Your regex runs into catastrophic backtracking because you have nested quantifiers (([...]+)*). Since your regex requires the string to end in / (which fails on your example), the regex engine tries all permutations of the string in the vain hope to find a matching combination. That's where it gets stuck.
To illustrate, let's assume "A*BCD" as the input to your regex and see what happens:
(\w+) matches A. Good.
\* matches *. Yay.
[\w\s]+ matches BCD. OK.
/ fails to match (no characters left to match). OK, let's back up one character.
/ fails to match D. Hum. Let's back up some more.
[\w\s]+ matches BC, and the repeated [\w\s]+ matches D.
/ fails to match. Back up.
/ fails to match D. Back up some more.
[\w\s]+ matches B, and the repeated [\w\s]+ matches CD.
/ fails to match. Back up again.
/ fails to match D. Back up some more, again.
- How about
[\w\s]+ matches B, repeated [\w\s]+ matches C, repeated [\w\s]+ matches D? No? Let's try something else.
[\w\s]+ matches BC. Let's stop here and see what happens.
- Darn,
/ still doesn't match D.
[\w\s]+ matches B.
- Still no luck.
/ doesn't match C.
- Hey, the whole group is optional
(...)*.
- Nope,
/ still doesn't match B.
- OK, I give up.
Now that was a string of just three letters. Yours had about 30, trying all permutations of which would keep your computer busy until the end of days.
I suppose what you're trying to do is to get the strings before/after *, in which case, use
pattern = r"(\w+)\*([\w\s]+)$"