Movie Review: In David Fincher’s ‘The Killer,’ an Assassin Hides in Plain Sight 

This image released by Netflix shows Michael Fassbender as an assassin in a scene from "The Killer." (Netflix via AP)
This image released by Netflix shows Michael Fassbender as an assassin in a scene from "The Killer." (Netflix via AP)
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Movie Review: In David Fincher’s ‘The Killer,’ an Assassin Hides in Plain Sight 

This image released by Netflix shows Michael Fassbender as an assassin in a scene from "The Killer." (Netflix via AP)
This image released by Netflix shows Michael Fassbender as an assassin in a scene from "The Killer." (Netflix via AP)

It’s a noir staple to open with a bit of narration, but once the nameless hit-man protagonist of David Fincher’s “The Killer” starts gabbing, he doesn’t stop.

As Fincher’s assassin (Michael Fassbender) awaits his target from a high, unfinished floor in a Paris building that looks out on the home of his mark, his inner monologue runs with a smooth, affectless monotone. His musings are a mix of professional tips (“Anticipate, don’t improvise”), nihilistic existential observations (“Most people refuse to believe that the great beyond is anything more than a cold, infinite void”) and sincere self-reflections (“I’m not exceptional, I’m just apart”).

That last line is the most telling one. “The Killer” is a terse, minimalist thriller in the cool, cold-hearted tradition of Jean Pierre Melville’s “Le Samouraï.” But while its methodical and solitary assassin acts and moves like cunning killers we’ve seen before, he blends into a modern background. He doesn’t wear a trench coat or fedora; he dresses like a German tourist, with a dopey bucket hat. He shops for tools on Amazon. He picks up supplies at Home Depot. His position in Paris is an unused WeWork space.

In “The Killer,” an agent of death is hiding in plain sight. He’s an assassin for our homogeneous, corporate world operating in the same spaces we all do. He eats McDonalds. He drives a white Avis rental van that’s the exact same as a dozen others in the rental car parking lot. Sameness is his superpower.

That also means that his nihilism is ours, too. “The Killer,” which begins streaming Friday on Netflix, is a thriller where pointlessness isn’t just lurking in the shadows. It’s everywhere, even in a movie plot that grows increasingly resistant to offering the usual genre satisfactions. Fassbender’s hitman, a background actor supreme, is a lethal manifestation of our soulless environment.

In that opening scene, he boasts of having a batting average (1.000, he brags) “better than Ted Williams.” Yet the job goes badly. In the ensuing turmoil, he races to erase his footsteps but not before a dissatisfied client has his girlfriend (Sophie Charlotte) nearly beaten to death at their clandestine Dominican Republic home.

He embarks on a location-hopping mission to eliminate those responsible, an odd twist for an assassin who, at length, preaches disaffection. Much doesn’t quite fit in “The Killer.” That he even has a live-in girlfriend — we barely see her and his thoughts never again turn back to her — seems unlikely. A revenge plot also doesn’t quite suit such a dispassionate protagonist. “Forbid empathy,” he says. And the movie, too, can be withholding of anything like emotion. The most distinct thing about Fassbender’s killer is that, like Patrick Bateman bopped to Huey Lewis and the News, he listens exclusively to the Smiths.

There’s much pleasure to be found in the unnamed hit man’s proficiency, just as there is in Fincher’s cool finesse. Here, the director — long known for his own meticulous rigor — is working with some regular collaborators, among them screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker (“Se7en”), composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross (“The Social Network”) and cinematographer Erik Messerschmidt (“Mank”). And there’s a kinetic thrill to seeing Fincher back in B-movie territory. (The script is based on a French graphic novel by Alexis “Matz” Nolent.)

Especially good is a nighttime sequence set in Florida that begins and ends with a bloodthirsty dog and in between features violent hand-to-hand combat that careens through glass and walls. The scene, like several others in “The Killer,” is a filmmaking feat of control. Fassbender, a natural at playing a loner (see “Shame”), is captivating throughout because he so possesses the movie’s chief traits of guile and a deadpan sense of humor.

Everything here is tantalizingly close to calculated perfection that it comes almost as a surprise how “The Killer” ends up missing its mark. You could call it a feature of the film’s existentialism, but “The Killer” increasingly is working, albeit proficiently, in a vacuum. Our hitman travels from place to place — always with fake passports with the names of TV characters like Felix Unger, Lou Grant or Sam Malone — but we don’t get anywhere deeper with him or anything else. Meaningless may be the point in “The Killer,” but at a certain point in this stylishly composed but empty vessel, you feel like pleading as another Fincher protagonist once did: What’s in the box?



France's Ozon Under the Gun with Big Screen Take on Camus Classic

 Director Francois Ozon and cast members Benjamin Voisin and Rebecca Marder pose on the red carpet for the screening of the movie "The Stranger" in competition, at the 82nd Venice Film Festival, in Venice, Italy, September 2, 2025. (Reuters)
Director Francois Ozon and cast members Benjamin Voisin and Rebecca Marder pose on the red carpet for the screening of the movie "The Stranger" in competition, at the 82nd Venice Film Festival, in Venice, Italy, September 2, 2025. (Reuters)
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France's Ozon Under the Gun with Big Screen Take on Camus Classic

 Director Francois Ozon and cast members Benjamin Voisin and Rebecca Marder pose on the red carpet for the screening of the movie "The Stranger" in competition, at the 82nd Venice Film Festival, in Venice, Italy, September 2, 2025. (Reuters)
Director Francois Ozon and cast members Benjamin Voisin and Rebecca Marder pose on the red carpet for the screening of the movie "The Stranger" in competition, at the 82nd Venice Film Festival, in Venice, Italy, September 2, 2025. (Reuters)

French director Francois Ozon has dared to do what so many other filmmakers have shied away from -- adapting one of French literature's most-read classics, Albert Camus's "The Stranger", for the big screen.

The "8 Women" director said this week he had rediscovered Camus's 1942 novel after first reading it in school like so many other French teenagers -- but not really understanding its deeper absurdist meaning.

"I was shocked reading it because the book was still so strong, so powerful, so mysterious and so I was excited," Ozon told journalists at the Venice Film Festival where "The Stranger" premiered on Tuesday.

"It was a big challenge because when I decided to make it, so many French people told me, 'It's my favorite book, I'm curious to see what you will do', so it was a big pressure."

Ozon said it was crucial to bring a more contemporary view to the novel, which takes place in 1930s Algeria under French colonialism, where Meursault, the Algerian-born French protagonist, kills an Arab man, who is never named in the book.

It was "impossible" for the Arab victim to remain nameless, said Ozon, who gives him a name in the film while fleshing out the character of his sister, whose honor the murdered man tried to defend.

"It was important to give a name to this man who is dead because during the trial (of Mersault), we never speak about him," he said.

He said that choice was "political, especially today where there is a real invisibility of the victims in Gaza, for example."

The only other well-known film version of "L'Etranger", whose stage adaptation is a fixture in French theaters, is a 1967 film by Italian maestro Luchino Visconti starring Marcello Mastroianni.

Ozon said he told Camus's daughter Catherine that a too-faithful rendering of the book -- as he believes Visconti did -- would not work.

"I said to her, 'We have to look at the story with the eyes of today.' It's impossible to follow the book like someone in 1942," he told AFP.

Filmed in Morocco and starring Benjamin Voisin as the detached Meursault -- who is sentenced to be beheaded for his crime -- Ozon's "The Stranger" is set under a blinding sun and shot in black and white.

"For me it was quite obvious to shoot in black and white, to show the sun... to have something very abstract, very pure and not to be disturbed by colors," Ozon said.

The film begins with archival footage of Algiers -- images of the wealthy white French elite in Algeria contrasted with those of Algerians -- that hint at the tensions simmering just under the surface of colonial rule.

"I wanted to be realistic about the situation in Algeria. I wanted to show both communities. I wanted to show that these two communities live side by side," he said.

The Hollywood Reporter said Camus's classic "works splendidly on the page but does not necessarily translate well to the screen."

Yet it said Ozon's new adaptation "gets many, many things right".

Variety called it "a superb portrait of disaffection".


NFL Commissioner Opens Door for Swift Super Bowl Performance

FILED - 13 November 2022, North Rhine-Westphalia, Duesseldorf: American singer Taylor Swift walks the red carpet at the MTV Europe Music Awards in front of the PSD Bank Dome. Photo: Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa
FILED - 13 November 2022, North Rhine-Westphalia, Duesseldorf: American singer Taylor Swift walks the red carpet at the MTV Europe Music Awards in front of the PSD Bank Dome. Photo: Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa
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NFL Commissioner Opens Door for Swift Super Bowl Performance

FILED - 13 November 2022, North Rhine-Westphalia, Duesseldorf: American singer Taylor Swift walks the red carpet at the MTV Europe Music Awards in front of the PSD Bank Dome. Photo: Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa
FILED - 13 November 2022, North Rhine-Westphalia, Duesseldorf: American singer Taylor Swift walks the red carpet at the MTV Europe Music Awards in front of the PSD Bank Dome. Photo: Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa

Pop icon Taylor Swift, recently engaged to Kansas City Chiefs star Travis Kelce, is a definite "maybe" to perform at the Super Bowl, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell told NBC's Today show on Wednesday.

"We would always love to have Taylor play," Goodell said. "She is a special, special talent and obviously she would be welcome any time."

Asked if that meant an appearance by Swift at the NFL's championship showpiece was in the works, Goodell hedged.

"I can't tell you anything about it," he said. "It's a maybe."

Goodell said he was "waiting on my friend Jay-Z" for word on the Super Bowl halftime show lineup. Jay-Z's Roc Nation company has produced the show in a partnership with the NFL since 2019.

Goodell's appearance on the Today show came on the eve of the NFL's season-opener between the Super Bowl champions the Philadelphia Eagles and the Dallas Cowboys.

The buildup to the season has been enlivened by the engagement announcement of Swift and Kelce -- whose romance has been a cultural crossover phenomenon thanks to the huge popularity of the NFL and Swift's legion of fans, AFP reported.

This season the Chiefs will be vying for a return to the Super Bowl after the Eagles denied them a third straight crown in February.

The Super Bowl will be held on February 8 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, home of the San Francisco 49ers.


Daniel Craig Leads Hollywood Stars to Toronto for 50th Film Fest

Netflix's popular 'Knives Out' whodunit franchise returns, with former 007 actor Daniel Craig back investigating the latest murder in 'Wake Up Dead Man'. Frederic J. Brown / AFP/File
Netflix's popular 'Knives Out' whodunit franchise returns, with former 007 actor Daniel Craig back investigating the latest murder in 'Wake Up Dead Man'. Frederic J. Brown / AFP/File
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Daniel Craig Leads Hollywood Stars to Toronto for 50th Film Fest

Netflix's popular 'Knives Out' whodunit franchise returns, with former 007 actor Daniel Craig back investigating the latest murder in 'Wake Up Dead Man'. Frederic J. Brown / AFP/File
Netflix's popular 'Knives Out' whodunit franchise returns, with former 007 actor Daniel Craig back investigating the latest murder in 'Wake Up Dead Man'. Frederic J. Brown / AFP/File

Hollywood stars arrived in Toronto Thursday for a celebratory 50th edition of North America's biggest film festival, with new movies from Daniel Craig, Sydney Sweeney and Matthew McConaughey among a packed lineup.

The Toronto International Film Festival dwarfs more famous rivals like Venice and Cannes for sheer scale, if not glitz and glamour, drawing an estimated 400,000 annual visitors to the Canadian metropolis.

Over 11 days of red-carpet galas, the "audience-first" fest showcases splashy crowd-pleasers in front of giant public audiences, while also serving as a key launchpad for Oscars campaigns.

This year, Netflix's popular "Knives Out" whodunit franchise returns, with former 007 actor Craig back investigating the latest murder in "Wake Up Dead Man" in a Saturday night world premiere, alongside Glenn Close, Mila Kunis and Josh O'Connor, AFP reported.

Josh Brolin plays an unnerving demagogue with a cult following in a film that "tackles current issues in a fun, locked-room, classical-plot way," said TIFF director of programming Robyn Citizen.

Sweeney aims to pivot from her recent jeans ad controversy to Academy Award contender with Friday's premiere of "Christy," a gritty, raw biopic of US female boxing pioneer Christy Martin.

In another harrowing true-life tale, launching Friday, McConaughey rescues schoolchildren from California wildfires in the emotionally searing action-thriller "The Lost Bus."

For the festival's 50th anniversary celebrations, stars Russell Crowe, Paul Mescal, Angelina Jolie and Anya Taylor-Joy will all hit the screenings and soirees.

TIFF "started out as festival of festivals, choosing the best work from around the world to show to Toronto audiences," Citizen said.

While it has increasingly prioritized discovering new filmmakers, "certainly our public audience is what distinguishes us as a big festival," she said.

French invasion

French directors are sure to bring a European flair.

Matt Dillon appears in Claire Denis' drama "The Fence," about a mysterious death on an African construction site, while Arnaud Desplechin launches love story "Two Pianos" starring Charlotte Rampling.

Alice Winocour directs Jolie for Paris fashion drama "Couture."

Romain Gavras's celebrity climate-change satire "Sacrifice" stars Taylor-Joy and Chris Evans as an eco-terrorist and a waning movie star, respectively.

Elsewhere, Crowe gives what organizers describe as a nuanced and eerily charismatic performance as Nazi Hermann Goering on trial in historical drama "Nuremberg," opposite fellow Oscar-winner Rami Malek.

"You don't expect to be disarmed by this person, who you know has done horrible things," said Citizen. "And then, through the course of the movie, you are."

Keanu Reeves plays an incompetent angel in Aziz Ansari's body-swapping farce "Good Fortune," while Channing Tatum portrays a real-life fugitive who lives clandestinely inside a toy store in "Roofman."

Brendan Fraser plays a lonely actor for hire at funerals and weddings in Tokyo-set "Rental Family."

The Bard and the King

Toronto follows hot on the heels of the small but influential US-based Telluride festival, and invites a selection of movies to make a bigger, second splash.

Among them, Mescal plays a young William Shakespeare in literary adaptation "Hamnet" from Oscar-winning director Chloe Zhao -- though the focus is squarely on the Bard's long-suffering wife Agnes, played by a "transcendent" Jessie Buckley, says Citizen.

The film earned rave reviews and plenty of Oscar buzz in Telluride.

Director Edward Berger, on a hot run after "All Quiet on the Western Front" and "Conclave," will present Colin Farrell as a down-on-his-luck gambler in "Ballad of a Small Player."

And fresh from Venice, director Guillermo del Toro brings his reimagining of "Frankenstein," while Dwayne Johnson will promote "The Smashing Machine," which has already drawn gushing predictions of a first Oscar nomination for the former pro wrestler known as "The Rock."

TIFF runs until September 14.