amerikanische Freund.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





