MovieChat Forums > Reds (1981) Discussion > Saw this movie for the first time the ot...

Saw this movie for the first time the other night..wow


How did I manage to live for 42 years without seeing this film? As as history buff, I was floored...moving. This film immediately moved into my personal "top 5 favorite films of all time" after just one viewing...what a piece of movie magic...a masterpiece for the ages...

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Congratulations. I find it quite uplifting to see someone else discover this great film.

I first saw the movie back in the 1980's, and saw it several times over a period of years. It ran on the Movies! network recently and I caught it again, my first time re-watching it probably a couple of decades. I have to say though, it truly holds up over the years. Seems just as good to me as ever.

I don't think it's perfect. There are a few lengthy bits of dialogue that probably sounded good on the writer's page but seem a little pretentious when actually spoken. But it's a small flaw that I can accept in this otherwise magnificent movie.

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I am thrilled to read a post that doesn't begin "I don't get it" or "Highly overrated". To me this is one of the best movies ever made.


























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Can't say "I didn't get it", since WB made sure to belabor the story. One cannot "over-rate" the film's cinematography since it is wonderfully shot. But beyond that, Reds would've been better if it was about John Reed & his posse, OR about the Russians. But not a mashup of both. There's too much "we think we're so important" yakkity yak like in a Frank Capra movie FFS. Warren & Diane fans may enjoy Reds, but it bored me greatly.

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I concur. Lovely cinematography and recreation of the time.

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Just rented it today.Looking forward to it now.Never heard of it before but i read Peter Biskind STAR autobiography on Beatty and the behind the scene stories.Good too hear it all paid off in the end.








Drilling is not a science, it's an art

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[deleted]

Saw it in the theater in 1981. Wow!

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I love the movie, rewatching it right now. Thanks to TCM as always.

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If you enjoy this film and history, read John Reed's Ten Days That Shook the World. His enthusiasm, descriptions, it's a perfect time capsule.


Et ses mains ourdiraient les entrailles du prêtre
Au défaut d'un cordon pour étrangler les rois

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