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IMDbPro

Red Army

  • 2014
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
7.3K
YOUR RATING
Red Army (2014)
Following the Soviet Union during the height of the Cold War, this documentary tells the story of the nation's famed Red Army hockey team through the eyes of its captain Slava Fetisov.
Play trailer2:05
16 Videos
31 Photos
Sports DocumentaryBiographyDocumentaryHistorySport

The story of the Soviet Union's famed Red Army hockey team through the eyes of its players.The story of the Soviet Union's famed Red Army hockey team through the eyes of its players.The story of the Soviet Union's famed Red Army hockey team through the eyes of its players.

  • Director
    • Gabe Polsky
  • Writer
    • Gabe Polsky
  • Stars
    • Viacheslav Fetisov
    • Vladislav Tretiak
    • Scotty Bowman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    7.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gabe Polsky
    • Writer
      • Gabe Polsky
    • Stars
      • Viacheslav Fetisov
      • Vladislav Tretiak
      • Scotty Bowman
    • 32User reviews
    • 118Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos16

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Official Trailer
    Festival Trailer
    Trailer 1:08
    Festival Trailer
    Festival Trailer
    Trailer 1:08
    Festival Trailer
    Dont Let Him Out Of The Country
    Clip 1:06
    Dont Let Him Out Of The Country
    They Were The Best
    Clip 1:03
    They Were The Best
    Tikhonov
    Clip 1:22
    Tikhonov
    Training Camp
    Clip 1:27
    Training Camp

    Photos31

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    + 25
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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Viacheslav Fetisov
    Viacheslav Fetisov
    • Self
    • (as Slava Fetisov)
    Vladislav Tretiak
    Vladislav Tretiak
    • Self
    Scotty Bowman
    Scotty Bowman
    • Self
    Vladimir Pozner
    Vladimir Pozner
    • Self
    Herb Brooks
    Herb Brooks
    • Self - US Olympic Coach
    • (archive footage)
    • (voice)
    Don Cherry
    Don Cherry
    • Self - Hockey Commentator
    • (archive footage)
    • (voice)
    Mark Deakins
    Mark Deakins
      Alan Eagleson
      • Self - Hockey Agent
      • (voice)
      Lada Fetisov
      • Self - Wife Of Vladislav Fetisov
      Anatoli Karpov
      Anatoli Karpov
      • Self
      Alexei Kasatonov
      Alexei Kasatonov
      • Self
      Vladimir Krutov
      Vladimir Krutov
      • Self - Red Army Right Wing
      Ken Kurtis
      • (voice)
      Lawrence Martin
      • Self - Journalist
      Felix Nechepore
      Felix Nechepore
      • Self
      Igor Rabiner
      • Self - Journalist
      Igor Romishevsky
      • Self - Soviet Hockey Legend
      Tatiana Tarasova
      Tatiana Tarasova
      • Self
      • Director
        • Gabe Polsky
      • Writer
        • Gabe Polsky
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews32

      7.67.3K
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      Featured reviews

      JohnDeSando

      Much more than just exciting hockey.

      "Ninety percent of hockey is mental and the other half is physical." Wayne Gretsky

      In Gabe Polosky's expert documentary, Red Army, the understanding of modern Russian hockey history filters through the influence of legendary coach Anatoly Tarasov. He taught young and old about how to play hockey like chess layered over with the best of communist collectivist philosophy—a blueprint for world-class teamwork dominance from 1954-91.

      The star of this doc is Vyacheslav Fetisov ("Slava"), whose play, along with four other Russian teammates, dominated world hockey for years. His face full of character in middle age, his understanding of human nature, and his devotion to the best of what Russia could offer make for no-bathroom-break-allowed drama. His defection that results in losing his best friend, Kasatonov, is the stuff of real-life drama. Yes, there are arresting shots of hockey that seem more like perfect video games than the real-live action they are, but it's the humanity that make this film outstanding.

      Slava is central-casting smart and handsome carrying an abiding love of the motherland conflicting with a heightened sense of things going wrong after the Cold-War halcyon days. To hear him extol the spirit of collective achievement is to put in relief our emphasis on individuality, for its strengths and weaknesses. Polosky does not belabor the good and bad of the competing systems but rather presents the victories and defeats as a matter of history and politics: "Draw your own conclusions," he might say.

      That classic documentary "lack of bias" sometimes is frustrating. For instance, I would like to know how much of either ideology—American vs. Russian—plays in the "miracle" of the USA win at the 1980 Olympics in Lake Placid. Did the invulnerable Russian five suffer from their dislike of new coach Tikhonov's dictatorial ways (e.g., he wouldn't let a player leave to see his dying father!)? I need to go back, I guess, to another great doc, Miracle (2004), to see Kurt Russell play the legendary Herb Brooks and his victorious USA Olympic team. I suspect the reason for the Russian failure will be less apparent than the American victory.

      I am nitpicking here because overall the film is exemplary historical reporting without forcing inferences about facile conjunction. Even if you're not a hockey fan, you'll delight learning about truly great players who came to America, eventually living the dream but not without a rocky adjustment as they learned to love individualism in a new country that didn't accept them as graciously as I would have expected.

      See Red Army and be uncomfortably embarrassed. They were good guys.
      8olastensson13

      Holiday on Ice

      There has never been such beauty in sport than ice hockey performed by the Soviet Union at its best. How was it possible? It's pretty obvious that it all was due to propaganda reasons. The Communist human was superior, according to Soviet leaders. Or at least they wanted to think so; but the almost only way to prove it was through the athletes.

      The legendary Fetisov tells most of the story here. How the players were kept almost as slaves under the regime of KGB man Tichonov. And when finally the Soviet system broke down, Fetisov and his comrades were allowed to play in NHL. But had to give most of their money to the embassy.

      A sometimes breathtaking documentary and the system succeeded in creating some of the best athletes ever. And yes, they impressed the West. But the price was high.
      8CleveMan66

      "Red Army" tells of the USSR's international hockey program & raises the bar for other documentaries of its kind.

      "Do you believe in miracles?! YES!!" That was sportscaster Al Michaels' immortal exaltation at the end of the 1980 Olympic hockey game which became known as "The Miracle on Ice". An American team of amateur and college hockey players had defeated the vaunted team from the Soviet Union, which had won the gold medal in the last four Winter Olympics and six of the last seven. The U.S. team would go on to win the gold medal by defeating Finland. The highly improbable American victory over the Russians was named by Sports Illustrated as the greatest sports moment of the 20th century and spawned a TV movie, a documentary film and the 2004 feature "Miracle" starring Kurt Russell. But what of the Soviet team? How did this shocking loss affect them? And was this the beginning of the end for Russian dominance of international ice hockey? The documentary "Red Army" (PG, 1:25) answers those questions and many more as it delves into the stories of the men behind the hockey masks and the dramatic history of their national sport.

      The story of the Soviet Red Army hockey program is one of athletic, social, political and military influences that reflected the larger phenomenon of the Cold War and dictated the fates of those involved. This film contains the kind of interviews that you'd expect from such a documentary and also uses little-seen archival footage, creative modern graphics and skilled editing to tell this story in a very engaging way. The main interviewee is Soviet team captain Viacheslav Fetisov who describes his story as it felt back then and apparently still feels today. Interviews with his wife, his former teammates, a former KGB agent and a few journalists tell of their experiences and give valuable color commentary, but just as revealing is what is NOT said in the documentary. Co-producer, director, writer and interviewer Gabe Polsky is smart enough to turn the camera on early, keep it rolling and edit into the film the honesty and emotion that shows itself in the candid moments and unguarded reactions of his interviewees.

      The film's scope covers over four decades of the Soviet Union's hockey program, but focuses mainly on the 1980s, a decade which began with Cold War tensions heightened by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and ended with the rapid decline of the USSR as a unified state. During this period, Fetisov and his teammates absorbed that crushing Olympic defeat, dealt with the changes that followed, rose to new challenges and, eventually, began to consider careers in the NHL, as the Soviet government gradually loosened its strong grip on its players, just as it began losing control of its people and its empire. Polsky uses all the tools at his disposal to illustrate how the Russians ran their program and what that program meant to the country. We see children from all over their massive and diverse nation training, playing and competing within the program. We observe "the best of the best of the best", as one interviewee describes them, transition from hockey players to Russian icons, and cogs in the Soviet Union's propaganda machine. We learn that these elite players were to place hockey above literally everything else in their lives. We come to understand that their purpose was to embody the superiority of their communist system. We get to peek behind the Iron Curtain and contemplate an untold story unlike any other in sports.

      "Red Army" doesn't just reveal the untold story of the Soviet Union's ice hockey program, but helps us see that the men involved were more than their government's propaganda puppets, but were human beings with desires for their lives, both common and uncommon problems, and impressive amounts of talent and work ethic. This is a documentary that feels like a drama. The film brings openness to a notoriously closed system and tells a story that most audience members have never thought about, but will be unable to avoid thinking about after seeing this movie. The only weak spot I noticed was the soundbites of the director's amateurish interviewing techniques. That aside, this is a fascinating film which raises the bar for future documentaries of its kind. "A-"
      9ankhharu

      Fantastic insight into the Russian Hockey

      You'll note that the only bad reviews so far are Canadian hockey fans upset that those too young to remember Russian Hockey dominance, will learn that Canada was never the defacto all Hockey rulers of the world as they like to claim. Fact is, Russia was the best in the world for quite some time. This is just a tough pill for Canadian hockey fans to swallow.

      My only complaint is the interviewer did come off as amateurish and disrespectful. Outside of that, I thought the film was very introspective with lots of old footage of the former USSR. Excellent interviews. And to the guy complaining about no Tikhonov interview, it clearly stated at the end of the film that Tikhonov declined an interview request.

      This is an excellent documentary. If you can put your patriotic homerism aside and respect it for what it is, you will enjoy it.
      9ZRHZurich

      Perspective Shaper - Hard Men Real Relationships And Team Bond

      I came away from this movie deep in thought, trying to piece together the personal journeys of the cast, the context of life in the USSR, the changes and resulting impact upon the players lives.

      This documentary is well researched and highly viewable, it is not just a male only film.

      Women get to see stripped to the bare bone, deep male team bonding, open responses to complex relationships and real meaning as to how 5 men dominated a sport in the USSR and the Americas.

      The death of one of the cast members shortly after the movie added a melancholy touches, yet there is humour from both Gabe Polsky and Vyacheslav Fetisov.

      It was clever, I see this documentary staying around for some time, certainly one to watch again.

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Quotes

        (voice): [confused] Wait a second. Go Back. I don't get why Yazov let you leave the country, if he was mad at you.

        Viacheslav Fetisov: I'm not a historian. My feeling was the country tried to change something, because it's Perestroika time, but he doesn't want changes. Everybody was afraid. It's understandable. It's like in a dark room, trying to find a dark cat. It's not funny.

        [still confused]

        (voice): Okay.

      • Connections
        Featured in Docventures: Urheilu (2015)
      • Soundtracks
        Romany Rythm
        Composer: Aaron Wheeler

        Courtesy of Firstcom Music

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      FAQ19

      • How long is Red Army?Powered by Alexa
      • Bluray Release Date

      Details

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      • Release date
        • February 25, 2015 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • United States
        • Russia
      • Official site
        • Official site
      • Languages
        • English
        • Russian
      • Also known as
        • Красная армия
      • Production company
        • Gabriel Polsky Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $694,600
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $20,100
        • Jan 25, 2015
      • Gross worldwide
        • $798,680
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 24 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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