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(1981)

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8/10
A maverick magnum opus with a political theme -- rare in American movies
Chris Knipp3 October 2006
Warren Beatty's magnum opus Reds was presented as a revival film official selection of the New York Film Festival 2006 to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of its original appearance.

Reds's greatest virtue may be that it's grand, without being pompous, film-making. It's a film that takes some pride in being big and turbulent and unruly. It's important, but it's not tidy. It's in part certainly very much about ideology, but it avoids sharp, well-honed edges or large hard-etched "points." John Reed (played by the film's impresario, its sole producer, director, co-author, and star, Warren Beatty) was a man who happened to be able to write a first-hand account of the Bolshevik revolution, a long-time bestseller called Ten Days That Shook the World. At that time early in the twentieth century in America Reed arguably was a central figure, if only in the sense that during his time in Greenwich Village he managed to be (as he wanted to be) consistently at the center of things American political and cultural – when he wasn't in Russia (which was pretty central then too). Roger Ebert thinks the movie "never succeeds in convincing us that the feuds between the American socialist parties were much more than personality conflict and ego-bruisings" (that may depend on how hard we need to be convinced to begin with), but we do care about Reds (Ebert thinks) as "a traditional Hollywood romantic epic, a love story written on the canvas of history, as they used to say in the ads…it is the thinking man's Doctor Zhivago, told from the other side, of course." What about the choice of Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton as the lovers? Initially that may seem an odd and chemistry-poor decision. (I'm not sure I overcome that impression.) But arguably the film takes long enough with each of its main characters to make them into rounded people, complex enough to be attractive to others and to each other. Beatty uses the romance to hold the story together, and in doing so, he follows a conventional enough scheme. Reds stands out from other American mainstream products – and for all its maverick central force, it remains that – in its attempt to deal seriously with complex socio-political events during a turbulent period, and to approach them in an open-minded way. Beatty weaves other significant characters into the fabric of his drama, notably the leftist activist Emma Goldman (Maureen Stapleton, who got the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress) and the radical editor Max Eastman (Edward Herrmann), who are members of the same political-intellectual salon into which he brings Louise, as is the playwright Eugene O'Neill (Jack Nicholson).

Beatty's filmic recreation of John Reed is good in not being too serious or too idealized: in having a silly side Beatty's Reed perhaps has something of himself. Reed's lover Louise Bryant (Keaton), though originally a bourgeois lady from Portland, is similarly rounded; she's led by her relationship to Reed to develop other facets and strengths, and further enlarged as a personality through the way the film depicts her long affair with the alcoholic O'Neill, played by a toned-down but emotionally potent Nicholson. His discontent and negative energy are disturbing. Personalities anchor the film; but in some of the political debates and adventures one loses track and forgets why Reed is somewhere in Russia. He is at the center of things. But why he is where he is otherwise at certain moments is uncertain. In its ambition to keep juggling the many balls of major personalities and major political currents and historical events, Reds loses some of its narrative clarity and momentum over time. Complex political and historical currents are tracked, but the emotional trajectory loses its momentum. Nonetheless the film develops sweep in its length of three and a quarter hours. One walks out convinced that the material was complex enough to be worthy of such length, even if Beatty and his co-writer Trevor Griffiths could not whip it all into shape.

Whether it's all worth it on the stage of international cinema or not, this is a film of historical interest as a great independent project, begun logically in the Seventies, but completed right in the middle of Hollywood by an American intelligent and engaged enough to be star, director, writer, and producer, to raise $35 million to do it, and to make more or less the movie he wanted to make – right in the middle, so to speak, of a wave of conservatism and yuppiedom, in the early Eighties, when people were thinking about making money and making it, when Ronald Reagon was President of the United States. What more appropriate time to reexamine this achievement than in the middle of the second term of George Bush II? No doubt Beatty took on this story because he was interested in a time in America when it was rife with left-wing politics. But he is realistic, and he made a Hollywood movie, with big stars and romance. And that's what it is and remains. But one can't imagine anybody else making it, and that's what makes it worth revisiting. Warren Beatty is an admirable maverick in the clone-heavy world of Southern California media-moguldom. He's a real person. And this is his great performance as a person and as an artist. I first saw it with a group of real communists. "We're "reds," they said as we walked out. The theater staff looked impressed. I was bowled over by their pride. Not everyone watches this film as a "traditional Hollywood romantic epic." It would never have been made if that were all it was. Its grandeur and ambition are still moving and it must not be forgotten. For a more pungent treatment of a political and social theme starring Beatty, consider Hal Ashby's 1975 Shampoo.
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6/10
"Voting is the opium of the masses in this country. Every four years you deaden the pain."
moonspinner555 January 2017
A personal triumph for co-writer-producer-director-star Warren Beatty, who won the Oscar for his direction and gives a cautious, interesting performance as early-1900s American journalist John Reed, who shared a tumultuous courtship and marriage to Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton), a socialite and self-described writer. Reed, a radical political activist, became intrigued with the Communist teachings of Russia and, with Bryant, defended the Bolsheviks and opposed American intervention. Their acquaintances, a community of activists and artists, included anarchist Emma Goldman (masterfully played by Oscar-winner Maureen Stapleton) and playwright Eugene O'Neill (Jack Nicholson), who also had a passionate affair with Bryant (one "guest witness" speculates the Reed-Bryant marriage was actually a menage a trois that included O'Neill). Beatty's film is too long at 195 minutes--and is far better in its early stages, so momentum tends to decrease as the story progresses--however, its an actors' paradise and everyone brings something special to the fore. Keaton's chattering sometimes feels anachronistic ("yeah, yeah...uh-huh, uh-huh"), but she works the camera mercilessly with her big, enchanting smile (to knock us dead) and sad, questioning stare. Keaton manages to translate her innermost thoughts into expressions, and her penetrating scenes with Nicholson are quietly-charged and fascinating, although her romance with Beatty's Reed feels somewhat muffled. Beatty, content to let his co-stars shine, has chosen to remain reserved; some may applaud the performance as successfully subtle, yet he might have shown us a bit more of his own personality (it would help in a three-hour-plus movie such as this). The epic-sized "Reds" is a strange melodrama, at times, and an overachiever, but with surprising humor in the mix and the fire of determination at its core. **1/2 from ****
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8/10
Warren Beatty's Communist Baby
evanston_dad27 January 2017
"Reds" was Warren Beatty's ambitious passion project of 1981, the film that was supposed to clean up at the Oscars that year. The Academy ended up being fairly cool toward it, giving it only three awards out of 12 nominations, but it did finally recognize Beatty for his balls if nothing else by giving him the Best Director Oscar.

It's a good film that holds up well, even if it can be a bit dry at times. Beatty (Oscar nominated) is compelling as Communist revolutionary John Reed, who worked tirelessly to bring a Socialist revolution to America, but he's outshone in the acting department by Diane Keaton (also Oscar nominated), who gets a chance to shed her Woody Allen persona and prove what a good dramatic actress she could be. I could have done with less of the domestic squabbling that drags down the middle part of the film, and found the parts detailing the couple's experiences in Russia to be the most engrossing. The movie has a whopper of a running time (3 and a half hours) but even at the slower parts I never felt especially impatient with its length.

Maureen Stapleton won an Oscar for her fiery performance as Emma Goldman, and Vittorio Storaro won his second Oscar for cinematography (bookended by his work on "Apocalypse Now" and "The Last Emperor"). The film's other nomination were for Best Picture, Best Actor (Beatty), Best Supporting Actor (Jack Nicholson, never especially convincing as playwright Eugene O'Neill), Best Original Screenplay, Best Art Direction, Best Costume Design, Best Film Editing, and Best Sound. Alas, no nomination for Stephen Sondheim who provided the original score.

Incidentally, "Reds" became the 13th and last film to win Oscar nominations in all four acting categories until David O. Russell added back to back films number 14 and 15 with "Silver Linings Playbook" and "American Hustle." He's the only director to achieve that feat two years in a row.

Grade: A
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You Forget..
tedg16 November 2008
.

I am old enough to have lived through (probably) three different Americas. These are radically different worlds. It isn't just the mood, styles or state of the economy; its the adoption of a whole cosmology. Religions change under our feet. Family, love, belonging. These things are malleable yet largely beyond our control and we forget what "things were like." Memory always is constructed in terms of the present world.

Always.

So projects like this are necessary. We cannot know who we are unless we remind ourselves who we were.

The ordinary fold here is a romance, folded into grand political actions. Here they are a bit more cerebral than usual, but never getting past the notion of simple justice.

The more unusual and complex fold is that we see a story based on real events and people. Interspersed with that story are interviews of people who were personally involved in the story. These are remarkable, the way they are captured and the way they are edited to overlap with and annotate the story. But much more engaging is that these are enticing people, many with minds and phases that invite us into their faces — made warmer and more open by Beatty's camera. I compare this to the "Up" serious and the contrast is astonishing. True, here we want to be informed about the lives of others, and the "Up" goals pretend that the people randomly selected decades ago are remotely worth knowing.

But these folks are. We want more, simply based on their implicit invitation, and we carry ourselves into the narrative more forcefully, sort of like the characters do. This is folding doing its job and doing it well. They remember. I remember, and therefore am.

Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
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10/10
Every movie lover should see this film!
Princess-Alice26 June 2001
Warren Beatty's Reds follows only Gone With The Wind in my list of favourite films. This movie is both a love story, and a documentary. It educates the viewer not just on John Reed and his comrades, but on WWI era society in general.

This brilliant script, (which, like the writings of Jack Reed expresses his political feelings with the same poetic eloquence as his love poems to his wife Louise), is interspersed with commentary from Jack's contemporaries, who tell the history from their own unique perspectives. As the truth of what was going on in that community is such an illusive thing, the only way to tell this story accurately was to show the often completely opposite view points of what was going on as told by the people for whom this history is a first hand memory.

The acting in Reds is breath taking. Every member of this, extremely large, cast committed fully to their characters. One feels a true connection to even those characters who lurked in the background with only occasional lines. The most notable performances were by Beatty himself, (who's embodiment of Jack Reed was incredible), Diane Keaton, (who portrayed all the facets of Louise's personality with stunning realism), Jack Nickelson, (who delivers O'Neil's quick witted dialogue with an almost frightening cynicism), and Maureen Stapelton, (who conveyed an amazing strength as Emma Goldman). While these actors were the most prominently featured, all the actors delivered noteworthy performances as far as I'm concerned.

The political history covered in this movie is nothing if not vast. This is proof of Beatty's most impressive knowledge of history. This is a film I would recommend be shown in schools, as one the most in depth study of American communism on screen to date.

Reds is truly an inspiration, and should be seen by every actor, director, writer, liberal, film maker, history buff & movie lover! You will not be disappointed!
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10/10
Political insight!!
will_thehighlander3 September 2002
Reds, a succinct, controversial title totally typical of a major directorial outing by Warren Beatty. We always knew that Beatty was on the left, but a film glamourising a known Communist who defected to the USSR and is buried within the Kremlin. How the studios let him make it is a mystery to me, but I suppose that the name Warren Beatty was enough.

The film is long, and not for the light-hearted. It covers the broad canvas of early 20th Century American socialism. Concentrating first on Reeds efforts to form an American Socialist party, before moving to Russia; Beatty plays Jack Reed, the playboy writer, journalist and socialist. He opposes the war after initially supporting Wilson at the Democratic convention. After the Russian Revolution he becomes enamoured with the newly founded Soviet Union, as does his wife and sparring partner Louise Bryant, marvellously played by Diane Keaton who is excellent as the proto-feminist Bryant. Self-assured and very sexy, and her tragic love triangle between her, Reed and Jack Nicholson's character is brilliant. A number of other actors also crop up, including Paul Sorvino and M. Emmet Walsh.

One of the most important films of its generation, and every movie fan should make this compulsory viewing. Any aspiring left-wing intellectual should also make this compulsory viewing - there were Communists and Socialists in America, and one of them is even buried in the Kremlin. The USSR may be reviled these days, but you cannot deny the hope and utopianism that swept the world in those first few years after the 1917 Revolution. Beatty brings all this marvellously to the screen in Reds.
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10/10
A great companion piece to 1965's 'Doctor Zhivago'.
WalterFrith4 March 1999
Warren Beatty's 'Reds' is a terrific film that is not only great story telling in the conventional Hollywood way but also has an original style of narration told in many ways from the point of view of witnesses to the real story who lived during the days the film is centred around.

The film is especially significant to view since the iron curtain in Russia has come down and 'Reds' is a movie that never looks dated and stresses the fact that morals at the early part of the 20th century were about the same as they are now. It's just that no one discussed it back then and it emphasizes that times change but people don't.

With top notch performances from the entire cast, it is one of the few films to be nominated for an Oscar in all four acting categories and was victorious in the Best Supporting Actress category for Maureen Stapleton although the film's best performance comes from Diane Keaton who should have won her second Oscar.

To date, Beatty is the only film maker to be Oscar nominated for Best Director, Actor, Screenwriter and Producer twice for the same film. The other time was for 1978's 'Heaven Can Wait'.
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6/10
Beatty swimming against the tide
Prismark101 August 2015
British playwright Trevor Griffiths who co-wrote Reds was asked by a journalist in 1990 who he hated? His answer was anyone considering voting for the British Conservative Party in the next election. No doubting of his socialist convictions.

However what about Lothario Warren Beatty? This actor/writer/director/producer was better known for his sexual conquests than leftist politics although he did take time out to campaign for George McGovern for the 1972 Presidential Elections.

However Beatty is regarded as a typical liberal Hollywood millionaire. Griffiths is not and maybe it is him who gives the film a political centre. I can certainly see in scenes where there are endless arguments between various factions of the left and the cod bureaucracy that it is Griffiths would have had first hand knowledge with his involvement in left wing politics of 1970s Britain. Goodness knows I encountered it in the 1980s.

Reds was a long held labour of love for him and this film bagged him a Best Director Oscar. You need a strong constitution to watch Reds, it clocks in at 194 minutes and although it is an epic, frankly David Lean probably did not lose any sleep over this movie and that his own epics might get downgraded and Richard Attenborough would go on to show a year later what a real epic should look like.

Reds covers the life of journalist John Reed (Warren Beatty) and his relationship with socialite Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton) from their first meeting, their involvement with the American left movement to Reed's final days in post revolutionary Russia when he is gravely ill and after he became famous for writing the best known account of the Russian Revolution. Bryant was married to someone else when they first met and afterwards has a complex relationship with playwright Eugene O'Neill (Jack Nicholson) the only (cynical) character who sees through the fog of romantic socialism the others are so enamoured with.

To give the movie authenticity the film is interspersed with interviews from surviving witnesses who knew the people involved or were around the time period. This lends the film a documentary setting and for the time was an unusual narrative device. Something that was parodied later by Woody Allen in Zelig, a former lover of Keaton before Beatty became involved with her.

The problem with the film is it's trying to do too much. It is a tragedy, it is a romance, a globe-trotting political adventure, a growing disillusionment of the Russian revolution and the efforts to export the revolutionary ideals to the USA. Beatty has bit off more than he could chew here. Actors flit in and out without establishing much of a presence such as Gene Hackman.

Beatty should had jettisoned some of the story strands and unleashed a tighter film. Of course we later realised that the aftermath of Russian Revolution did not install a socialist utopia and you feel the film tries to but does not always honestly address this.

This film was released in the year when Ronald Reagan became President and America entered an economic shift to the right with policies I daresay laid the foundations of the financial meltdown of 2008. It's a radical but flawed film which you do not expect to be made by a major film corporation.
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10/10
Great piece of political discussion and drama
Quinoa198427 June 2000
Warren Beatty makes himself the only director to get Oscar nominations in Best Producer (picture), director, actor and writer twice (Heaven Can Wait is the other one), and he won his only Oscar (besides his honorary Thalberg award in 2000) for direction here. And it is well deserved. Mainly because this is the best film about communism and other political issues ever made.

Here, Beatty portrays journalist and idealist John Reed to maximum potential. He also comes of great with Diane Keaton as his love. Long, yet immensly entertaining and interesting, which was one of the few political films (besides maybe South Park) that got me thinking about communism. By the way, this film also won best conematography (Vittoro Storatto) and Best Supporting Actress (Maureen Stapleton as Emma Goldman), though I think it should've also won Oscars for Nicholson and Beatty. One of the better films (top 20) of the decade. A+
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7/10
DVD Brings New Life to Beatty's Big, Bold and Sometimes Didactic Take on the Early Communist Movement
EUyeshima21 November 2006
Even at its epic length of 195 minutes, Warren Beatty's quadruple hat trick as producer, director, co-screenwriter (with Trevor Griffiths) and star of this 1981 historical drama feels surprisingly intimate despite periodic efforts at David Lean-style grandiosity. Finally on DVD in a pristine print transfer, it's hard to believe it's been a quarter century since I've seen this movie, yet it still casts an intriguing spell probably because Beatty seems so enraptured by the turbulent story of John Reed, the American journalist-turned-Communist activist who provided a vital and controversial first-hand account of the Russian Revolution of 1917, "Ten Days That Shook the World".

The film itself covers the last five years of the young writer's life (he was only 32 when he died), and Beatty smartly uses talking heads by way of 31 surviving eyewitnesses of the period as a means to explain the context of the story being told. Covering the full political spectrum from left to right, none are identified outright, but a few are quite famous like writer Henry Miller, journalist Adela Rogers St. John and comedian George Jessel. This approach allows the core of the movie to be the love story between Reed and his wife Louise Bryant, a fellow writer who became his companion on his first trip to Russia. Theirs is a tempestuous relationship driven by their increasing politicization and complicated by adultery and conflicting priorities. They socialize in an elite circle, which includes socialist writer Max Eastman, political anarchist Emma Goldman and playwright Eugene O' Neill, with whom Bryant has a passionate affair.

Divided into two parts (and consequently separated into two discs for the DVD release), the first part focuses on Reed and Bryant's involvement with political and labor disputes stateside and their fits-and-starts courtship, climaxing with their trip to Russia during the revolution. The second half shows them inspired by their experiences in Russia with Reed trying to lead the Communist party back in the U.S. but getting bogged down by bureaucracy in both countries. It all ends in an extravagant series of Zhivago-like sequences that crank up the romance quotient of the entire venture. Except for the occasional lapses into Hollywood formula, this is intelligent film-making if rather dense, and the politics become especially cumbersome in the second half with the actors resorting to speechifying.

Beatty is as good as he's ever been as Reed, though his innately elliptical nature sometimes undermines the open idealism of the character he's portraying. With her self-effacing Annie Hall mannerisms held in check, Diane Keaton fulfills the comparatively more difficult role as the mercurial Bryant since she initially comes across as an embittered dilettante and then evolves in a somewhat disjointed manner to become the supportive wife. Both are so internally motivated as actors that they come across as a bit too contemporary and human-sized for such a romantic epic. Better is Jack Nicholson who threatens to steal the film as the cynically anguished O'Neill, especially in a hostile, painfully honest confrontation scene with Keaton. As Goldman, Maureen Stapleton transcends the dogma of her obsessive character with an undercurrent of humanity. Gene Hackman, Edward Herrmann, Paul Sorvino and writer Jerzy Kosinski are solid in smaller roles.

Not too surprisingly, the technical aspects are impressive from Vittorio Storaro's cinematography, which ranges from the sepia tones of the early scenes to the bold colors used during the revolution montage, to Stephen Sondheim's original music score, which matches well with the period music used, to Richard Sylbert's production design. The 2006 DVD comes with just two extras - a trailer made for the DVD on the first disc, and an enlightening documentary in seven parts on the second disc, "Witness to Reds" by Laurent Bouzereau, which runs over an hour. Despite his open reservations about providing commentary on the film, Beatty is interviewed extensively, and other surviving key cast and crew members are included as well, including a surprisingly open Nicholson. Keaton unfortunately chose not to participate. Regardless, it's essential viewing if you want a greater context for the film from political history to actual production.
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10/10
One of the treasures of this film are the many "witnesses"
steiner-sam24 January 2022
It's set in various parts of the world from 1916 to 1920. It is a romance about the relationship of radical journalist John Reed and Louise Bryant, a feminist and a journalist. It's set against the radical politics of the day in which both Reed and Bryant were deeply involved. It's 3.25 hours in length.

John "Jack" Reed (Warren Beatty) is already a seasoned journalist with socialist leanings when he meets Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton) in his hometown of Portland, Oregon. She is an unfulfilled writer and artist married to a dentist. After meeting Reed, she follows him to Greenwich Village in New York City, trying to launch a writing career. However, Reed's apartment is a socialist meeting place, and Reed continues to move further and further leftward in his politics.

Reed and Bryant escape to the coast of Massachusetts, where many of their New York friends visit, including Eugene O'Neill (Jack Nicholson), with whom Bryant has an affair while Reed is away. Finally, however, Reed and Bryant marry and move to the northern suburbs of New York City. Unhappiness returns, however, and Bryant leaves for Europe to write, feeling she needs distance from Reed. In 1917 Reed follows her and persuades her to come along to Petrograd, Russia, where the Kerensky government seems to be in trouble, and the Bolshevists are in ascendance. They are present for the October Revolution, and both experience great satisfaction in their journalistic efforts, and Reeds becomes a convinced Bolshevist.

When they return to the U. S., Reed becomes very engaged in forming Communist parties and ultimately returns to the USSR for an International Congress. While there, he gets into increased conflict with Grigory Zinoviev (Jerzy Kosinski), a leader close to Lenin (Roger Sloman). Eventually, Bryant follows Reed to Russia, where he dies of typhus in 1920.

One of the treasures of this film are the many "witnesses" who comment from time to time. These are people who knew John Reed and Louise Bryant and are commented on what they remember about the couple 60 years later. It's a fascinating technique that is very well integrated. The storyline for me was gripping from end to end, partly because each time I've seen the film, I've felt a strong emotional identification with John Reed, including his passion and nascent delusion towards the end.

As most "based on" films do, the film takes liberties with the facts. Their relationship was not as fraught as depicted. Reed did not meet Bryant in France. Reed did not have serious health issues in Russia until Bryant reached him there. He knew where she was coming to Russia while he was in Baku, and while dramatic events took place in the last months, they did not approach what is depicted in the film. But the story is excellent as shown, and I'm a sucker for romance.
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7/10
Pretty Good Movie
michael_the_nermal21 June 2006
Some spoilers ahead.

Warren Beatty scored big with this gem of a film. This movie is a great retelling of the life of American communist John Reed and his girlfriend, played respectively by Beatty and Diane Keaton. The love story between the two seems a little forced and uninteresting, and that is why I rated this movie a seven instead of an eight. It is also a very long movie, and probably will take most people two days to watch. For those with a passion for obscure history, especially that relating to American socialism, this movie is a must-see. Beatty plays Reed credibly, and he also wonderfully recreates the world of leftist bohemians during the late 1910s and early 1920s. Maureen Stapleton deservedly won that Oscar for her portrayal of anarchist Emma Goldman. Her dialogue with Reed about the failures of the new Soviet Union must be seen to be believed. This film is somewhat of a tragedy, in part because we see the dissolution of the socialist dream that Reed had hoped for. We also see the difficulties is maintaining a romantic relationship while also trying to work as a journalist touting the socialist cause. All in all, this is good stuff.

Another great feature of the movie are the brief interludes featuring testimony from real socialists from the era portrayed in the movie. These people were well into their eighties and nineties when they were filmed, but their minds were still full of vivid memories, and their commentary adds a real life human dimension to this movie.
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2/10
Dishonest Performances, Lousy History
Dan1863Sickles30 July 2020
People seem to think this is a left-wing movie, so if you hate it you must be some kind of right-wing maniac. I see myself as fairly progressive, yet I hated this movie. I hated the phony performances, the lousy history, and especially the empty speeches that go on and on and say nothing at all.

Warren Beatty is more interested in making John Reed pure and noble than in making him real. He's got this stupid smirk on his face in practically every scene like, "dig how superior I am to the greedy masses I want to save."

When you watch CASABLANCA or ON THE WATERFRONT, there's a lot of preaching and there's a message you have to listen to. But those movies are classics and there's a reason why. Rick in Casablanca and Terry in Waterfront are tough guys who look out for number one. They *are* the American working man. And when they learn the hard way you learn with them. You love the women they love and you want to fight the enemies they hate. By the time the movie is over, they're not alone anymore and neither are you.

REDS is precisely the opposite. The way Warren Beatty plays John Reed, he's not exactly like you. He's better than you. He gets the girl you can't have and he puts her on the shelf for half the movie! He lectures the American working man on greed, on selfishness, when he's the most selfish character in the film. He cries over little starving peasant boys in Russia while black Americans are being lynched all over the south. He sneers at America for fighting a war to make the world safe for democracy, but he doesn't care whether black Americans can vote or not. He's a phony even on his own terms, yet we're supposed to see him as half Victor Laszlo and half Joan of Arc. And the fact that the masses reject this man and his vision is only supposed to prove that he was too pure for them. Too pure for us!
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Great movie
green4tom16 June 2004
This movie was great, and I hope it comes out on DVD real soon. Beatty became Reed in more than one sense--not only did he act the part, but he directed the movie in a way reminiscent of the kind of "new journalistic" style that Reed and his fellow MASSES writers pioneered, mixing the drama with interviews of people who knew JR, Louise, etc.

The film also sort of puts forward the question, "What if, instead of running back to Russia (to die of kidney failure and mistreatment by the CP), Jack Reed had stayed in this country to build the CP? Would it have turned out to become Stalinist?" According to Howe and Coser, who wrote a good book on THE AMERICAN COMMUNIST PARTY, much like Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht in Germany, Reed was the ONLY leader who was independent, who had some real backbone.

The best part of the movie is when Emma Goldmann, played by Maureen Stapleton, tells Jack that "it doesn't work" (i.e. statist, bureaucratic socialism that the Bolsheviks were instituting as a grossly mistaken response to the economic crisis and Allied invasion of Russia after the Revolution). And then his rebellion against the lying propaganda of Zinoviev. Kind of hits me right now that Jerzy Kosinski should play Zinoviev--didn't he commit suicide when he was exposed as a plagiarist? Where is the line between art and reality, politics and life?

Of course I loved the romantic reality between Beatty, Bryant, and Nicholson (Reed, Bryant, and Eugene O'Neill). And the cynicism that Reed expresses about the Democrats and Wilson is certainly apropos today.
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9/10
25 Years Later, 'Reds' Still Brings History to Life
Larry_L_Peel23 July 2007
In the midst of the Cold War, Warren Beatty set out to bring history to life with an epic tale of the Russian Revolution and the rise of the American Left. After an introduction at this year's 44th New York Film Festival, Beatty's Oscar gold shines through on REDS Silver Anniversary DVD.

Reagan just took the White House, the hostages had just come home from Iran, the Berlin Wall still stood strong, and America had grown tired of the shallow and often gloomy films of the 1970's. The stage was set for a subtle political epic that would pave the way for such films as Gandhi and Chariots of Fire (which beat REDS for the title Best Picture). REDS took the critics by storm and garnered 3 Academy Awards in the process. Twenty-five years later, the film still carries a powerful message of the determination of love, and the dangers of fear.

With the Cold War still raging full strength and America still nursing wounds from the Vietnam Era, Warren Beatty's epic historical drama of the rise of Communism in America may have been a gamble, but with a stellar cast and riding the wave of the success of Heaven Can Wait, the Academy Award winning director brought his dream to life. Beatty co-wrote, produced, directed and starred in the film that not only showcases his political beliefs that the American public unreasonably feared Communism, but also gave voice to his vision and talent as both actor and director. The film garnered more Academy Award nominations – twelve – than any other film in the previous 15 years.

Based on actual events, the film tells the story of John Reed (Beatty), American Communist, activist and journalist, who falls for feminist/writer Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton). Their love affair grows as the world around them unravels in the midst of World War I, the Russian Revolution and Congressional inquests into the American Communist Party. Bryant's love is put to the test when Reed is arrested trying to return to the United States from Russia and she embarks on a treacherous journey to be reunited with him. As the only American entombed in the Kremlin, Reeds impact on both the American Communist movement and the Russian Revolution itself are chronicled in the film. The film deftly utilizes personal interviews with those who actually knew Reed and Bryant, along with a steady pace of drama and romance to completely immerse its audience in the story. Beatty utilizes historic re-enactments and poignant deliveries from his stars – including Maureen Stapleton, who won Best Supporting Actress gold for her role – to create a bond with the characters and hope for their fates.
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8/10
Epic historical backdrop
gbill-7487729 June 2023
"The Soviets have no more local autonomy. The central state has all the power. All the power is in the hands of a few men and they are destroying the revolution. They are destroying any hope of real communism in Russia. They're putting people like me in jail!" ... "What did you think this thing was gonna be? A revolution by consensus where we all sat down and agreed over a cup of coffee? ... Did you really think things would work right away? Did you really expect social transformation to be anything other than a murderous process?"

For one thing, this is a remarkable film for having been made in America during the conservative Reagan years, right around the time of the "evil empire" rhetoric and Cold War arms race escalation. At the same time, and despite conservative opposition to the film for its various sympathies, I thought its crucial political points were about disillusionment, the fact that communism when put into practice devolved into authoritarianism. For all his defense of the Soviet experiment, what a great moment it was when Beatty's character says "When you purge dissent, you kill the revolution! Revolution is dissent!" In a nice parallel, there was also a disillusionment of sorts in the love story, which went from a couple professing a belief in "free love" to the natural jealousies that come when it was put into practice.

This is a sprawling epic, probably a little too long at 195 minutes, one you might say the main subjects, Jack Reed (Warren Beatty) and Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton) were unworthy of, especially when they're almost upstaged by the brilliant Emma Goldman (Maureen Stapleton). To me, however, their personal story was fascinating, and they were a perfect lens through which to view this little segment of history, roughly 1915-20, in a nuanced way. It's a collision of so many things, anti-war sentiment, worker's rights, emerging feminism, and of course, the Russian Revolution. Lots of great speeches here, and a touching human story amidst the grand historical backdrop.
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6/10
If it wasnt for the cast, this film would be almost completely unwatchable
Idocamstuf15 August 2003
Sometimes star power can make or break a movie, that's the case with "Reds", its a rather dull story about a women who gets involved with communism. If this film was acted by unknowns, it would be a turkey with no redeeming values whatsoever. But the cast makes it worth seeing, if you have time to waste. I can give it a 6/10.
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8/10
My brief review of the film
sol-24 April 2005
A competently directed historical piece, the film improves as it progresses and the concentration shifts from the romance at hand to politics, yet it still is not what I would call a very engaging experience. It has a large array of characters, and many of them are not fully developed; the ones that are felt a bit bland to me, and I could not find many sparks between Keaton and Beatty's characters. There are also quite a few subplots, which makes the whole film rather hard to grasp, since so many things are going on, and so few seem properly explained. Perhaps though I am being a bit harsh on the film. The quality of acting is quite reasonable, and so is the technical side of the production. The film has some good ideas and some good elements, and perhaps it is worth seeing for those, but I would be cautious as to whether one can sit through over three hours of it in one go.
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6/10
Reds color has faded.
st-shot27 September 2010
Warren Beatty's vainglorious attempt to join epic filmmakers with this plodding historical romantic melodrama back dropped by the Russian Revolution is filled with fragments from Lawrence, Zhivago and some Bonnie and Clyde but like former mentor Arthur Penn he directs with a leaden hand as Reds lumbers along repeating itself for over three and a half hours. There is decent two hour film* in Reds but the extra ninety minutes tacked on serves little purpose beyond Beatty the artist identifying with John Reed the swashbuckling newspaper man who marched to the tune of his own drum crusading for the masses.

American Journalist John Reed (Ten Days that Shook the World) is passionate about two things in life, Socialism and Louise Bryant his feminist paramour. Torn between maintaining domestic bliss and turning the world into a Socialist paradise Reed attempts to juggle the two and in spite of being betrayed by both at various times (Louise has an affair with Eugene O'Neill and Bolshevik big shot Zinoeiv distorts his translated words the principled Reed refuses to let either dream die.

With Vittorio Storaro (The Conformist, Godfather) lensing, Richard Sylbert (Chinatown, the Fortune) in charge of production design and Shirley Russell's (Women in Love) subdued (for her) costuming Reds has an excellent period look. The power of director Beatty's mise en scene remains inconsistent however as he dilutes the film's impact with an excessive amount of chaotic debates among party members and squabbles between the two stars along with a few kiss and make up silhouettes of the two humping. Moderation in all these areas would have clearly removed some of the film's lethargy but Beatty's attempts to balance a remarkable historical event with a romantic interest that has Beatty the actor's same stuttering seductive charm in play from a previous fantasy film (Heaven Can Wait) and a film based in Beverly Hills (Shampoo) on the face of it alone lacks gravitas. It's the same boyish love sick puppy with the silent pained expressions we get in the two confections but we're dealing with the real world in turmoil and a lot of time could be saved if they took Rick's Casablanca speech to heart.

As Louise Bryant Diane Keaton spends most of the film in a state of frustration and disappointment both personally and professionally and in the incapable hands of the limited Keaton it is one long suffering sulk to behold as Beatty peppers us with dozens of ambiguous reaction shots of her in awe and anger with the mercurial Reed. Jack Nicholson's O'Neill is laid back and so much more interesting than the red rousing Reed you almost wish the camera would follow him around for the rest of the film. Novelist Jerzy Kosinski as Zinoeiv is surprisingly effective and Maureen Stapleton brings dignity and radical rational to the role of Emma Goldman.

Beatty's most imaginative move is to intersperse the film with testimony from witnesses of the era and acquaintances of the two but here too he errs by not identifying them individually and most of the anecdotes do little to flesh Reed and Bryant out at all.

One could make the argument that given Beatty's status in Hollywood in 1980 this epic film about an audacious journalist who blazed his own path mirrored Beatty's trail blazing part in bringing about Hollywood's last golden age with Bonnie and Clyde. It's certainly one of the reasons why Reds fails as epic. David Lean may sympathize with Lawrence and Zhivago but he keeps his distance. Beatty's Reed is Beatty's alter ego and the camera seldom leaves his face except for Louise's wide eyed admiration of him and conflict over him. Instead of size scope and larger than life we get the socially conscious Bickersons, something that would translate just as well on a theater stage. At best Reds is very lean Lean.

* Actually Jaques Feyder's 1937 Knight without Armor with Robert Donat and Marlene Dietrich in similar period and setting is that film. Surpassing Reds in nearly every department and devoid of its heavy handed pretense it makes some sharp observations about the chaotic struggle between the Reds and the Whites with Feyder displaying a more imaginative command of composition and Dietrich a far more convincing Countess on the run than Keaton's pipsqueak feminist.
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10/10
Reds Is an Anti-Communist Love Story -- Part I
jeff_dm_lorton18 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This is a tremendous movie that people of all political stripes should see. Until I saw this movie, Warren Beatty has always come across to me as your basic Hollywood liberal -- elitist without reason and in possession of values at war with those of most of his countrymen. And given the subject matter of this biopic, I fully expected it to be a glorification of Reed's life. It's anything but, though Reed is the movie's protagonist.

What it is, by contrast, is primarily the love story between Reed and Bryant. Given the leftist ideas of free love, which the movie also explores, the very notion of a love story is anathema to the supposed political beliefs of the Bolsheviks and those in the American and European left. The notion of love and self-sacrifice were denigrated by the left as bourgeois concepts. Hammering my point home, O'Neill at one point even accuses Bryant of cynically pretending to be about free love to win a marriage proposal from Reed. Within the context of the movie, that's probably unfair. Bryant thought she was about free love until she met Reed. Reed thought he was about free love until he met Bryant and until Bryant gave herself to O'Neill.

What the moviegoer should conclude from all of this is is that the left-wing notion of free love is empirically unsustainable and bankrupt as an idea. At the end of the movie, just before Reed dies (or just before Bryant learns Reed dies), she drops a cup she was taking to get him some water, as he lay on his death bed. A small boy picks the cup up and hands it to Bryant. The boy, perhaps 4 years old, returns to his seat, smiling at Bryant. Earlier in the movie, when Reed was diagnosed with kidney disease, he asked his doctor if that would affect his ability to have children (the answer was "no"). The closing scene with the boy is meant to call that to mind. In other words, after all of his trials, Bryant sees the child, and the moviegoer gets the message -- Reed and Bryant have effectively wasted their lives. They've wasted their lives (more Reed than Bryant) striving for their beliefs, which in the end turn out to have been painfully naive. What they missed were multiple years in which they could have been together in bourgeois happiness. (The movie repeatedly shows Reed and Bryant's happiest moments as being precisely those where they were together, in America, living a middle class or lower middle class life -- making dinner, playing with their dog, or making love.) And what they missed because of Reed's misplaced revolutionary fervor was the opportunity to have children and raise a family together. In short, they missed the basic point of life, and only realized it too late.

As an aside, I didn't expect this from Beatty, one of Hollywood's most notorious womanizers. But I think what it shows is that he was a romantic at heart all along. And given that he's still married to Annette Benning, after lots of profound public expressions of love -- which at the time I discounted as so much Hollywood showboating -- I think Beatty just found the one he was searching for. The right has its lotharios, like the left, and it's easy to understand a handsome man with a strong libido chasing so many skirts. The point is that eventually Beatty did settle down. I think the denunciations of his by many of his former lovers is because they wanted to be "the one," but only late in his life did Ms. Benning get his heart.
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7/10
Idealism and Disillusionment in The Bolshevik Revolution
Eumenides_011 April 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Reds follows the lives of American journalist John 'Jack' Reed and his wife, Louise Bryant, amidst the background of the Bolshevik Revolution. It's an interesting, enjoyable epic with several good performances by Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, Jack Nicholson, Paul Sorvino, Jerzy Kosinski, and other good actors in cameo roles. The movie has been sold as a romantic epic, and indeed shows a good deal of the difficult, complex relationship between Jack and Louise.

But I think director Warren Beatty just used this as bait for the real interesting story of Reds, which is the way Jack becomes more and more involved in the Revolution to the point that he becomes one of the Party's members and an influential speaker.

The movie starts shortly before Louise meets Jack, in an interview, and immediately they feel an attraction for each other that leads her to abandon her husband and come live with Jack in New York. The first hour of the movie emphasizes their relationship mostly, especially the love affair between Louise and playwright Eugene O'Neill, and the effect Jack's work, which kept him away from her for long periods, had on their love.

It is when Jack invites Louise to travel with him to Russia to cover the Revolution, that the movie becomes fascinating and marks a turning point in his life as he stops being a man reporting news to being a man involved in History, in the creation of news.

Although it's clear that Beatty has love for the character he's playing, he nevertheless paints a disillusioned portrait of the Revolution and shows how quickly and easily it started going wrong. The hunger, the lack of fuel, the rise of oppression, are captured in this movie. And as a testament to his courage, he never allows Jack to have doubts or regrets. When the character Emma Goldman observes how the revolution has betrayed its own values, he makes a passionate speech about ends justifying means. Seldom do we witness such inflexibility and callousness in lead characters, not to mention one played by a star like Warren Beatty. But even though Jack remains faithful to the revolution, Beatty doesn't shy away from showing how he was used by it and gives the impression that Jack was involved in something that was too big for him.

In the acting department, this movie is flawless. Maureen Stapleton didn't impress me enough in her role of Emma Goldman, but Nicholson, Keaton and Beatty were all wonderful. Nicholson was very little in the movie, but the few minutes he was in were hypnotic. And Keaton showed just how easily she can transmit feelings with just her eyes and body language.

I'd also like to commend the work of director of photography Vittorio Storaro. I've been a fan of him for a while now. The images he captured in movies like The Conformist or The Spider's Stratagem have never left my mind due to their beauty. And his work in Reds was quite good too. In the first forty minutes his camera seemed sedate, but then he slowly starts showing that style that has made him one of the best DPs in the world: the way he captures colors, the composition of his shots, the symmetry in them. When the action changes to Russia, it becomes especially memorable.

The movie is not always engaging, sometimes it's dull. The pacing is uneven, and hardly helped by the intrusive moments with witnesses talking about the events in the movie. Sadly they're not identified and their relationship with the characters is never explained. It's an interesting, risky choice that I think didn't succeed. Otherwise, Reds is good movie to watch, a marvel of film-making that is also an interesting recreation of a historical episode that reshaped our world.
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9/10
Beatty pulls off the impossible
pmtelefon3 November 2020
Writer/director Warren Beatty and company pull off a pretty amazing achievement with "Reds". They somehow managed to make a compelling three plus hour movie about some very unlikable people. "Reds" is a beautiful looking, beautifully acted movie. The sets and costumes are also top-notch. I remember seeing "Reds" in the theater (Bay Terrace, Bayside, NY). I've seen it many times since. The movie in long but the journey is worth it. I don't watch "Reds" as much as I should mostly because of its length. But every time I finish watching "Reds", I'm glad I did.
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6/10
Producers of the world unite!
rmax30482325 April 2010
Warning: Spoilers
In his Academy Award acceptance speech, Warren Beatty plauded a capitalistic system that would permit the making of a movie like this -- about a rabble-rousing journalist who joined the Russian revolution and wound up buried in the Kremlin. He was right to do it. Imagine a Soviet movie about an heroic capitalist? John D. Rockefeller as iconoclastic humanist? (He was infected by altruism in old age.)

The story illustrates John Read's achievement of class consciousness. Karl Marx distinguished between what he called "false consciousness" and "class consciousness." In the former, you blame all your misfortunes on bad luck, personal flaws, a lousy upbringing, and so forth. In "class consciousness" you recognize that the problem is systemic, that you're humped because the class system is designed to keep you down at the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder. The path to improvement comes not through efforts to improve one's self but through collective power.

In the film, "The Grapes of Wrath", Tom Joad and Casey the Preacher achieve class consciousness. Ma Joad, with her speech about hunkering down and letting the rich destroy themselves, does not. Here, Warren Beatty as Jack Reed wavers back and forth between false consciousness and class consciousness. The choice is put to him bluntly by Jerzy Kozinski as a Red Russian leader -- what's more important, your love for your wife (Diane Keaton) or the fate of all the people of Russia?

Kozinski is one of many recognizable supporting players. I don't know why, but many of them have signed on for small roles in the way that European actors do. They don't mind taking tiny parts once in a while. They don't seem to be afraid that it will damage their standing on the A list. I won't list all of the established performers with small roles but they include people like Paul Sorvino and Gene Hackman. Good on them!

But only half of the movie is about the "liberation" of the Russian people. The other half, probably the major part, deals with the love affair between Louise Bryant (Keaton) and Beatty's character. In the early years of the 20th century there was a movement towards greater freedom. (Women didn't yet have the vote, for instance.) And there are many talky and somewhat dull arguments between Keaton and Beatty. She seems more committed to throwing off the shackles than he does.

The film is definitely not a propaganda piece along the lines of, say, "Mission to Moscow" or "North Star" -- the sort of thing that came out of Hollywood during the war years. And it's not an anti-communist tract either. It's unsparing in its depiction of the results of the revolution. The aftermath of the moderate Karensky government is thoroughly familiar to anyone who knows what happens AFTER a revolution. There's an internal split based on self-interest and a lot of shouting about ideological purity. A lot of blood is often spilled, which is shown in "Doctor Zhivago" but not here. Things fall apart. The center cannot hold -- because there IS no center, and eventually something resembling a dictatorship is established, if only to maintain order in the streets. Josef Stalin literally killed more Russians than the Nazis did.

I rather like "Reds" because it's a courageous movie in displaying so flagrantly the chaos that follows the deposing (and slaughter) of Czar Nicholas. The business about "liberation" is treated ironically most of the time, undercutting the seriousness of the theme.

I like it too because of Jack Nicholson's depiction of Eugene O'Neill as a depressed, alcoholic playwright, smothered in false consciousness, given to loving individuals rather than social classes.

At the same time, the movie sometimes drags. I think I understand why the love interest and the revolutionary motives are there, and why they're necessary, but I could have done with less of the former and a little more formal explication of the latter. There is so much shouting at so many crowded, smoky meetings that it's easy to get lost.

There are a multitude of inserts of older people talking about Reed and Bryant and the revolution and Greenwich Village after the turn of the century. Most of them weren't alive at the time, but Henry Miller is charming in his candor and cynicism.
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5/10
Tedious historical epic with some interesting elements
Wuchakk11 November 2017
RELEASED IN 1981 and written & directed by Warren Beatty, "Reds" stars Beatty as real-life radical American journalist and socialist, John "Jack" Reed, who becomes involved with the Russian revolution, and hopes to bring its spirit and idealism to America. In the meantime he romances "progressive" writer Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton), who also goes to Russia. Jack Nicholson plays the wrench in their romantic wheels, Eugene O'Neill. Maureen Stapleton & Gene Hackman are also on hand.

Throughout the movie there are interjections from aged people who actually knew John Reed, Louise Bryant and Eugene O'Neill. I found this an interesting touch.

The first hour and twenty minutes take place in the states during WWI, starting in Portland, Oregon, and then switching to the East Coast when the couple decides to move there (New York City & Provincetown, Massachusetts). Only then do events start to perk-up when they head to France and then Russia. Until that point there's a lot of relationship shenanigans between the three (Jack, Louise & Gene) and endless talk about communism, socialist ideals and workers' rights.

The tone of the drama is akin to a Robert Altman film; you can tell Beatty learned a thing or two from him with "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" (1971). The movie's certainly ambitious and well-acted. Those with interest in the period will find much to like here. Unfortunately, it's not all that compelling and it lacks the epic stature, nigh-surrealism and jaw-dropping cinematography of "Dr. Zhivago" (1965). Reed's a misguided character because his communistic ideals proved to be a nightmare for the Russian people. To the film's credit, this is effectively shown in the last act in a potent discussion between Reed and Emma (Stapleton) yet, even then, Reed didn't "get" it, which is typically the case with boneheaded libertines who insist on forcing their fatally flawed ideology on the rest of the populace.

While communism sounds good on paper, it just doesn't work in practice. It's a demotivating system that ensures that everyone's equally poor, except of course for the ruling state class, which essentially becomes communistic royalty. To all intents and purposes they are the reviled "bourgeoisie" and the common people are the "proletariat," both of which communism sought to eliminate in the first place, which makes communism hypocritical. Furthermore, communism leads to all kinds of suffering and corruption, like waiting in long lines or bribing doctors and sellers for services & merchandise, not to mention how the state itself becomes "god" and thus demands the 'worship' of the people. Sure, capitalism has its downside, but it's an all-around superior system, which is why people from communistic states flee to capitalistic countries and not vice versa.

The temperamental and non-traditional Louise Bryant has her points of interest, but ultimately she isn't a sympathetic character (for one thing, she's duplicitous). Not for a second do I believe that she bluntly said to Reed in the yard outside a lecture hall: "Jack, I want to see you with your pants down" (rolling my eyes).

THE MOVIE RUNS 195 minutes (3 hours, 15 minutes) and was shot in England, Finland, New York City, California, Spain and Sweden. ADDITIONAL WRITER: Trevor Griffiths.

GRADE: C
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A Monumental Achievement in Epic Film-Making
tfrizzell29 July 2000
"Reds" is a 200-minute epic masterpiece which deals with left-wing American journalist John Reed (Warren Beatty in an Oscar-nominated performance) and his coverage of the Russian Revolution of the 1910s. Beatty's passion is what carries this ambitious film, which could have easily been a multi-million dollar disaster. His Oscar-winning direction, screenplay, and overall performance carry the film as far as it can possibly go. The top-flight performances by Diane Keaton, Jack Nicholson (both Oscar-nominated), and Maureen Stapleton (Oscar-winning) all add great depth to the performance. Paul Sorvino, Edward Herrmann, and Gene Hackman also make lasting impressions in supporting roles. Overall a great achievement all the way around. 5 stars out of 5.
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