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Synopsis
In 1977 Voyager II was launched into space, inviting all lifeforms in the universe to visit our planet. Get ready. Company's coming.
When an alien takes the form of a young widow's husband and asks her to drive him from Wisconsin to Arizona, the government tries to stop them.
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Director
Director
Producers
Producers
Writers
Writers
Casting
Casting
Editor
Editor
Cinematography
Cinematography
Assistant Directors
Asst. Directors
Additional Directing
Add. Directing
Executive Producer
Exec. Producer
Lighting
Lighting
Camera Operators
Camera Operators
Additional Photography
Add. Photography
Production Design
Production Design
Set Decoration
Set Decoration
Special Effects
Special Effects
Visual Effects
Visual Effects
Stunts
Stunts
Composer
Composer
Sound
Sound
Makeup
Makeup
Hairstyling
Hairstyling
Studios
Country
Language
Alternative Titles
John Carpenter's Starman, Starman. El hombre de las estrellas, Csillagember, L'Homme des étoiles, Starman - O Homem das Estrelas, Человек со звезды, Gwiezdny przybysz, 外星恋, スターマン/愛・宇宙はるかに, Στάρμαν, איש הכוכבים, 스타맨, Starman: O Homem das Estrelas, Звезден човек, Зоряний чоловік, 外星戀, Starman: El hombre de las estrellas, L'homme des étoiles, Čovjek sa zvijezda, ადამიანი ვარსკვლავიდან, Chuyện Tình Kinh Dị
Theatrical
13 Dec 1984
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Brazil12
14 Dec 1984
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USAPG
20 Apr 1985
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JapanG
10 May 1985
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AustraliaPG
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UKPG
30 May 1985
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Netherlands9
22 Jun 1985
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FranceTP
12 Jul 1985
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Denmark15
17 Jul 1985
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Switzerland12
09 Aug 1985
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Spain
05 Sep 1985
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Germany12
15 Nov 1985
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IrelandPG
01 Feb 1989
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Slovakia12
09 Mar 1989
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Hungary12
Physical
05 Mar 2002
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Netherlands9
16 Sep 2009
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Netherlands9
TV
28 Feb 1997
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Slovakia12
24 Jan 2003
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Netherlands9
Australia
Brazil
Denmark
France
Germany
Hungary
Ireland
Japan
Netherlands
Slovakia
Spain
Switzerland
UK
USA
More
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Starman means a lot to me, so I’ll get this out of the way first. I love Starman so much—the story, the cast, the pacing, the score, and Carpenter’s direction... especially since (at least on paper) he’s the last person I would ever suspect or choose to make this kind of picture. I don’t revisit this often and there’s a reason for that, which I’ll go into because I think it’s time to change that...
Jenny Hayden: Love is, um, it's when you care more for someone else than you do yourself.
In my late 20’s I lost someone. We were together for years until that fateful day, which happened to be my birthday. Just like that, she was gone. When…
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Hollywood in the 80s really fucked up by not putting Karen Allen in every movie
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So I’m here with mom, helping her out after the loss of her partner, going through photos and documents and organizing the memorial, and she tells me a friend of hers has recommended a movie that might help her process her grief. Something called Starman.
I go apeshit with excitement. What magical friend told my seventy year old mother to watch Starman? I tell mom how much I loved that movie when I was a kid. How it played on HBO over and over again in the era when HBO meant “Hey, Beastmaster’s on!” (My Golden Age of HBO)
I explained how the movie was important to me because it was a very personal, early example, possibly my earliest, of…
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85
"Tell me again how to say goodbye."
As a road movie and a cozy sci-fi picture, Starman is exceptional, but it shines as a film about grief and its lasting effects. John Carpenter allows for plenty of mood and intrigue, although the grandeur of the film is rooted in a gentleness and distinct lack of cynicism. We treasure the waking movements of a once-dead deer, and the first taste of apple pie. It mght also offer the greatest final shot of Carpenter's career. You're floating by the end of it.
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A gentle film about grief, loss, decency and human (or not-so-human) kindness. Something I kind of needed, to be honest. Jeff Bridges is terrific as a physical actor, and Karen Allen absolutely kills it in a wonderful, nuanced performance.
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What begins as John Carpenter’s quirky, feel-good take on E.T. slowly builds and evolves into what can only be described as an unstoppable freight train of grief and longing made beautiful and uplifting by the sheer heart of Karen Allen and Jeff Bridges, a train riding headlong toward an ending that hits like a brick wall of transcendental emotion. One of those rare experiences where I just sitting there motionless, letting the entire credits roll through with that unfuckingbelievably gorgeous, ominous, haunting score echoing through my mind, thinking of those whom I love and cherish, having spiritual conversations with those I’ve lost, and pondering my place in this universe and the next.
Yeah, I Cry. So What? Fuck Off.
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"Shall I tell you what I find beautiful about you?"
Carpenter's BALL OF FIRE.
(It's also THE TERMINATOR but nice -- released two months apart)
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A very strange and sudden burst of pop commercial sweetness for Carpenter, presumably a response to the unjust failure of The Thing but one that proved no less artistically fruitful for him as he gets to take elements from old-fashioned Hollywood films he loves (romantic comedies, road movies, westerns, etc) and put a tender, grandiose post-Spielberg alien contact science-fiction spin on them. Bridges is obviously doing some spectacular proto-Dougie Jones physical acting and mugging as the alien wearing the widow's hot dead husband as a skinsuit (all the way to an Oscar nomination, no less) but Allen has the more challenging and rewarding task of watching this absurd premise with wide-eyed terror and a gentle, broken heart that slowly warms…
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'Starman' is a revenant story, a ghost story, a story born out of grief and loss, and the reintegration of what was lost back into a life made new and strange. It is a story about Stockholm Syndrome pre-loaded. 'Starman' is a noir posing as a romance posing as a sci-fi film. It is the story of the outlaw on the lam from the authorities who hides in the home of the grieving widow and takes her on the road with him in her car to safety (across the county/state/country/planetary line). In this story, the grieving widow tends to (righfully) fear the (misunderstood) outlaw who generally points a gun at her after she points a gun at him until they…
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possibly my favourite carpenter to date, exceptionally profound and heartbreaking, it's the type of film that understands what it means to be human, the beauty in the strength, the variety, the connections and passions, the idiosyncrasies that make each of us unique. but mostly it understands the power of love, how seeing the face of the man you loved in person again, not just in a clip or in a photo can make the pain of the loss fade just a little bit. how as he develops as a person, he gains not just disconnected and apathetic knowledge about our species but the passion and warmth and humanity that is present throughout the best of us. but it's about how…
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Carpenter is biting Spielberg really hard here, and it's the damndest thing that it still feels so sincere. Was this a weird Salieri and Mozart rivalry playing out after Spielberg's friendly E.T. became an international sensation and Carpenter's The Thing tanked? Whatever his intentions, when Carpenter has Karen Allen give "the Spielberg face" while watching alien Jeff Bridges resurrect a deer, I melt and evaporate away. Carpenter is so different than the rest of his generation in how he assimilates existing works. It's not tribute or pastiche, nor an attempt to deconstruct or recontextualize or play any post-modern games with classic Hollywood material. He just remakes it as his own. Sincerely, without a hint of irony, and in Allen and…
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John Carpenter's romantic version of E.T.: The Extraterrestrial is weird, eerie yet very touching. It blows my fucking mind that Karen Allen never pursued leading actress/movie star status because she's absolutely magnetic in this. she's IN-CRED-I-BLE! Bridges is operating on all cylinders here as well, with his bird-like mannerisms and otherworldly behaviour. I absolutely love that he was Oscar nominated for this and i find it incredibly sad that performances like this don't really get nominated anymore. Like McAvoy in Split, Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler and Franco in Spring Breakers, there's not enough recognition from the Academy for these dedicated and gonzo performances these days. Starman is a great movie but major warning for that "baby ---> man" transformation sequence, it's fucking nightmare fuel.
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