

The Amateur

After his life is turned upside down when his wife is killed in a London terrorist attack, a brilliant but introverted CIA decoder takes matters into his own hands when his supervisors refuse to take action.
After his life is turned upside down when his wife is killed in a London terrorist attack, a brilliant but introverted CIA decoder takes matters into his own hands when his supervisors refuse to take action.
Loved this movie from start to finish. Totally expected him to die in the end.
Really enjoyable film from start to finish highly recommend
'The Amateur' is not all that believable or unique, but it without question made for a satisfying time at the movies for me. It feels like a long while since I've seen Rami Malek in anything; fwiw, 'Oppenheimer' over a year ago. This makes for a strong return into my world.
Malek is the beating heart of the movie, as you'd expect. I mentioned that it doesn't come across as all that plausible, though that is only in regards to what the film ends up portraying; Malek is convincing as the main dude. Elsewhere, Laurence Fishburne and Michael Stuhlbarg are good.
I was fully invested from beginning to end, so I can't really harbour any complaints. It's pure and simply a very well done movie, in my eyes at least. After the very good 'One Life'
The Mr. Robot and Jason Bourne mashup we never knew we needed. This is a very good conspiracy thriller. It was paced very well too. No filler. No unnecessary drama. Gets straight to the point and keeps the momentum from start to finish.
Just do yourself a favor and watch the movie. Don't expect an action packed thriller, but a more deeper sophisticated agent on a brilliant and different voyage of revange.
This is a remake of 1981 The Amateur, the same story of a husband plotting revenge of his wife's death. While 1981's The Amateur was a straight spy thriller, this was upgraded to a spy thriller drama by seasoned British director James Hawes.
In the beginning of this film, I questioned the choice of Rami Malek as the main hero. Malek has his signature look of arogance and over thinking stare which aometimes awkward, but perfect as Freddy Mercury. Later on, it's clear why Malek was selected. Malek's over thinking stare and soft spoken fit the character exceptionally well.
A warning who expected James Bond style of spy thriller, The Amateur ain't it. The Amateur is a slow burner thriller with Charles Heller, the main character, always planned ahead instead of shooting with anger. Malek worked his acting skills to make Heller believable in such fantastic dark (almost) realistic adventure.
The supporting casts did well. The creative team behind this film adjusted DEI demands by casting Julianne Nicholson as CIA Director, but it was written for a man and showed characteristics of masculine character.
Hawes was smart enough to insert Heller's spy trainer, Hendersen, fought with CIA assassin. Hendersen was using non-lethal defensive weapons while the attacker use deadly weapons. Later showed at the end that Hendersen had been supporting Heller.
In summary, if you like British spy thriller with Hollywood actors, then The Amateur is highly recommended.
Rami Malek was amazing, such a great movie, i loved how he outwitted everyone and his methods and approach to each villain out of the four and what he had planned for every single one of them, very satisfying end and overall such a great watch
It was a really good watch, I was expecting it since I saw the trailer like 2 months ago, because I knew it was going to be a strange mix of impossible mission but with the brain as the protagonist and it really worked for me
It hurt the way it turned out for him at the start but everything always fall into the right place
A lot of action and thrill with strong and well written characters
Been a while since I've watched a spy movie and I enjoyed this lots! Felt the storyline moved along pretty quickly and enjoyed the locations / weapon's which was built. Felt like I could make them fully aware I'd end up killing myself 😂
[English + French]
🇺🇸🇬🇧 The Amateur by James Hawes. I haven’t seen the 1981 movie or read the book, so I can’t compare, but it was a nice surprise. The story is well put together, and it’s refreshing to have a hero who isn’t a superman — he has skills, especially in IT and intelligence, but he’s still very vulnerable on the ground. He stays a step ahead of his superiors, which makes the CIA seem a bit too clueless at times.
The movie takes us to several countries and cities in Europe, pausing when it needs to move the story forward, while also keeping us running to remind us of the constant stress of this mission, mixing vengeance and a manhunt.
One small regret about the trailer, which reveals the most striking scenes: you end up waiting for them, knowing they’re coming, and the next ten minutes feel like they’re just building up to that moment. It takes away some of the tension.
Rami Malek is really good. He plays a tense, unsure guy who can push himself when needed. His expressions really fit the idea of someone who works in the shadows, never revealing themselves.
In the end, the movie is easy to watch. You really want to see Charles succeed in mourning the way he wants.
🇫🇷 The Amaeur by James Hawes. Je n'ai pas vu le film de 1981 ni lu le livre, donc je peux pas comparer, mais bonne surprise. L’histoire est bien ficelée, et ça fait du bien d’avoir un héros qui n’est pas un surhomme — il a des compétences, surtout en informatique et en renseignement, mais il reste très vulnérable sur le terrain. Il garde une longueur d’avance sur ses supérieurs, ce qui rend la CIA un peu trop larguée de façon exagérée à certains moments.
Le film nous fait voyager dans plusieurs pays et villes d’Europe, en se posant quand il faut pour faire avancer le récit, tout en nous relançant régulièrement dans la course pour rappeler le stress constant de cette mission mêlant vengeance et cavale.
Petit regret concernant la bande-annonce, qui montre les scènes les plus marquantes : on se retrouve à les attendre, et à sentir que les dix minutes qui précèdent ne sont là que pour les amener. Ça casse un peu la tension sur certains passages.
Rami Malek est vraiment bon. Il incarne bien un mec tendu, pas sûr de lui, mais capable de se dépasser quand il faut. Il a des mimiques qui collent bien à l’idée qu’on se fait de quelqu’un qui travaille toujours dans l’ombre sans jamais se révéler.
En finalité le film se laisse regardé facilement. On veut voir Charles réussir a faire son deuil de la façon qu'il désir.
Loved this movie from start to finish. Totally expected him to die in the end.