79
Metascore
11 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Chicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonChicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonThis is a Wenders masterwork--a chilling tale of painting, crime and forgery. [19 Jan 2007, p.C5]
- 90Time OutTime OutSuperb adaptation of Patricia Highsmith's novel Ripley's Game, with Hopper as her amiably cynical hero.
- 80Chicago ReaderDave KehrChicago ReaderDave KehrThe film has a fine grasp of tenuous emotional connections in the midst of a crumbling moral universe. Wenders's films (Kings of the Road, Alice in the Cities) are about life on the edge; this is one of his edgiest.
- 80EmpireKim NewmanEmpireKim NewmanBruno Ganz is excellent as the victim deceived into committing murder.
- 80The New York TimesJ. HobermanThe New York TimesJ. HobermanLike Taxi Driver, The American Friend was a new sort of movie-movie — sleekly brooding, voluptuously alienated and saturated with cinephilia.
- 75Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertThere's something cheerfully perverse about filming a thriller and then tossing out the parts that would help it make sense, but Wim Wenders has a certain success with the method in The American Friend.
- 75Washington PostGary ArnoldWashington PostGary ArnoldAn absorbing but rarefied, introspective variation on traditional thriller motifs, it's probably not the synthesis between the personal and traditional that Wenders needs but it's a fascinating compulsively watchable experiment.
- 75The A.V. ClubKeith PhippsThe A.V. ClubKeith PhippsAdapting Ripley's Game, the third of Patricia Highsmith's Ripley novels, 1977's The American Friend knits Wenders' ongoing concerns into a thriller in the Hitchcock mold.
- 75Slant MagazineSlant MagazineFrom its engagement with genre tropes (particularly film noir), to its tangibly grimy urban backdrops, to its archetypal hero/villain dramatic dichotomy, there’s no mistaking the film’s American influence.
- 60The New YorkerPauline KaelThe New YorkerPauline KaelWenders' unsettling compositions are neurotically beautiful visions of a disordered world, but the film doesn't have the nasty, pleasurable cleverness of a good thriller; dramatically, it's stagnant -- inverted Wagnerism.