Metacritic Film

Assassination Tango

Starring Robert Duvall, Rubén Blades, Kathy Baker, Luciana Pedraza, Julio Oscar Mechoso, James Keane, Frank Gio, and Katherine Micheaux Miller

MPAA RATING: R for language and some violence

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corporation / United Artists
Suspense/Thriller
114 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters March 28, 2003

From acclaimed actor, writer, and director Robert Duvall comes Assassination Tango, a complex thriller, fascinating character study, and provocative look at the intoxicating world of Argentine tango. (United Artists)

WRITTEN BY
Robert Duvall

DIRECTED BY
Robert Duvall

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

51 / 100

Critic Reviews

91 Entertainment Weekly
Acting doesn't get more personal, or much greater.
80 Los Angeles Times
A wonderfully eccentric piece of filmmaking -- to demand it cohere to formula would be to miss the point.
75 Chicago Tribune
The movie is an odd mix of tones and styles, and the thriller plot is casually introduced, shoved aside and reintroduced. But, like all Duvall's work, Assassination Tango breathes with humanity.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
A wonderfully crafted, smartly acted study of a complex old coot.
75 ReelViews
Like "The Apostle," it exists off the beaten path and will not satisfy mainstream viewers. Yet, for those who do not demand a firm adherence to formulas and genre-driven expectations, this movie offers the chance to see something a little different.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
The movie is not quite successful. It is too secretive about its heart.
75 USA Today
There isn't any kind of dance you can compare to Robert Duvall's latest as an actor/director, though a slo-mo minuet might come close.
75 Christian Science Monitor
The willingness to blend professionals and nonprofessionals is Duvall's most interesting directorial trademark. Most commercial filmmakers hesitate to use this technique, but he doesn't see it as risky.
70 Chicago Reader
The thriller plot, while serviceable, registers as somewhat gratuitous, but the Buenos Aires locations are nicely used.
67 Portland Oregonian
Disconnected and even disoriented, Assassination Tango is an atmosphere in search of a reason.
63 Boston Globe
Since its maker is one of the least vain of Hollywood actors, it's one that is worthy of indulgence and respect.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Jennie Punter
Assassination Tango is about one commanding performance, fascinating to watch but not strong enough to redeem the muddled story line on which it hangs.
50 Rolling Stone
Duvall missteps in trying to mesh suspense with a love story that also involves the woman (Kathy Baker) John J. lives with and her young daughter (Katherine Micheaux Miller), on whom he disturbingly dotes.
50 The New York Times
If Mr. Duvall's finely textured performance is a testament to the power of good screen acting to lift a film above the mundane, the movie's many irritating tics demonstrate that he is much more at home in front of the camera than behind it.
50 San Francisco Chronicle
At heart, ridiculous -- ludicrous in its conception and silly in its spectacle.
50 New York Daily News
The story line is frustratingly haphazard, spreading out in several directions without ever focusing on one.
50 LA Weekly
The plot is slow and absurdly contrived, and if you're looking for a thriller, look elsewhere. If you love dance movies, Assassination Tango is worth a go.
50 Village Voice
Dramatically lopsided, Assassination Tango is a spontaneous life-slice in which John J. (standing in for Duvall) fumbles like a besotted granddad toward empathic connections. That it doesn't "work" is a measure of its sincerity.
50 The Onion (A.V. Club)
A supremely unhurried filmmaker, Duvall lets the story meander sleepily en route to a conclusion as ho-hum as everything preceding it.
50 Wall Street Journal
An odd little thriller that celebrates, in order of importance, Mr. Duvall, tango and his real-life significant other, Luciana Pedraza, who makes her attractive debut as a screen actress and, yes, tango dancer.
50 New York Post
The most interesting parts of the movie are the long, sexy and well-staged dance sequences, some of them involving a very nimble Duvall.
50 Film Threat
With its clumsy storytelling and lack of someone to filter Duvall's gushiness about the subject matter, Assassination Tango winds up shooting itself in its own dancing feet.
50 Miami Herald
Assassination Tango offers little heat. In dancing with death, Duvall stumbles a few too many times.
42 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
As a thriller it's dull and incomprehensible; as a romance it's empty and emotionally uninvolving; and as a character study it's strangely repulsive.
40 TV Guide
Duvall at his worst is still an accomplished performer; Pedraza is a modern-day Ali McGraw, lithe and beautiful but no kind of actress. For all her fluidity on the dance floor, she's a dead weight who drags the film down.
30 Variety
On just about every level -- as a thriller, as a romance and as a character study of a complicated man nearing the end of his professional life -- the film fails, and the meandering, sub-Cassavetes approach is likely to be a turnoff for all but the most indulgent viewers.
30 Dallas Observer
Assassination Tango is Duvall's fourth, yet it still feels like a first film; worse yet, it feels like a waste of an undeniably great actor.
30 Washington Post
Duvall is a great actor in the homestretch of a great career; it's hard to hold this trifle against him, and certainly nobody will.
30 The New Republic
A series of disconnected scenes alternating between two story lines, neither of which is cogent or concluded. The picture is tinged with the irrational.
30 Washington Post
Someone forgot to remind Duvall to write an ending.

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