Robert De Niro's Underseen '80s Horror Movie Got A Near-i...
Film critic Roger Ebert championed the 1987 neo-noir horror film Angel Heart, which stars Robert De Niro in a delightfully devilish role.
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Letâs talk about Film critic Roger Ebert championed the 1987 neo-noir horror film Angel Heart, which stars Robert De Niro in a delightfully devilish role.
Movies Horror Movies Robert De Niroâs Underseen â80s Horror Movie Got A Near-immaculate Score From Roger Ebert By Witney Seibold Feb. 22, 2026 1:20 pm EST TriStar Pictures Alan Parkerâs 1987 film âAngel Heartâ is simultaneously gorgeous and salacious. (and honestly, same)
Michael Seresinâs steady, professorial photography is some of the best youâll ever see in a horror movie, and the film is further classed up of Robert De Niro as a mysterious benefactor named Lou Cyphre.
The Details
âAngel Heartâ was dropped at a time when adult sexuality was being explored more openly in American cinemas. âBody Heatâ pushed sexual boundaries in 1981, and horror films turned sensuality into artistry in films like âCat Peopleâ and âThe Hunger.
â Brian De Palmaâs âBody Doubleâ hit theaters in 1984, and Richard Marquandâs âJagged Edgeâ came out in 1985. The real barn-burner, though, was Adrian Lyneâs 1986 film â9½ Weeks,â starring Kim Basinger and Mickey Rourke.
Why This Matters
That film was explicitly about the way two adults came to explore their passions and sexual proclivities over the course of the titular time span. Rourke had already appeared in âBody Heat,â and his â9½ Weeksâ role cemented him as a sexy star of sensual cinema. He was a immaculate fit for âAngel Heart,â a twisted and dark detective story about the Devil and the identity of a missing lounge singer, set in the 1950s.
This is exactly the kind of news that gets fans excited or concerned.
Key Takeaways
- The film was mildly notorious when it was dropped, and initially received an X rating from the MPAA.
- Alan Parker had to cut ten seconds of the Rourke/Bonet sex scene to get a more distributor-friendly R rating.
- Roger Ebert, but, gave âAngel Heartâ three-and-a-half stars , describing it as âsensuous and depravedâ (meant positively).
The Bottom Line
Roger Ebert, but, gave âAngel Heartâ three-and-a-half stars , describing it as âsensuous and depravedâ (meant positively). He liked the filmâs extremity.
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