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7/10
Father and son
jotix10013 July 2005
Warning: Spoilers
"American Heart", which was released in 1992 was an excellent dramatic account of the relationship between a father and his impressionable teen age son. Jeff Bridges helped to produce the film, that is directed with great sense of style by Martin Bell, a man that should be appreciated for his uncompromising way of looking at life. Mr. Bell collaborated on the screen play with Peter Silverman, a writer that has worked extensively on television.

Jack Kelson is an ex-con who wants to go straight. In the process he inherits his own son, who has been living away. They both end in Seattle trying to make a new start. Unfortunately, Jack Kelson has left behind enemies that ultimately want him dead. Jack figured he wants to start a new life in Alaska, away from the evil environment of crime in Seattle.

Jeff Bridges is the best thing in this movie. We had seen this movie when it first was released, and we are impressed how well it still plays. Mr. Bridges is an accomplished actor who is totally believable in whatever he decides to play. It's his honesty that pulls us to him, and even this tough man he is portraying, shows redeeming qualities. Edward Furlong is also equally good as the young Nick, who clearly adores his father. The last scene at the ferry, when it's not clear Jack will make it and Nick is looking for him all over the place, has to be one of the most heart wrenching moments in this film.

The musical score is amazing. Tom Waits songs in the background contribute to the feeling of despair the director created for us. Also Fats Waller's song "Im Crazy 'Bout My Baby" is heard in the film.

This is a film that endures the passing of time thanks to the great contribution Martin Bell made to the film.
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8/10
Fighting Malevolent Forces
bkoganbing8 September 2007
American Heart casts Jeff Bridges in the role of a recently paroled convict who would like to make a fresh start of things. But from the gitgo he's saddled with a responsibility of his own making. His 14 year old son Edward Furlong runs away from the uncle he's been staying with and hooks up with Bridges.

Sad to say but it's like they're doomed from the start. They live in an SRO hotel on Seattle's seamier side. Bridges is working as a window washer, barely making ends meet. Furlong tries to enroll in school, but the bureaucracy proves too much. He falls in with a lot of street kids including child hooker Tracey Kapisky who reminds me very much of Jodie Foster in Taxi. She's lives in the same SRO with her mother who's in the same profession and jealous of her daughter.

Bridges also has a younger associate, Don Harvey who'd like to get him back in the criminal life. He's also found a bit of romance with a prison pen pal in Lucinda Jenney.

American Heart is a real downer of a film, but very well done. Sad to these are very real people. But oddly enough it follows the same plot line as the Shirley Temple movie Now and Forever with Gary Cooper and Carole Lombard. Sort of like an R-rated version of it.

This film is not one for those who like happy endings. Still I think it is one Jeff Bridges finest screen achievements.
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7/10
Good performances; intelligent story.
QueenMag25 November 1998
This movie features another great performance from Jeff Bridges, as a convicted felon whose son wants to have a relationship with him. It's a rare cinematic look at the strained father-teenage son relationship. Edward Furlong is sympathetic as Bridges' persistent son. The ending bothered me a bit - almost too anti-Hollywood, but this film is not driven by plot. The characters are the meat of this story. Makes a worthwhile rental.
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Refreshingly honest and very well acted
lazarillo15 November 2004
This is a dramatic, narrative film by Martin Bell, the director of the excellent documentary "Streetwise". And while it is obvious Bell was a little uncomfortable with the narrative format, it is one of the few independent films of the 1990's that doesn't suffer from the Quentin Tarantino syndrome--i.e. it is not just a pastiche of other movies the director has seen. It's clear Bell based a lot of this movie on real life. In fact, many of the characters here were obviously based on real people in "Streetwise"--the kid and his ex-con father, the tomboy lesbian, the 14-year-old amateur hooker. The movies suffers a little in comparison to early Gus Van Sant films ("Mala Noche","Drugstore Cowboy", "My Own Private Idaho")which had similar down-and-out characters and were also set in the American Northwest. But many will find this film refreshingly honest and less pretentious, at least, than some of Van Sant's films.

What really makes this film is the acting. It marked Jeff Bridges return to independent film (five or six years before "The Big Lebowski"), and his performance here makes one forgive him for the Hollywood crap he made in the 80's like "Against All Odds". Edward Furlong is also very good. I remember reading some alarmist claptrap about him in Premiere magazine around the time of this movie, about how he was dating a 30-year-old woman (oh, the horror! the horror!) and about to become another young Hollywood casualty. Well, starting with this film he ended up carving a nice little niche for himself in independent film (i.e. "Pecker", "Animal Factory"). Turns out that just because you're not starring in "Terminator 3" it doesn't necessarily mean you're sharing needles in a crack house with guys named Corey and girls named Shannen. And as a little icing on the cake this movie has a great Tom Waits theme song which you can't find any of his albums. Definitely a recommended movie.
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7/10
Fact: This is Jeff Bridges favorite film.
film-critic2 December 2007
I recently stumbled upon one of Jeff Bridges early pieces entitled "American Heart" and was again impressed with his ability to take a cliché character coupled with a choppy story and transform it into a meaningful, albeit mediocre, film. While not all elements work in this independent feature, it is the power and raw nature of the good parts that make this itty-bitty feature shine.

Jeff Bridges. Even in the early 90s he was making powerful cinema with strong characters and dedicated roles. "American Heart" could have easily fallen into the category of desperate father/son reunion fare, but instead it jumps beyond that into a world all its own thanks to our leading man, Mr. Jeff Bridges. He is nothing short of flawless in this film. His body image, his tone, his strength/courage/fears are all incredibly real and developed. When you watch "American Heart", you do not see Bridges playing a father role, but instead see the character of Jack in every scene. Through those squinty eyes and burly biceps, through the years of prison life dutifully planted behind his long, pony-tail hair, his youthful troubles beautifully (albeit randomly) placed throughout this story, Bridges becomes Jack. He becomes a man who has seen more in life than we have time to see, but yet we can see it through Bridges' character. Bridges is the lead and the obvious scene-stealer of this film and there is no way to deny his excellence. It is due to his ability that the other characters fall in line. Those surrounding him, Edward Furlong, Lucinda Jenney, Tracey Kapisky, and Don Harvey are devoted characters, but they do not measure up to what Bridges is pouring. The coupling of Bridges and a young Furlong is exceptional, but for me, it could have been more. They are father and son, the connection there is obvious, but it is when Furlong explores on his own, symbolically following in his father's footsteps, that we see a lack of character. He becomes annoying and more childish than mature. This is a growth film for Furlong, and in my opinion, there wasn't enough growing for Furlong to really make that pivotal change by the end. He should have had more interaction with Charlotte, who isn't used enough to perhaps add conflict between the two men. She is one of Bridges' backbone character, but is only used as more eye-candy for the screen. Then there is Bridges' old business associate who just happens to follow the rulebook for cliché, he was my least favorite character and more filler than necessary. My point? Without Bridges this would have been a forgettable film.

Characters were beautifully placed. Bridges claims this to be his favorite film, and his heart, his entire heart is in the character, but Peter Silverman's script could have used more grit. There was still a sensation of sugarcoating involved with the story. How simple was it for Nick (Furlong) to get to his dad, to not have to go to school, to live on the streets – these were are too simple for someone who may not have had the real-life experiences yet like his father. This doesn't mean that the story wasn't dark. This is a story of a family with nothing, who strives to have nothing more than just freedom and each other – it is a dark story and Martin Bell did a phenomenal job of making sure that we weren't distracted with unnecessary emotional pitfalls. His camera work and direction paired well with Bridges' powerful work, but it again goes back to the downfall of the story that will not allow me to give this film a perfect score. The relationship between Furlong and his pseudo-girlfriend is annoying, and ultimately distracting from the real story. There is no chemistry or emotion there, so when he tries to "free" her, it just feels like an event that needed to happen instead of "should be" happening. The stripper mother story, again, too much filler. Thankfully, these are all used up in the center of the film giving us a strong beginning and an emotionally beautiful ending. Powerful acting, strong direction, tight camera work – a couple of more hours spent on the script and "American Heart" would be an instant addition to the collection.

Overall, I liked "American Heart" because of the true work that everyone put into it. This was a project of passion, a story with characters that everyone wanted to be involved with no matter the chunkiness of the story. Bridges needs to win an Oscar, he should have won for this film. You, as a viewer, cannot keep you eyes off him as he struggles with the new life in Seattle and dreams of Alaska. Martin Bell understands the streets, or at least early 90s streets, and while the image of this film doesn't withstand the test of time, the overall tones and themes are powerful and unforgiving. Furlong tried to keep up with Bridges, but it was impossible. There were times he was just too childish and annoying, completely destroying the conventional character developed from the beginning. There are great moments in this film that stand apart from the classic Hollywood recycle, and for that I must give "American Heart" credit. If released today, I think it would be a runaway success, it would be a word of mouth film, while I cannot add it to my collection, it will be a film I will strongly suggest to others. Jeff Bridges. Can you believe the work he did in this film? The man has an undeniable eye for the trade that he is in, and he should not be afraid to exploit it further. With "American Heart", Bridges has rejuvenated my hope to find a great American actor.

Bravo Mr. Bridges, Bravo!

Grade: **** out of *****
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7/10
The Lusty Lady
gavin694212 September 2017
An ex-convict (Jeff Bridges) is tracked down by his estranged teenage son (Edward Furlong), and the pair try to build a relationship and life together in Seattle.

Elements of the screenplay for "American Heart" were based on material originally covered in the director's prior documentary film "Streetwise" (1984), such as the relationship between Dewayne and his father. Having not seen the earlier film, I cannot comment on the connection any more than that.

Not surprisingly, Edward Furlong won an award for this, and Jeff Bridges is as great as ever (he is quite the natural). It is a shame that Furlong went on to a more questionable future. One cannot help but wonder if the early success tainted his later life.
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7/10
More Sherry Baby than Straight Time .....
PimpinAinttEasy10 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Dear Squares,

I know life is tough. Many movies have been made, books been written and songs been sung about out plight. But most of us like to see what life is like on the other side too, don't we? I mean, we like to vicariously enjoy the adventures of the outlaws and the misfits.

If your answer is yes, American Heart is the movie for you. It is about an ex-con (Jeff Bridges) just out of jail, trying to settle back into ordinary life while also taking care of his creative teenage son (Edward Furlong) who is slowly falling into bad company.

Bridges as a wiry muscular ex-con shows why he survived the 80s which left talented guys like Mickey Rourke, Michael Madsen and Eric Roberts in the wilderness. You've got to respect this man's range. He has been one of the top five American actors of the last 25 years. Furlong plays the role he is more well known for in Terminator 2 and American History X.

The film is pretty depressing when you think about it. The lack of opportunities when you're out of jail with everyone breathing down your neck. Materialistic women who only want to have a good time. Fans of Sherry Baby and Straight Time would definitely enjoy this film.

There are some great long shots of this wharf where Brides and Furlong spend a lot of time together. The ending is great. The film deserves a blu-ray.

Best Regards, Pimpin.

(7/10)
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6/10
Call of the Wild
wes-connors1 September 2012
Showing off hair and muscles made to cover romance novels, convicted bank robber Jeff Bridges (as Jack Kelson) is washing up in a public bathroom when his 14-year-old son Edward Furlong (as Nick Kelson) enters. Young Furlong wants to live in Seattle with his newly-paroled father. After unsuccessfully trying to get the kid to go back to his aunt's farm, Mr. Bridges relents. They move into a cheap apartment and Bridges gets a job washing windows. His sleazy ex-partner in crime Don Harvey (as Rainey) tries to get Bridges back in business, and also attempts to recruit Furlong plus his friend Christian Frizzell (as Rollie)...

Bridges wants to go straight and move to Alaska. Furlong gets a job selling newspapers. Bridges drinks heavily and beds prison pen pal Lucinda Jenney (as Charlotte). Furlong kisses budding prostitute Tracey Kapisky (as Molly) and hangs out with the streetwise crowd. There is joy in watching a father getting to know and care for his son as both temper wild impulses. This makes their setbacks sad. Every so often, we are reminded something is not genuine, but Bridges and director Martin Bell hold it together on the star's characterization. The subject matter winds up depressing, but effective. Life is hard.

****** American Heart (5/92) Martin Bell ~ Jeff Bridges, Edward Furlong, Lucinda Jenney, Don Harvey
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9/10
Great Unknown Film
raymond_chandler29 July 2001
I first heard about this movie when it was filming in Seattle, my home. Being a fan of Jeff Bridges, I had to see it when it was released. I now own it on video, and it is one of my favorites.

The Seattle locations are used well, but the basic story could happen anywhere. Ex-con Bridges tries to build a life for himself and his estranged son after his release from prison. There are subplots dealing with a pen-pal romance and Jack's ex-partner, but the focus is on the father-son relationship. What makes the film fascinating is the texture and depth of Bridges' performance. Jack is not too smart, a drunk, and flat broke. He is thrown into a harsh, uncompromising world at the very bottom rung, and somehow must find a way to survive AND stay straight. As he gradually takes responsibility for his son, Nick, he regains his self-esteem and humanity. Bridges shows us all this with humor, honesty, and zero sentimentality. He never shies away from exposing Jack's flaws, but also imbues him with a raw sort of nobility. Flashback sequences drawing a parallel between young Jack and Nick add a layer of poignancy.

There is level of verisimilitude and frankness in "American Heart" that contemporary, mainstream American movies rarely exhibit. In form it greatly resembles Dustin Hoffman's remarkable "Straight Time", but this film is about relationships, not crime. If all you want from a movie is escapism, stay away. Those who like to wander near the Edge will be rewarded.

"you keep me straight, I'll keep you straight"
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2/10
Extremely edgy characters, in a town full of Drones
Sintz4930 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I must disagree with, really, all of those rating this film as "good". One reviewer did well to make references to the documentary he/she said this film was kind grounded with. But I don't think the film has much truth to it. Some reviewers here, do well by sharing their inability to care much for Bridges's character, but I couldn't care much about anyone in this version of "Seattle". I lived there from 1967 to 1943 - attended college, but got my BA after 16! years. I worked at part-time jobs at a bit over minimum wages and for awhile lived 4 blocks from "Kelson's" apartment building on Capital Hill. With a job like Jack's I may have earned more. Yes, I had contact with real nice people: students, musicians, even family; but I scarcely so little as SAW anyone like all the characters in this film. Even when I was living in Brooklyn, NY, I rarely saw any people like these. In the mention of the real Seattle documentary, it was said that "help" for people like Kelson was so rare. I'd suggest that people like Kelson were pretty rare in Seattle, too. In the style of presenting the characters here, there is inconsistency - spread out in just a few seconds. Kelson gives a few encouraging words to his son, and celebrates his Alaska plan of rebirth for them together, but when he promises to go earn more cash for rent, he goes out to play music (which he does well, esp. for a street performer). Good plan, but when we see him out there with his tenor guitar(?), he is being thrown out of a restaurant and is so drunk he can barely walk. Why didn't we see any scene to learn why that good plan he had had failed and went totally under.... it looks like he christened his fundraiser by having a dozen stiff drinks. The more normal citizens of Seattle are represented at vanilla androids. They hardly see anything or anyone. Get this > one character (hidden for your reading, now) RUNS onto a big ferry boat, crashing past other riders who get in his way... it's crowded with people boarding the ferry. Then, one of our characters catches up and shoots the other character in full view of many other passengers only a few feet away. Moments later, we see the man, on the ferry deck, alone, no-one seeming to have noticed that the man had been shot, and was dying. This wouldn't have happened that way. In another scene, Furlong's - Nick Kelson, is homeless and on the streets, finally we get to see a "normal" Seattleite drive by, then stop to offer him help. Of course, he's gonna hit on the kid, but Nick gets away. Yes, Seattle has its share of bad folks, but many good people, too. This film could have tried to grapple with the diversity. Gee, Kelson is working, washing windows inside a fancy looking bank lobby. When he see's Nick out on the sidewalk, why doesn't he drop his stuff and run out and talk to him. No, he shouts through the window and swears, screaming all the time. Sure, he gets fired, but how did a guy like this ever manage to get the job? SOMEONE must have given him the benefit of the doubt to hire him in the first place..... ALSO, I doubt the bank was his boss, and couldn't have "fired" him. Wouldn't they have thrown him out, then fired the window cleaning service? The one "good" person besides Nick, I'd say (and whoever gave Jack that job), is Charlotte. She's hard to believe for me though. Nice, yes ... kinda; but she is so accepting of Jack's worst behavior that it can't really help him want to change.
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9/10
Excellent, but I'm biased...
The_Core7 February 2000
I have to admit being somewhat biased toward this film, as I was living in the apartment building (at the time) where most of the filming took place! The rent was $225/month if I remember correctly, and it was indeed a "studio"... complete with bare bulb hanging from the ceiling and a lot of roaches :-) (the room used in the movie was somewhat nastier than the one I was in - there was a top floor, a middle and a basement, and I was living in one of the middle floor rooms at the time). But I got to see a great deal of the process of filming a movie (extremely interesting and educational) as well as meeting Jeff Bridges and Edward Furlong (no, I don't appear anywhere in the film as either an extra or an actor). As for the movie itself, it turned out quite a bit better than I had expected. Martin Bell is underrated as a director, and it's unfortunate that lately he's concentrated on TV rather than movies - he really is talented (See "Streetwise," 1984). The ending of American Heart really was sad, although we've seen it before in a lot of movies. Yet another reflection on the sad state of today's society.

And now, a small revelation... in the movie, the apartment where "Jack" and his son lived was portrayed as being on Queen Anne Hill in Seattle. Actually, the building used in filming was on Capitol Hill, a few blocks west of Broadway. No, I'm not going to give away the street address or the name of the apartments, sorry :-).

My overall review for "American Heart" - 9/10.
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4/10
Antihero misfire
bregund22 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
For the antihero premise to work, there has to be something engaging or redemptive about the main character, otherwise the whole thing is off. Here, it's off from the beginning, and stays off for the duration. Nothing clicks. There is no motivation for Nick to stay with Jack, they have no chemistry, and neither one of them needs the other. So you have two positive magnetic poles throughout the story. Show me one moment of tenderness between father and son, one moment where they really connected despite their differences, where they accomplished something or tried to patch things up despite the lost years, and it would have saved the film. Instead it frustratingly steers clear of any attempt at reconciliation. Not even once is there any legitimate sign of affection between them. This could have been so much more, and Lucinda Jenney's terrible acting didn't help.
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Underrated Bridges as usual; brilliant as usual
george.schmidt21 February 2003
AMERICAN HEART (1993) **** Jeff Bridges, Edward Furlong, Don Harvey, Tracey Kapisky. Bleak yet truthful look at a father/son relationship in a world of despair. Bridges gives a modulatedly depicted performance as an ex-con fresh from jail and confronted with his teenage son, who is also on the path of hard knocks. Great rapport between Bridges and Furlong as well as a hopeless demise that maintains despite its moments of carefree aimlessness. Bridges co-produced as well.
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10/10
A marvellous film that deserves a bigger audience
wildiris10 April 1999
I love Martin Bell's American Heart. It comes together like an organic whole, with nothing that seems false or out of place. The low-key, matter-of-factly gritty tone means that the film probably won't rollercoaster over you on first viewing, but also that, unlike some more high-impact films, it bears repeated viewings and even gains by them.

American Heart is high quality throughout, with fine writing, directing, acting, and artistic design. The characters are well drawn, not just types but real creations. The cast are wonderful across the board. Despite the fact that Heart was his first non-documentary feature, Bell seemed already to know how to get the best out of his actors (his later made-for-cable film Hidden in America also features fine performances). The score is very effective, too; Tom Waits' end-title song in particular. For anyone interested in Jeff Bridges or Edward Furlong this is probably essential viewing, but it is also well worth discovering for indie buffs or, indeed, anyone who likes good drama. Though the UK video sleeve may make it look like an all-action blockbuster, and the opening title sequence like a comedy, don't be put off: it's a gritty, poignant drama of real quality that deserves to be seen by more than the seemingly few who have already done so.
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1/10
Simply disheartening
Nimbo6 August 1999
I am at fault. I cannot see a father and son so definitely unconnected. This was a sad movie and I kept wishing that both the father and the son would wise up to how each was destroying the other. The father must have known and did know about the young people with which his son was cavorting. He really made no attempt to stem the tide. I cannot see such failures in life who absolutely just don't even try to improve situations in somewhat a sane fashion, or seek help. This movie left me with such a bad aftertaste. And Furlong, how inept his acting was. Bridges was up to par. I give this film a 1 out of 110.
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9/10
deeply felt, but stripped of sentimentality, and one of Bridges absolute best
Quinoa198423 September 2008
The only minor drawback with American Heart, and it should not be a big one for most concerned, is that so much of it is taken and/or borrowed from the details and real people and situations documented by director Martin Bell in Streetwise that it almost feels very slightly watered down in comparison. This is not to say that American Heart doesn't have its share of nicely defined grit or realism, but for those handful of viewers who were lucky enough to see Streetwise it isn't quite exactly the same, despite the similar locations and (some) real street kids used again and Tom Waits song accompaniment from time to time.

But this is minor as a liability for two reasons: 1) Martin Bell is out to make a film for all those audiences, however small in the independent film market, who didn't get to see Streetwise and want the facts put into a perspective of compelling dramatization, and he shows the goods as a director of naturalistic settings and specific scenes, and 2) Jeff Bridges. Bridges plays a character based upon a real convict (featured in only one, but perhaps the most shattering, scene of Streetwise) who is out of jail and has to take care of his 15 year old son played by very young Edward Furlong. Bridges gets so deep into this character, so in touch with the hard-bitten mannerisms and hard-knock-lived way to his voice and even the bits of vulnerability that it's hard to see it as anything less than remarkable.

If Furlong isn't quite as remarkable maybe it's to be expected since, frankly, he was still too young to impress much further than his own affected way of speaking and acting. Yet he is fantastic at playing off of this father character, who isn't unloving but knows what road he could go down with just one wrong step (such as, for instance, getting into business with his old crooked diamond-stealing partner). American Heart, on its own terms, allows for Bridges to show what a small treasure (yes, breaking out the pompous terminology like 'treasure') he can be as an actor in American film, and brings to light the degradation of the urban life in Seattle.

Indeed, as a big credit to Martin Bell, it's no less harrowing at times watching these people on the streets, in the bars or the crummy hotel rooms trying to get by or hanging out, living by wits end (if that) as in Streetwise. Only Herzog, with his two films on Dieter Dengler, can probably top Bell's films on Seattle's lower classes in terms of immense dramatic impact, technical skill, and a lead performance that embodies the attitude and conflicts of the danger at every turn. It's overlooked to say the least as far as highly charged but unsentimental indies go.
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Great performance by Bridges!
jbels14 August 2003
Man, was Jeff Bridges excellent in this! Talk about being pitch perfect in a character who is trying to change and just having the hardest time. Subtle touches, like when he takes away the joint from his son, only to slip it into his own pocket. This is a good film, small gem. Rent it!
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9/10
A splendidly gritty and poignant indie drama gem
Woodyanders29 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The always excellent Jeff Bridges gives one of his finest, most impressive and hard-edged performances to date as Jack Kelson, a scruffy, but basically decent ex-con who gets paroled and has trouble readjusting to civilian life. Jack gets a job washing windows, resides in a cheap crummy apartment, tries to save money so he can move to Alaska and start life afresh, and attempts to bond with his forlorn, disaffected teenage son Nick (beautifully played by Edward Furlong). Documentary filmmaker Martin Bell, working from an astute, no-nonsense script by Peter Silverman, directs his first fictional feature with a commendable blend of total assurance and steady compassion for the more downtrodden members of modern society. The strong, moving and absorbing story about redemption and urban blight thankfully eschews cloying sentiment and hokey mainstream Hollywood razzle-dazzle; in their place we instead have a rough and unsentimental tone that naturally draws poignancy from the characters and the dire situation they find themselves struggling to overcome. Bridges and Furlong are both outstanding in the leads; they receive fine support from Lucinda Jenney as Jack's sweet cabbie girlfriend Charlotte, Don Harvey as Jack's slimy old criminal partner Rainey, Tracey Kaprisky as sad teenage prostitute Molly, and Melvyn Hayward as Jack's stern, but fair parole officer Normandy. The cinematography by James R. Bagdonas nails the grimy despair of the grungy Seatle locations with exceptional vividness. James Newton Howard's spare, bluesy score and a tip-top soundtrack which includes several terrific songs by Tom Waits further add to the film's deeply affecting impact. The downbeat ending is absolutely heartbreaking. A total powerhouse.
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9/10
A powerful, special film, with a great Jeff Bridges performance
runamokprods4 January 2012
A very powerful, honest, un-sentimentalized look at a hardened ex-con trying to build a life with his 12 year old son.

Jeff Bridges gives a towering performance, subtle, real, quiet, angry, scary, withdrawn and heartbreaking.

The film around him often matches the super high level of his work, although some of the sub plots involving Edward Furlong as the son feel a bit more obvious and schematic than the grown-up world sections of the film.

None-the-less, a powerful, honest look at how hard making it once you're down really is.

It's very frustrating that this is only available on DVD in 4:3. The film deserves better treatment.
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Heartbreaking
cmeeker4 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Jeff Bridges is so good in this film his performance will break your heart. The entire film is beautifully cast and played, with a very strong, and equally heartbreaking performance by Edward Furlong as Bridges' young son. The scenes between the two actors are pivotal and breathtaking. Their relationship is perilous for each of them because they've never known or been a real family, and have never explored their emotional vulnerabilities, or learned how to express love. When Bridges throws a framed photograph of the boy's mother on the floor, smashing the glass, Furlong, in pain and rage, retrieves the photo, and smashes his father's guitar to pieces. Bridges is drunk, but deep inside he truly cannot understand that his son loves his mother. These are characters who have known only the hardest possible life. "American Heart" cuts like the broken pieces of that photograph. This is a terrific film, and Jeff Bridges' finest performance.
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10/10
American Heart Attacks the Core of Environment ****
edwagreen5 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
An absolutely powerful movie with Jeff Bridges giving a sensational performance as a recently released prisoner connecting with his young son.

This is definitely a film which shows the importance of environment in the lives of our protagonists. The Bridges character wants to go straight but is held back by environmental influences, and not being able to secure employment doesn't help the situation.

His intelligent but emotionally wrought son wants to know more about his hooker mother. In constant outbursts with his father, he soon falls into the mean streets of the city and with other outcasts as well.

While the ending of the film is tragic, there is hope for the new generation.
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10/10
Seattle's skid row
lee_eisenberg17 April 2020
Martin Bell had previously focused on Seattle's skid row with the documentary "Streetwise", focusing on several homeless children. He then directed "American Heart", addressing the same sort of thing. Jeff Bridges plays an ex-con whose son (Edward Furlong) reconnects with him. Forced to live in a dismal apartment, they have no choice but to eke out a living by any means necessary.

It's one of the grittiest movies that you'll ever see. In addition to the focus on poverty, most of the characters make you feel as if you're walking on eggshells. A stark contrast to the image of Seattle as one of the most livable cities in the US; I recently moved to Seattle and can confirm that there's a lot of homelessness. This movie certainly gives one a sense of what it's like, with the unpleasant things that they have to do to survive. Definitely see it.

Lucinda Jenney plays a supporting role.
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Great movie!
kristin_dalton14 February 2003
I had seen this movie years ago, but recently I bought it and viewed it again. I knew I had liked the movie when I first saw it, but this time around I loved it. It is a great drama movie with a great Father/Son relationship story. Edward Furlong is really great in this film. He plays the role the way a role like this should be played. I would recommend this movie to others who enjoy a good story and a good drama. I thought the ending was sad and personally would have enjoyed a happier ending. Great movie! Kristin
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10/10
Solid indie film
sara281623 June 2020
A well-acted story about a father and son who have to make do with what they have and about hoping for a better tomorrow.
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8/10
Realistic and Restrained
LeonLouisRicci21 March 2013
The Film is a fine character study of a Father/Son relationship from the dark side that is more hopeful than one would expect from the despair surrounding this rough but realistic re-bonding. Everyone on screen is believable and the two leads are impressive and surrounded by characters and scenery that is streetwise.

It is Jeff Bridges' powerfully laid-back anger and unrelenting belief that he can escape this entrapment and maybe provide some guidance and hope despite the odds. His son is mostly incapable of resisting the obvious temptations of his environment, girlfriends, drugs, and the need to get some money.

The Movie is quite engrossing despite its low-budget and downbeat story and is rendered remarkably restrained and never boring. It also resists trying to be too clever or too condescending. This is quite an achievement and deserving of more attention from those seeking something down to earth. This one is all the way down to street level and never, surprisingly, descends to the gutter.
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