Warren
Beatty, Diane Keaton, Edward Herrmann , Jerzy Kosinski, Jack Nicholson,
Paul Sorvino , Maureen Stapleton, Nicolas Coster.
Few filmmakers other than Warren Beatty
would have had the courage and vision to fashion an epic film from
the life of famed American Communist John Reed (who is the only
US citizen buried in the Kremlin). The film is an effort to humanize
a political movement that has previously been depicted on screen
in a series of unsubtle and prejudicial broad strokes. The film
begins in 1915, when Reed (Beatty) makes the acquaintance of married
Portland journalist Louise Bryant (Diane Keaton). So persuasive
is Reed's point of view--and so charismatic is Reed himself-- that
Bryant kicks over the traces and joins Reed and his fellow radicals.
Among the famous personages depicted herein are Emma Goldman (Maureen
Stapleton), Eugene O'Neill (Jack Nicholson) and Max Eastman (Richard
Herrmann). The second half of this nearly-200-minute film skims
through the years when Reed, now a Russian resident, becomes disillusioned
by the harsh realities of Bolshevism. Despite the celebrity line-up
of real-life "witnesses" to the events depicted in the
film (ranging from novelist Henry Miller to comedian George Jessel!),
historians took Reds to task for its oversimplification of events
and its laundering of the notoriously promiscuous Louise Bryant.
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