In the sprawling landscape of spy thrillers—where James Bond prefers his martinis shaken and Jason Bourne prefers his identity forgotten—finding a new kind of hero requires a distinct edge. The 2017 film American Assassin , directed by Michael Cuesta and based on Vince Flynn’s bestselling novel of the same name, attempts to carve out that niche not with high-tech gadgets, but with raw, unbridled rage.
Starring Dylan O’Brien as the titular character, the film serves as an origin story. It strips away the polished veneer of espionage to ask a brutal question: How do you turn a heartbroken college student into the CIA’s most lethal weapon? The film opens with a scene painfully familiar to the post-9/11 generation. Mitch Rapp (O’Brien) is on a beach in Ibiza, blissfully proposing marriage to his girlfriend, Katrina. The romantic fantasy shatters in an instant when terrorists launch a sudden attack, killing Katrina and hundreds of others. We flash forward eighteen months. American Assassin
American Assassin is a hard-R, throwback thriller that prioritizes knuckle-bone cracks over quips. It isn’t trying to reinvent the spy genre; it’s trying to remind audiences that before the globe-trotting missions and the patriotic speeches, there is simply pain. If you can forgive its clichés, you’ll find a lean, mean, and surprisingly emotional start to a potential franchise. In Mitch Rapp, Hollywood finally has a hero who doesn't just flirt with the darkness—he was forged in it. In the sprawling landscape of spy thrillers—where James
– For fans of Zero Dark Thirty and The Bourne Identity . It strips away the polished veneer of espionage