''Reds'' is a 1981 American epic film that was co-written, produced, directed by and starred
Warren Beatty. It centers on the life and career of
John Reed, the revolutionary
communist,
journalist, and writer who chronicled the
Russian Revolution in his book ''
Ten Days that Shook the World''. Beatty stars in the lead role alongside
Diane Keaton, as
Louise Bryant, and
Jack Nicholson as
Eugene O'Neill.
The supporting cast of the film includes Edward Herrmann, Jerzy Kosinski, Paul Sorvino, Maureen Stapleton, Gene Hackman, Ramon Bieri, Nicolas Coster and M. Emmet Walsh. The film also features, as "witnesses," interviews with the 98-year old radical educator and peace activist Scott Nearing (1883–1983), author Dorothy Frooks (1896–1997), reporter and author George Seldes (1890–1995), civil libertarian Roger Baldwin (1884–1981), and the American writer Henry Miller (1891–1980), among others.
Beatty was awarded the Academy Award for Best Director for the film. ''Reds'' was also nominated for Best Picture, but lost to ''Chariots of Fire''. Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton were nominated for Best Actor and Best Actress, but lost to Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn in ''On Golden Pond''.
In June 2008, the American Film Institute revealed its "Ten Top Ten" — the best ten films in ten "classic" American film genres – after polling over 1,500 people from the creative community. ''Reds'' was acknowledged as the ninth best film in the epic genre.
The film covers the life of John Reed and
Louise Bryant from their first meeting to Reed's final days in 1920 Russia. Interspersed throughout the narrative, several surviving "witnesses" from the time period give their recollections on Reed, Bryant, their colleagues and friends, and the era itself. A number of them have mixed views of Bryant and her relationship with Reed.
In 1912, married socialite Bryant encounters the radical journalist John "Jack" Reed for the first time at a lecture in Portland, Oregon, and she is intrigued with his idealism. Upon meeting him for an interview on international politics which lasts over the course of a night, she realizes that writing has been her only escape from her frustrated high society existence. Inspired to leave her husband, Bryant joins Reed in Greenwich Village, New York City, with their fellow liberal peers. Later, they move to Provincetown, Massachusetts, to cover the 1913 Armory Show of European post-impressionist artwork. Through her writing, she becomes a feminist and radical in her own right. However, Reed becomes involved in labor strikes with the "Reds" of the American Communist Labor Party, and he results in alienating himself from Bryant. Obsessed with changing the world, he grows restless under his circumstances, and, against Bryant's wishes, he heads for St. Louis to cover the 1916 Democratic Convention. During Reed's absence, she falls into a complicated affair with the alcoholic playwright Eugene O'Neill, who is sympathetic towards her. Upon his return, Reed discovers the truth about the affair yet admits to his own infidelities, but Bryant takes ship to Europe to work as a war correspondent. After a flare-up of his kidney disorder, Reed is warned to avoid excessive travel or stress, but he decides to take the same path. Reunited as professionals, the two find their passion rekindled as they are swept up in the fall of Russia's czarist regime and the events of the 1917 Revolution.
The second part of the film takes place shortly after the publication of ''Ten Days that Shook the World''. Inspired by the idealism of the Revolution, Reed attempts to bring the spirit of Communism to the United States, because he is disillusioned with the policies imposed upon Communist Russia by Grigory Zinoviev and the Bolsheviks. While attempting to leave Europe, he is briefly imprisoned and interrogated in Finland. He returns to Russia and is reunited with Bryant at the railway station in Moscow. By this point, Reed is growing progressively weaker as a result of his kidney disorder, but is refused permission to leave for medical treatment. Bryant helps nurse the ailing Reed, who passes away shortly after. At the beginning of the film a witness remarks about Reed being the only American to be buried in the Kremlin.
{| style="width:400px;" class="wikitable"
|-
! style="background:tan;"| Actor
! style="background:silver;"| Historical character
|-
|
Warren Beatty ||
John Silas "Jack" Reed
|-
|
Diane Keaton ||
Louise Bryant
|-
|
Edward Herrmann ||
Max Eastman
|-
|
Jerzy Kosinski ||
Grigory Zinoviev
|-
|
Jack Nicholson ||
Eugene O'Neill
|-
|
Paul Sorvino ||
Louis C. Fraina
|-
|
Maureen Stapleton ||
Emma Goldman
|-
|
Nicolas Coster || Paul Trullinger
|-
|
William Daniels ||
Julius Gerber
|-
|
M. Emmet Walsh || Speaker -
Liberal Club
|-
|
Ian Wolfe || Mr. Partlow
|-
|
Bessie Love || Mrs. Partlow
|-
| MacIntyre Dixon || Carl Walters
|-
| Pat Starr || Helen Walters
|-
| Eleanor D. Wilson || Margaret Green Reed (mother)
|-
|
Max Wright ||
Floyd Dell
|-
|
George Plimpton || Horace Whigham
|-
| Harry Ditson ||
Maurice Becker
|-
| Leigh Curran || Ida Rauh
|-
|
Kathryn Grody ||
Crystal Eastman
|-
|
Dolph Sweet ||
Big Bill Haywood
|-
|
Gene Hackman || Pete Van Wherry
|-
| Nancy Duiguid ||
Jane Heap
|-
| Dave King ||
Allan L. Benson
|-
|
Roger Sloman ||
Vladimir Lenin
|-
| Stuart Richman ||
Leon Trotsky
|-
|
Oleg Kerensky ||
Alexander Kerensky
|-
| John J. Hooker ||
Senator Overman
|-
|
Jan Triska ||
Karl Radek
|}
Warren Beatty came across the story of John Reed in the mid-1960s and executive producer and film editor
Dede Allen remembers Beatty mentioning making a film about Reed's life as early as 1966. Originally titled ''Comrades'', the first script was written by Beatty in 1969, but the process stalled. In 1976, Beatty found a suitable collaborator in
Trevor Griffiths who began work but was delayed when his wife died in a plane crash. The preliminary draft of the script was finished in 1978, but Beatty still had problems with it. Beatty and Griffiths spent four and a half months on fixing it, though Beatty's friend
Elaine May would also collaborate on polishing the script.
Beatty originally had no intention of acting in the film or even directing it, because he had learned on various projects such as ''Bonnie and Clyde'' and ''Heaven Can Wait'' that producing a film alone is a difficult task. He briefly considered John Lithgow for the part of John Reed because the two looked similar in appearance. Eventually, however, Beatty decided to act in the film and direct it himself. Jack Nicholson was cast as Eugene O'Neill over James Taylor and Sam Shepard.
When principal photography began in August 1979 the original intention was for a 15-to-16-week filming shoot, but it ultimately took one whole year to just shoot the film. The process was slow because it was shot in five different countries and at various points the crew had to wait for snow to fall in Helsinki (and other parts of Finland), which stood in for the Soviet Union, and for rain to stop in Spain. Beatty would also not stop the camera between takes and would have it continuously roll. He also insisted on a large number of takes. Paul Sorvino said he did as many as 70 takes for one scene and actress Maureen Stapleton had to do 80 takes of one particular scene which caused her to quip to Beatty, "Are you out of your fucking mind?"
Beatty and Keaton's romantic relationship also began to deteriorate during the filming. As Peter Biskind writing about the making of ''Reds'' said, "Beatty's relationship with Keaton barely survived the shoot. It is always a dicey proposition when an actress works with a star or director – both, in this case – with whom she has an offscreen relationship. ... Keaton appeared in more scenes than any other actor, save Beatty, and many of them were difficult ones, where she had to assay a wide range of feelings, from romantic passion to anger, and deliver several lengthy, complex, emotional speeches. George Plimpton once observed, "Diane almost got broken. I thought [Beatty] was trying to break her into what Louise Bryant had been like with John Reed." Executive producer Simon Relph adds, "It must have been a strain on their relationship, because he was completely obsessive, relentless."
The editing process began in spring of 1980 with as many as 65 people working on editing down and going over approximately two and a half million feet of film. Post-production ended in November 1981 more than two years after the start of filming. Paramount stated that the final cost of the film was $33.5 million, which would be the rough equivalent of around $80 million today.
The film introduced the song "Goodbye For Now," written by
Stephen Sondheim. The song was later recorded by
Barbra Streisand for ''
The Movie Album'' (2003).
"The most evocative aspect of the presentation is a documentary enhancement — interviews with a number of venerable 'witnesses,' whose recollections of the period help to set the scene, bridge transitions and preserve a touching human perspective," wrote ''
The Washington Post''. "More than anything else in ''Reds,'' these interviews give the film its poignant point of view and separate it from all other romantic adventure films ever made," wrote ''
New York Times'' film critic
Vincent Canby.
To gain perspective on the lives of Reed and Bryant, Beatty began filming the "witnesses" as early as 1971. Some of them are very well known, others less so. As well as their being listed in the opening credits, ''American Film'' magazine identified the witnesses in its March 1982 issue.
Jacob Bailin, labor organizer
Roger Nash Baldwin, ''founder, American Civil Liberties Union''
John Ballato, ''early socialist''
Harry Carlisle, ''writer, teacher''
Kenneth Chamberlain, ''political cartoonist for the'' Masses
Andrew Dasburg, ''painter''
Tess Davis, ''cousin of Louise Bryant's first husband''
Will Durant, ''historian''
Blanche Hays Fagen, ''with Provincetown Players''
Hamilton Fish, ''Congressman, Harvard classmate of John Reed''
Dorothy Frooks, ''"Recruiting girl," World War I''
Hugo Gellert, ''artist for the'' Masses
Emmanuel Herbert, ''student in Petrograd, 1917–18''
George Jessel, ''entertainer''
Oleg Kerensky, ''son of Alexander Kerensky''
Isaac Don Levine, ''journalist, translator for Reed''
Arthur Mayer, ''film historian, Harvard classmate of Reed''
Henry Miller, ''novelist''
Adele Nathan, ''with Provincetown Players
Scott Nearing, ''sociologist, pacifist''
Dora Russell, ''delegate to Comintern''
Adela Rogers St. Johns, ''journalist''
George Seldes, ''U.S. journalist in Moscow''
Art Shields, ''political activist''
Jessica Smith, ''political activist''
Arne Swabeck, ''member, Communist Labor Party''
Bernadine Szold-Fritz, ''journalist''
Galina von Meck, ''witness to Russian Revolution''
Heaton Vorse, ''son of a Provincetown playwright''
Will Weinstone,''organizer, U.S. Communist Party''
Rebecca West, ''feminist, author''
Lucita Williams, ''wife of a Lenin biographer''
Released on December 4th, 1981, ''Reds'' opened to critical acclaim upon its release. Despite its political subject matter and limited promotion by Warren Beatty, the film became the
tenth highest grossing picture of 1981, grossing $50,000,000 in the United States. Although it was seen as a disappoinment, Beatty later remarked that the film "made a little money" in box office returns.
The movie currently holds a high 94% "Fresh" rating on the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes. The review stated that, "At a time when Ronald Reagan had just become the president of the United States, Beatty's sympathetic portrait of notorious American communist John Reed seemed even more daring. Yet, as it continues to age, the film only continues to grow in relevance, assuring its rightful place at the top of the Hollywood canon".
The film won
Academy Awards for the following:
Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Maureen Stapleton playing Emma Goldman)
Best Cinematography (Vittorio Storaro)
Best Director (Warren Beatty)
The film received the following nominations:
Best Actor in a Leading Role (Warren Beatty)
Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Jack Nicholson)
Best Actress in a Leading Role (Diane Keaton)
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (Richard Sylbert, Michael Seirton)
Best Costume Design
Best Film Editing
Best Picture
Best Sound (Dick Vorisek, Tom Fleischman and Simon Kaye)
Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen.
To date, ''Reds'' is the last film to ever receive Academy Award nominations in all four acting categories.
Reds at Rotten Tomatoes
Review of ''Reds''; Vincent Canby, ''The New York Times'' (December 4, 1981)
"Film on a Revolution Was a Revolution Itself"; A.O. Scott, ''The New York Times'' (October 4, 2006)
Category:1981 films
Category:American films
Category:Biographical films
Category:Films about anarchism
Category:English-language films
Category:Epic films
Category:Films about communism
Category:Films about journalists
Category:Films directed by Warren Beatty
Category:Films featuring a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award winning performance
Category:Films set in the 1910s
Category:Films set in 1920
Category:Films shot in Finland
Category:Films set in Finland
Category:Films whose cinematographer won the Best Cinematography Academy Award
Category:Films whose director won the Best Director Academy Award
Category:Films whose director won the Best Director Golden Globe
Category:German-language films
Category:Paramount Pictures films
Category:Political drama films
Category:Russian-language films
Category:Russian Revolution films
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