American Hero
Metascore
Mixed or Average
42
User score
Generally Favorable
6.1
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Metascore
Mixed or Average
17% Positive
1 Review
1 Review
50% Mixed
3 Reviews
3 Reviews
33% Negative
2 Reviews
2 Reviews
Dec 10, 2015
70
Love does a fine job evoking the social and cultural vibe of the Big Easy and its environs. He also enjoyably uses documentary-style testimonials from Melvin's devoted friends and supporters, inspired editing and a slew of nifty visual effects.
Dec 8, 2015
60
What’s missing is much in the way of substantial drama or character development.
User score
Generally Favorable
33% Positive
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
56% Mixed
5 Ratings
5 Ratings
11% Negative
1 Rating
1 Rating
Dec 12, 2015
6
Closer-to-life version of Jean Grey and Professor X. It may be strange that a mockumentary crew follows a random underachiever guy who just lost custody of his son and sent to community service. After a while it turns out he has special power, a straight up X-Men material also accompanied by his best buddy in wheelchair. The movie later follows his squandered life, which is quite identifiable because he struggles with daily problems even with his superpower, although the cycle of his drug abuse can be monotonous at the end. Superheroes movies usually opt for mix of fantasy, using outlandish power, and connection to the character, displaying their flaws to humanize them. American Hero clearly leans towards the latter as Melvin (Stephen Dorff) stumbles even on ordinary problems, let alone crime fighting. He looks stoned and disheveled almost the entire time. There's a good quality in his character, though one must look deep enough. I remember Stephen Dorff from Blade as the cool named antagonist Deacon Frost, as Melvin he's the complete opposite, albeit ironically still with super power. Melvin is talented and smart even without the gift, yet he’s using the telekinesis power to grope women with random objects and score drugs. The movie invests so much on establishing that he's a screw up, it has repetitive party montage for a good portion of the runtime, which tends to get stale after a while. Eddie Griffin as Lucille, the sidekick in wheelchair is also Melvin's moral compass. He's a charismatic comedian, cracking jokes and having tendency to flirt with women, but he presents good brotherhood relationship for Melvin. It's also nice that the movie adds some interviews with supporting chars to establish heroic or mundane atmosphere as well as adding slight realistic flavor. This is in heart, a comedy drama, not an ambitious use of super power like Chronicle. It does have solid special effect for some sequences, but it's still limited and might not look superbly authentic. The ones that work better are those seemingly happen out of nowhere and its use of mockumentary serves these tricks well. American Hero might not be as grand as the title or premise suggests, but it brings more connection with the characters than larger sci-fi or action movies. Melvin is not the hero we deserve, he's the one we will have to make do.
Dec 13, 2015
5
Melvin, a reluctant Superhero, lives only for crime, women and drugs - until he realizes that the only way he will ever get to see his estranged son is to go straight and fulfill his potential as a crime fighter. Honestly, I quite enjoyed this movie at parts. I say parts because I enjoyed this movie until it gets painful and all you are left with is the bad acting and humor. Aside from Stephen Dorff and Eddie Griffn, they carry a lot of the movie so it's important that they have enough chemistry and charisma to carry it... And they do... And it works really well! Watching them on screen working together was very entertaining, But when they aren't together and they are left with either his boring cliche family or his boring cliche friends and it's annoying. Speaking of cliches, this movie hits every single one. The setup, the fallout and the second chance sequences all hit every single cliche and even if it doesn't make any sense everything ends all happy and cheerful even though it doesn't deserve it. The pacing goes everywhere! It's insanely fast and chokes you with energy at one part. But, then it would become a total snooze and nothing happens. Literally the first 40 minutes we find out he has superpowers and an estranged child but that was in the trailer so nothing new happens. Now that I'm thinking about it, if you haven't seen the trailer and thinking this movie has a cool premise and want to check it out in theaters than please don't watch the trailer. It literally spoils the entire movie. In the end, I found this movie to be enjoyable although it was all over the place but I enjoyed it for what it was trying to do. I'm giving this one a 5/10.
Dec 13, 2015
50
American Hero, which intermittently uses a faux-documentary style to awkward effect, never quite decides what it wants to be.
Dec 10, 2015
40
American Hero starts off seeming as if it is going to be a fresh take on superheroes, but Nick Love, who wrote and directed, turns out to have nowhere to go with his intriguing premise.
Dec 8, 2015
30
The filmmakers blend tones like a child mixing fountain drinks into one unidentifiable flavor.
Dec 11, 2015
25
American Hero is an obnoxious rock star moment, with images of Americana that have apparently been lost in translation by an outsider British director.
Jan 11, 2016
4
I think Its the film encapsulation of the term **** and sugar mixed'. This film is quite beautifully shot, and has some impressive visual effects for such a low budget. However, I could never tell what this wanted to be. Such an intriguing premise prompts a healthy mixture of action and drama (take a page from Chronicle for example) but what tried to be Josh Trank's cinematic experience was rather dumbfounded magic tricks and acting that could never grasp onto what our main character, Melvin, was trying to achieve.




























