Angel Heart backdrop
Angel Heart poster

ANGEL HEART

1987 GB HMDB
March 6, 1987

A down-and-out Brooklyn detective is hired to track down a singer on an odyssey that will take him through the desperate streets of Harlem, the smoke-filled jazz clubs of New Orleans, and the swamps of Louisiana and its seedy underworld of voodoo.

Directors

Cast

👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Crew

Production: Mario Kassar (Executive Producer)Alan Marshall (Producer)Andrew G. Vajna (Executive Producer)Elliott Kastner (Producer)
Screenplay: Alan Parker (Screenplay)
Music: Trevor Jones (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Michael Seresin (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Marco Castellini
Brooklyn, 1950s: detective Harry Angel is hired by a mysterious and wealthy individual to track down Johnny Favorite, a musician who disappeared several years earlier. The detective uncovers a series of acquaintances of the missing man, who are mysteriously killed after each encounter. Surprise ending. Alan Parker directs a noir with more than one horror element, enhanced by the performances of an excellent Robert De Niro and, for once, a Mickey Rourke up to the task (this is, and will probably remain, the best performance of Hollywood's "pugilist"). A baroque thriller shot with an unusual attention to visual aspects and setting, but which is a bit too convoluted on the narrative level. The final solution is difficult to guess, but not entirely unpredictable. A good horror revision of the noir films of the 1940s. Curiosity: the film was initially labeled with the dreaded "X", which in the USA is equivalent to a ban for pornographic films. Then some sequences were removed and others "softened" and the film passed into theaters with a ban for minors under 17. For the role played by De Niro, Marlon Brando was initially contacted, who, however, refused the part.
👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Where to Watch

Stream

Raro Video Amazon Channel Raro Video Amazon Channel

Rent

Apple TV Apple TV
Amazon Video Amazon Video
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies

Buy

Apple TV Apple TV
Amazon Video Amazon Video
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies

COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

7 /10

"Harry Angel" (Mickey O'Rourke) lives a pretty hand-to-mouth existence as a New York PI when he is hired to track down a musician named "Johnny Favorite". Now this fella really doesn't want to be found, and after a while our street-smart investigator begins to contemplate that maybe this search isn't really all that his employer "Louis Cyphre" (a Rasputin-esque Robert De Niro) has in mind. As the search becomes more intricate, "Angel" finds himself having doors slammed in his face, or even worse before he is immersed in a world of voodoo in a distinctly unwelcoming New Orleans. Corpses are starting to pile up and "Angel" is starting to get cold feet. Can he stay the course and discover the whereabouts of his quarry? Can he also discover quite why the enigmatic "Cyphre" wanted him on the case in the first place? This is one of those whodunit's where the quest itself is not one of the more riveting parts of the plot. "Angel" has an ability to turn almost everyone he sees into metaphorical stone - including Charlotte Rampling's rather mysterious "Margaret" - what's going on? Alan Parker keeps the Hjortsberg story moving along quite faithfully to the book, allowing us to gradually get a sense that all is not as it seems, that poor old "Angel" is being manipulated and that things are probably not going to end well for him! O'Rourke carries that off really well - he injects a swarthiness and grit to his character who clearly isn't quite as hard as he would like people to think, and De Niro - though infrequently on screen - also manages to create that slight sense of malevolence as the penny begins to drop for all watching. It's a bit slow out of the gate, but it does build well to a denouement that is amongst the best in this extensive genre.

Reviews provided by TMDB