Red Army | |
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Directed by | Gabe Polsky |
Written by | Gabe Polsky |
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Distributed by | Sony Pictures Classics |
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Running time | 84 minutes[1] |
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Box office | $694,600[2] |
Red Army is a 2014 American-Russian documentary film directed, produced, and written by Gabe Polsky, executive produced by Jerry Weintraub and Werner Herzog. It premiered at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival[3] and was released in limited theaters by Sony Pictures Classics on January 23, 2015.[4] The film tells the story of the Soviet Union national ice hockey team through the eyes of team captain Slava Fetisov, in particular the famed 1990s five-man unit known as The Russian Five.
The film details the link between sports and politics. The film also narrates how players were wooed by National Hockey League scouts and eventually flooded NHL rosters. The film is particularly harsh on the ruthless tactics of coach Viktor Tikhonov about whom none of the players have a kind word. Tikhonov died in November 2014.[5]
The movie uses rare archival footage,[6] including children singing "No Coward Plays Hockey."[7][8]