Richard Linklater presents Warren Beatty's REDS at the Marchesa Hall & Theatre (2/26/14)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Intro and Q&A with AFS co-artistic director Holly Herrick and Richard Linklater
    Credit to Matt Latham & Nick Toti for video/audio recording

Комментарии • 17

  • @SagesseNoir
    @SagesseNoir 3 года назад +2

    I also saw this film when it first came out. I was visiting friends in Nashville (where I had attended university). And we all went to see it as a group. Superb movie

  • @emanuellawton7942
    @emanuellawton7942 4 месяца назад

    "Hamlet"(1996) directed by and starring Kenneth Branagh was the last film I saw in a theater that had an intermission. It was four hours long.

  • @trissaford840
    @trissaford840 9 лет назад +4

    My college roommate and I saw this three times in the theater in Santa Barbara back in the day. We were speechless when it lost to Chariots of Fire on Oscar night. (I was equally disappointed when Birdman beat Boyhood, but not speechless. I've learned enough about Oscar politics over the years by reading books like Down and Dirty Pictures to better know how things work.)

  • @phillophotographer7366
    @phillophotographer7366 7 лет назад

    Amazing movie!

  • @Historian212
    @Historian212 3 года назад +1

    Great intro to one of my favorite movies ever. But 1981 was hardly the height of the Cold War. It was, in fact, the waning days of the Cold War which, after all, started in the late 1940s/early 1950s. What a shame that he didn't do his homework on the historical context of the film's creation, let alone its historical setting.

    • @SagesseNoir
      @SagesseNoir 3 года назад

      Not like the 1950s. But I think there was a kind of low key revivals of the Cold War. A kind of Reaganite neo-McCarthyism

    • @marceloariassouto2368
      @marceloariassouto2368 3 года назад

      I think he did some homework on the historical context of the film's creation and the film's historical setting, World War I and the Bolshevik Revolution. It's true that the late 1940s and early 1950s are probably the height of the Cold War (the Communist witch-hunts, the Hollywood blacklist, McCarthyism, the execution of the Rosenbergs, etc). But in the 1980s, under the Reagan/Bush administration, in the beginning of the conservative counter-revolution known as Neo-Liberalism, there was another peak of the Cold War. This is the time of the American boycott of the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow (followed by the Soviet boycott of the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles).

  • @karenwayland6563
    @karenwayland6563 8 лет назад

    Can Warren top this ? His soon to be released ,yet to be titled film on Howard Hughes may , or may not. His Oscar for directing was very well deserved. It certainly deserved more than 3,Oscars. but hey so did , "Casablanca."

    • @ChuckECheeez
      @ChuckECheeez 3 года назад

      Lol the Howard Hughes film was an embarrassment. Thinks it’s safe to assume old Warren Beatty’s done, as far as his career is concerned.

  • @eclecticmn4838
    @eclecticmn4838 7 лет назад +3

    I saw this movie 5 times in the theater when it came out, 4 more than any other. Best movie ever made. It is NOT a pro communist movie. I was speechless when Reds did not win best picture, but then Apocalypse Now lost to Cramer vs Cramer so ....

    • @petervanherp6691
      @petervanherp6691 3 года назад

      It’s all about politics(literally in this case). Kramer Vs Kramer, Chariots Of Fire....all very safe choices. Fine movies but without anything to think, discuss or philosophy about. And Apocalypse... and Reds are those kind of movies! For sure!!

  • @thereliablesource7938
    @thereliablesource7938 4 года назад

    I strongly disagree when he says Reds is the last epic movie (Gandi, Malcom X, The Irishman, Once upon a time in America) and that its Jack Nicholsons last great performance (The Departed, Terms of Enderment, As Good as it gets)

    • @Historian212
      @Historian212 3 года назад

      It depends upon how you define "epic." I agree that those other films are great, but they don't quite reach the level of epic, especially not "The Irishman," which hardly has the grand sweep of "Reds." I believe that "Gandhi" comes close, but it doesn't quite match the cinematic grandeur of "Reds," "Lawrence of Arabia," etc. (For one thing, you need a truly great soundtrack to reach epic status, and "Gandhi" lacks one.) "Out of Africa" may come close as well, but except for the airplane ride, doesn't offer large vistas, or depict major historical or legendary events. Then again, I don't view "Gone With the Wind" as an epic, either.
      As for Nicholson, to be fair, Linklater made that statement but walked it back right afterward. I didn't see "The Departed," but his work in those other two rather flimsy movies doesn't come close. However, his appearance in "A Few Good Men" rivals his performance in "Reds," imo. Iconic.

  • @jamietaylor3745
    @jamietaylor3745 2 года назад

    Maybe don’t chomp and suck on your gum the whole time you’re giving a talk.