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12 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Fassbinder's world, 24 December 2002
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Author:
Itchload from Mass
This is an early Fassbinder film, and from what I've seen, one of the best
of his first 11 (which make up his first stage as a filmmaker). It's
Fassbinder in gangster mode, and has been called an homage to film noir or
even a parody of film noir. This isn't the case though. The movie is
just
film noir done by Fassbinder. There are little homages here and there,
the
beginning and end could be seen as being inspired by Breathless (taken to
ridiculous extremes), and there are lots of filmmakers names used as
characters, but Fassbinder isn't winking at the camera so much as just
being
himself, which back then, could be quite bizarre. In fact, this might be
one of Fassbinder's most bizarre movies.
The camera stands still, characters occasionally deliver seemingly
unrelated
monologues, unusual plot lines are treated nonchalantly (Ricky's brother
is
in love with him?), people about to be killed don't seem to be worried,
and
the singlehandedly greatest song ever plays over and over again, crooning
"so much tenderness is in my head, so much loneliness in my bed." To have
this song play over scenes of a stone-cold amoral hitman (the title
character) casually driving his car are perversely hilarious. Even better
is when it plays in the end, in one of the greatest endings I've ever seen
(you'll have to check it out).
The recent release of this film on DVD should help bring it some
attention,
as its now available for a pretty reasonable price from Wellspring. If
you're looking for one of Fassbinder's more mature, professional, socially
poignant melodramas, maybe this isn't the movie for you. If you're
interested in an extremely unique unclassifiable early Fassbinder, by all
means, check this out. Despite the occasional nods to past filmmakers,
it's
surprising how unique Fassbinder was from the start.
(for those who are Jim Jarmusch fans, it's apparent films like these must
have inspired the detached humor in some of his more recent films).
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
an experiment in style and the mood of character, more than a plot-driven movie, 24 September 2009
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
The American Soldier has a story, maybe even a plot, but that's not why
Rainer Werner Fassbinder made this movie, I believe. It's more about an
attack or subversion on the style of a movie, in this case the
film-noir. The black and white makes the comparison a little obvious,
but it's also in the attitudes of the characters, the costumes and
clothing that distinguishes a character like Ricky. But it also owes as
much to New-Wave tactics like Godard and Melville (Le Samourai and
Alphaville come immediately to mind), and to Fassbinder's own sense of
alienation with the world as well as in his own films. It's sometimes
hard to watch, since his character carry the same weight of angst and
dread that they barely really show to one another, but it's still an
intriguing trip.
The story that is there actually reveals more about a German viewpoint
than that of it being American, though I'm sure its protagonist and its
background is significant just for this reason. It's about a soldier
back from Vietnam who is recruited by the government, who act much in
the way of a discreet crime organization, to carry out killings of
people who may (or may not?) be nefarious characters, or just people
whom Ricky doesn't know why he's killing. The implication is somewhat
more satirical than action-movie based (though I'm reminded, sadly, of
Wolverine earlier this year and movies like it that don't get the
message), that a killer keeps on killing if without the right sense of
moral well-being or even self-worth.
Fassbinder amps up some clichés for the film-noir aesthetic by making
it a pulpy-crime story, where a prostitute falls in love with Ricky
even as she shouldn't or might just get in the way. He also casts his
parts very well, especially with Karl Scheydt as Ricky (makes Glenn
Ford look like a wimp) and Elga Sorbas as Rosa, the attractive but
uncertain prostitute who falls for Ricky (there's an engrossing scene
where he calls up to ask for a girl to his apartment room, she comes
and undresses, and then the two just lay in bed while a maid is in the
room telling a somber story about a romance gone bad). All of the
cinematography is at least interesting, and at best represents a
maturity in film-making for Fassbinder after his first couple of films
(Love is Colder Than Death, Katzelmacher) that were just a series of
static shots.
Some have brought up criticisms of its tedious nature, or that it's
just boring. It's hard to argue it since it's based on taste; the same
scene that could make on bored (and, frankly, it's not a good movie to
watch when tired at two in the morning) could also make a Jim Jarmusch
fan gripped to the chair one's sitting at. Characters in The American
Soldier don't move too realistically - it's more like in Fassbinder's
own The Merchant of Four Seasons; people move and talk and look like
they've come out of a shell-shock, or may still be in one. Even the cop
characters, or Ricky's mom and brother, are in a slight daze as they
speak, and this is deliberate. It ends up making for a more
intellectually satisfying experience than an emotional one; I wasn't so
much moved by the ending, where we see a character's death (one usually
typical in a film-noir of the 1940s in America, as in bad-guy-gets-his
by the end) in the context of a poetic mourning, but it did fascinate
me.
It's sometimes tough going, and its rewards are for a real geek for
black and white New-Wave inspired crime films that have such gimmicks
as a rock song that repeats in lieu of a usual orchestral sound, and
its not for someone looking for fast action and conventional thrills.
It is, in its dimensions, arty, and fine with it.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
The American in us, 28 February 2009
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Author:
hasosch from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The München police cannot cope anymore with some of their underworld
elements, so they hire Ricky Murphy alias Richard von Rezzori, a German
who served for the US in Vietnam, to kill first a gypsy, then a
porno-merchant (and by the way also her lover), and last the girlfriend
of one of the police detectives. It happens to be exactly this girl who
is sent to Ricky when he stays in a hotel and orders a girl. In the
scene in the hotel we hear also the story of the house-keeper Emmy who
married a much younger man from Northern Africa who killed her. This
story has been filmed by Fassbinder with a different end a few years
later under the title "Ali: Fear eats the soul". Just at the time of
his arrival, Ricky meets his old buddy Franz, and they visit places
where they had been together. Ricky also meets his mother and brother,
and in this scene we have on the one side a coldness between Ricky and
his mother that cannot be increased and a latent homosexual love
between Ricky a his slightly retarded brother on the other side.
However, after Ricky has done his duty for the detectives that engaged
him, they must get rid of him because otherwise they would have to
admit their incapability to solve their problems on their own in front
of their boss, an ancient police-chief who seems to be in the hand of
his officers. The end scene, in which Ricky and his buddy Franz lose
their lives because of a simple "accident", I do not want to spoil
here, because the end of "The American Soldier" is an end of such a
magnitude of splendor that you will hardly find in any other movie.
However, what I want to add is that the message of this movie goes way
beyond that of Fassbinder's inclination towards American gangster
movies from the 40ies: People who know Fassbinder's work also know that
he gave his movies strong political and sociological messages on their
ways. "I want my movies to go on in the heads of the audience after
they have left the cinema", Fassbinder once said. In this movie,
Germans engage an American-German with Vietnam-experience to do the
dirty work in Europe, and after he succeeds, instead of paying him the
promised sum, they kill him. It seems that Fassbinder just used the
decor of Film noir to characterize the years after World II in Germany,
since, for a man like Fassbinder, the liberation of Germany by the
Allies was not an act of terrorism against the Nazi regime, but a deed
for which the American soldiers who cleaned the mess up in Germany have
never been adequately rewarded.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
They're Coming To Take Me Away, Ha Haa!, 7 November 2009
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Author:
valis1949 from United States
American SOLDIER is certainly not among Fassbinder's greatest works. Fassbinder's oeuvre demands that his actors 'pose' rather than 'act'. Ordinarily, a successful dramatic performance allows the viewer to forget that an actor is 'pretending', but that one is witnessing a real depiction of emotions and reactions. However, Fassbinder strives for the converse of this process. He seems to aim for an almost militant lack of affectation, and his actors strike stylized poses which only represent authentic emotions. It's almost like German Kabuki Theater. It would seem that this form of acting technique would lend itself very well to the genre of Gangster Noir, but this film definitely missed the mark. The tale of three rogue police detectives who employ the skills of a heartless American Vietnam veteran is bogged down in an untidy avalanche of wacky details. Odd monologues, pointless car trips, enigmatic phone calls, and arguably the weirdest final scene ever brought to film, do not advance the storyline, but only confuse and perplex the viewer. Fassbinder's more successful films created surreal hyper-realities, but American SOLDIER only conveyed a feeling of disconnected opaqueness. Only for Die Hard Fassbinder Fans.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Experimental and Justifiable Plagiarism, 10 December 2004
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Author:
Daniel Hayes (dphayes@dal.ca) from Halifax, NS
The European pseudo-noirs of the 60s and 70s reaped the benefits of
being able to skip a number of steps in the writing process simply by
adopting styles and themes from previous films. What was left was to
add one's own spin to an existing story. Fassbinder was a genius at
taking a style and making it his own, not in a superficially
Tarantino-ish way, but in a way that was at once equally unique and
dependent, retaining the benefits of a style and pushing it even
further into his own territory.
In this sense, this film is an early experiment: a war veteran turned
contract killer stoically carrying out his duties, but in a post-war
German environment and with homoerotic undertones galore. But it's
remarkably coherent and compelling considering how little the plot
gives away explicitly. Indeed, this would become one of his trademarks.
4 out of 5 - An excellent film
5 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
For fans only, 7 September 2003
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Author:
zetes from Saint Paul, MN
Not one of Fassbinder's best, but certainly worth a look for those interested in the man's work. In mood and style, it's reminiscent of Godard's Alphaville, and my reactions to both films are similar: I am intrigued, but a bit bored. And I don't think either succeed in the end. The American Soldier concerns a haughty German-American soldier, fresh from Vietnam, who struts around killing people for reasons which are kept mostly obscure (he's some kind of gangster or hitman). The police are after him, though the police seem just as wicked. I didn't care much about what was going on no compelling reason was ever given for me to care. However, many elements of the film impressed me. Fassbinder's idiosyncratic sense of pace and mood pervades. The performances are pretty good. Fassbinder himself appears in a small role and, as usual, he delivers a remarkable performance. He has to be the best actor/director of all time. Peer Raben never seems to write a lot of music for Fassbinder's films. Instead, he just writes one theme that is used several times throughout the given picture. They are always exceptional, and his theme (and also theme song, which is the same tune with lyrics added) is excellent here. And then there's this ending. Fassbinder has a talent for unique and notable endings, and the end of this film is one of the weirdest and most remarkable I've ever seen. 7/10.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
under the genre, 4 March 2008
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Author:
jcappy from ny-vt
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Yup, this is full of allusions to brilliant German directors, and
French and American cinema, but "The American Soldier" is much more
than a clever exercise-- and cuts deeper than film noir. For this, I
think, is as much about the Vietnam War, misogyny, and German/American
superiority as it is about an underworld hit man. In fact, the genre
seems no more than a departure point.
Ricky's inner power is in no way individuated---he's a type, a type
produced by powerful entities. He's not a man born, but a male made.
He's one of a multiplicity of monsters let loose on the world by the
naked display of power--whether it be located in DC or Berlin. His
immediate authority resides in his soldier past, and in his male
identity--and more specifically, in his heterosexual male identity. He
kills men as easily as he commands submission from women.
But he's not a typical hit man. He's cool all right, and does cut the
figure. But he seems cumbersome, as if new to his form, his movements
contained as if by a low ceiling, his body by an uncomfortable suit.
He's "the man" but he seems programmed--and is, simply following orders
from his own "the man" who also happens to have state authority. He's
detached, indiscriminate, naked in his actions, and impersonal--his
mind almost narcoleptic. There seems to be some flaw in his design, as
if the suit made to cover the soldier, and the soldier made to cover
the killer, are not totally effective---not for him, not for those who
control him. His murders have all the raw arbitrary-ness of the
automated martial male, created in an era of war treachery that has no
end.
Ricky's females, a spectrum of femme fatales, have a malaise about
them, as if narcotized by drugs, drink, sex, or more obviously, by a
submissiveness to power. Ricky orders them in the same precise way he
orders his Ballantine--and with the same certainty of availability. He
takes them, literally dumps them, mocks them, uses them and, if they
get too close, murders them. He has to drink whiskey before every
sexual encounter to negate any emotion or doubt. Gay men suffer a
similar scorn from the brute, his contempt for the powerless
underwritten by the world of organized violence that created and
controls him. "So much tenderness in my head, so much emptiness in my
bed" is heard over and over during Ricky and his brother's final
sex/death scene. Which might be interpreted that in a perverse world
poisoned by super masculinity and violence, sex with the dead is more
possible--or preferable than sex with the living.
3 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
great parody of suppressed german culture, 29 June 2003
Author:
webgrind-2 from vancouver island
This is a very funny attempt by the director to deal with the "klischee"( german spelling) of the american man, or at least how the proletarian german man is looking across the atlantic. All americans are good in bed? goodlooking? violent and yet cool? Why is there a need to put ketchup on a shot person's shirt? Would you really believe then that somebody was actually killed? I agree with other viewers that this not a movie that could be considered enjoyable at all times, but it beats movies like "the patriot" or "frida" any time, because it doesn't take itself serious. And that in itself is exactly the director's criticism of american culture ( what an abuse of the word culture!) and their consistant effort to tell you everything is allright and we are the good guys. Here, have another Diet coke, or would you like a Big Mac with your Whitney Houston?
1 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Fuller, Von Praunheim, Murnau and the others, 26 March 2010
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Author:
semiotechlab-658-95444 from United States
"Der Amerikanische Soldat" (1970) is R.W. Fassbinder's least understood movie. Most people think - and this conviction can be found also in textbooks about Fassbinders as well as in reference works of film - that he just wanted to create a German Film Noir as a kind of reverence for his love for the respective American movies of the 50ies. Nothing can be less adequate! The American Soldier, asked by a prostitute, if he is a real Yank, answers: "First, there was Germany ... . Once there was a little boy ... He flew over the Pond ... . Scheisse!". I think the main problem with the story is that Fassbinder purposely does not portray The American Soldier as an American who has been called by the German police to abolish a bunch of criminals. Richard Murphy alias Richard Von Rezzori is a German. When Franz Walsch alias Fassbinder asks him during their car trip: "And how was it in Vietnam?" - Richard's astonishing answer is: "Loud". In this little dialog, there is all you need to understand this outstanding movie. Another crucial scene is when Richard visits his paternal house. As one sees, not only he, but also his mother and his brother are drinkers. When he rings the bell, he tries to kiss his mother, but she disgustedly turns away her head. His brother smashes a wine-glass in his hand until he bleeds. After Richard has left, he starts to cry and says: "Mama, I still love him!". So, who is the American Soldier? A German noble-man who became an American citizen in order to be legitimated to clean-up what had destroyed his soul in Germany? Vietnam as a legitimation to get rid of the burdens of his soul? But about such things one does not speak, and so it was just "loud" down there. But is there not an additional point of criticism in Fassbinder's movie? Fact is: It is the German police (represented by three moronic officers and an antique president) who hire the American Soldier in order to kill all those against which the police has too little evidence in order to arrest them. But in the end, the killer also gets killed, because otherwise the incapability of the police would become public! Can one not see in this other aspect of the story also the function of the real Americans who "liberated" Germany after World War II. and, at the same time, have been accused of intrusion and interference for what they have done? So, Fassbinders's movie is far from being mono-linear. What he copied is a little bit the Ambiente of some early gangster movies, but even the structural main feature, the play with light and shadow and the dark screens which have been so typical for Films Noirs, are completely lacking in "The American Soldier". One has rather the impression, that three clowns of police-men just have watched a bit too many gangster movies, that is all. With that, it goes together that the most unimportant persons in the movie carry the names of famous real persons, a stylistic effect that Fassbinder loved: So, the porter of the shabby hotel is "Murnau", the little girl-friend of one of the police-rowdies is "Rosa Von Praunheim". The porn-sales-girl is Magdalena "Fuller". Last but not least: Richard Von Rezzori bears the name of the German writer Gregor Von Rezzori whose wife Hanna Axmann-Rezzori was one of Fassbinder's early Maecenas and acted in "Warum Läuft Herr R. Amok" and "Rio Das Mortes". The score of this movie, by Fassbinder and Peer Raben, probably belongs to the best film music of all times.
3 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
The directors first major film, should have ended his career., 2 November 2009
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Author:
Jay Harris (sirbossman6969@yahoo.com) from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Can someone please explain how Fassbinder became famous after this
atrociously badly written, acted & made waste of celluloid was released
in 1970.
The title in English is: The American Soldier. That is an insult to the
worst gangster films,None were this bad.
It is supposed to be a tribute to American film noir gangster films.
What hallucinatory drug were these people on.
In all my 70 plus years of seeing movies, I doubt if I saw a worst
film. It is deadly slow,no life whatsoever in any scene or performance.
The ending scene ridiculous, it is actually revoltingly laughable. No
character seemed to draw a sober breath, they were drinking
continuously.
I could not care or give one hoot for anyone.
Ratings: 1/2* (out of 4) 13 points (out of 100) IMDb 1 (out of 10)
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