Directed by:
John CarpenterCinematography:
Donald M. MorganComposer:
Jack NitzscheCast:
Jeff Bridges, Karen Allen, Charles Martin Smith, Richard Jaeckel, Robert Phalen, Tony Edwards, John Walter Davis, Ted White, Dirk Blocker, M.C. Gainey (more)VOD (1)
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Light-years away from home, an extra-terrestrial space traveler enters US airspace and is shot down near Wisconsin, leaving its occupant life form stranded and in desperate need of help. Starman (Oscar® winner Jeff Bridges) arrives at the remote cabin of recently widowed Jenny Hayden (Karen Allen) and transforms himself into the physical state of her deceased husband, convincing her to aid his perilous cross-country journey to Arizona. With time running out and government agents hot on their trail, keen to possess the scientific discovery of the century at any cost, Jenny and Starman take to the road in an action-packed adventure, exploring the bumpy terrain of human nature and allowing Jenny to rediscover the diminishing frontier of universal love. (Umbrella Entertainment)
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Reviews (4)
By the mid-80s, John Carpenter was a well-established director of stylish B-movies that had a respectable commercial reception within their means. As a result, he was given the opportunity to direct a generously budgeted sci-fi film for a major studio about the arrival of an alien on our planet. Although I consider Carpenter a solid director and don't see the film's weakness in his direction, the movie didn't impress me when I saw it in the movie theater. The problem lies in the screenplay and the overall approach to the topic. It’s a bland sci-fi romance that often elicited a bemused smile and, in one instance, even a chuckle from me - particularly when Karen Allen's character learns that their son will one day be an engineer. Overall impression: 45%. ()
I didn't expect anything from this film, but John Carpenter surprised me once again. Besides choosing a rather interesting subject matter, which is primarily a romance but also serves as social criticism, the humor presented here is charming and graceful, although in John's case, that's not always the case. Jeff Bridges and Karen Allen are a great couple who work delightfully. Jeff gives one of his many incredible performances here. ()
The hot potato of Starman's long-circulating script, which needed to get on screens as quickly as possible after the success of E.T., landed in Carpenter's lap because he supposedly wanted to try something a little different with the characters and their relationships, but in retrospect even he admits that this was mainly due to the fact that he simply didn't have much to choose from after the disastrous reception of The Thing. In the end, Starman impresses the most with its original, sometimes quite epic special effects (the fall of the UFO into the forest is luxuriously grandiose, the subsequent formation of the alien into a human being is again rather disgustingly uncanny) and its appealing inclusion of various B-movie archetypes and situations. But I don't at all swallow the romance between the alien being, with grimaces resembling a bad trip trying to break through layers of Botox through which he utters phrases like "Define beautiful", "Define love", or "I gave you a baby." Ugh. The general poignancy of a childlike, guileless protagonist who unravels our life certainties with the kindness of simple questions, combined with an Oscar nomination (say whaaaaaaaaat?!), reminds us once again of the need to succumb to these little princes and their simple truths, because it's just easier than slowly and patiently unraveling and defining one's complicated and chaotic existence. Plus, thanks to this movie, another insufferable space smartass has fallen from the sky, prot, so the black spot for this one. ()
A thrilling story of a shipwrecked alien (the Oscar-nominated Jeff Bridges) who wants to return home. You might argue that the topic has been revisited too many times today. Fair enough. However, John Carpenter completely infused Starman with his unique style and feel, so this sci-fi stands out and touches our hearts at many moments. Plus, the ending is brilliantly scripted. A lovely piece of nostalgia. ()
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