Red Dawn
The city of Spokane is under attack from some Korean invaders, and a group of teens summon courage against the invaders.
25 January 1966, Anchorage, Alaska, USA
7 September 1985, Northridge, California, USA
October 20, 1970 in England, UK
6 November 1967, Chicago, Illinois, USA
25 December 1979
10 November 1986, New York City, New York, USA
19 November 1987, Clarkston, Michigan, USA
17 January 1995, Florida, USA
21 October 1985, Fort Knox, Kentucky, USA
30 October 1963, Roxbury, Massachusetts, USA
3 July 1979, Wilmington, Delaware, USA
26 January 1985, Onslow County, North Carolina, USA
November 25, 2013
... intricately designed to not offend any subset of its audience. It's as impotent as Milius' original was ballsy, and despite a brief running time and passable action, it ends up a frustratingly pointless experience.
November 21, 2012
Red Dawn suffers from a number of serious problems. The first, and most obvious, is that this is mini-series material compressed into a 95-minute movie.
November 21, 2012
Hobbled by a laughably bad script and a uniformly uncharismatic cast.
July 27, 2013
As stupid as the original, yet modernized to include the Subway product placement that today's audiences crave.
July 14, 2016
More like Red Yawn.
November 22, 2012
It's Friday Night Lights territory, but without good writing or acting.
November 21, 2012
Take that, screaming North Koreans with no agenda!
April 17, 2016
A picture of slight charms and minor successes, but they're definitely there for the right audience to discover.
March 17, 2013
In the wake of the Oscars, we have an early contender for worst film of the year.
November 21, 2012
John Milius's 1984 cult classic about American teens battling a Soviet invasion has been reinvented as a Tea Party wet dream that offers a scathing (if completely illogical) indictment of the federal government.
March 19, 2013
Ridiculously violent for the certificate and wholly implausible in its set up, Red Dawn is the kind of gung-ho action thriller for people with sawdust for brains.
November 21, 2012
Preposterously insincere ...

