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Red Dawn is a 2012 American war film directed by Dan Bradley. The screenplay by Carl Ellsworth and Jeremy Passmore is based on the 1984 film of the same name. The film stars Chris Hemsworth, Josh Peck, Josh Hutcherson, Adrianne Palicki, Isabel Lucas, and Jeffrey Dean Morgan. The film centers on a group of young people who defend their hometown from a North Korean invasion.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer announced its intention to remake Red Dawn in May 2008 and subsequently hired Bradley and Ellsworth. The principal characters were cast the following year and the film went into production in September 2009 in Mount Clemens, Michigan. Originally scheduled to be released on November 24, 2010, the film was shelved due to MGM's financial troubles. While in post-production, the invading army and antagonists was changed from Chinese to North Korean including Chinese symbols to North Korean in order to maintain access to China's box office. FilmDistrict bought the U.S. distribution rights in September 2011 and the film was released in the United States on November 21, 2012.[4]

Plot[]

An introductory montage shows the fallout of an economic crisis in the European Union and a weakened NATO alliance, amid increasing cooperation between an increasingly militant North Korea and ultranationalist-controlled Russia. The increased deployment of U.S. troops abroad leaves the mainland vulnerable.

U.S. Marine Jed Eckert is home on leave in Spokane, Washington. He reunites with his father, Spokane Police Sergeant Tom Eckert and his brother, football player Matt Eckert, as well as his childhood friend Toni Walsh and her cousin Erica Martin, Matt's girlfriend. The morning after a mysterious power outage, Jed and Matt are shocked to see swarms of invading North Korean paratroopers and transport aircraft. Their father tells them to flee to their cabin in the woods while he helps the townspeople. They are joined there by Robert Kitner, Daryl Jenkins, Danny Jackson, siblings Julie and Greg Goodyear, and Pete, and later by Toni; Erica is captured by the North Koreans. Tensions build as the teens try to decide whether to surrender to the invaders or resist, with Pete ending up betraying their position. North Korean soldiers, under the command of Captain Cho, bring Sergeant Eckert and the mayor out to convince the group to surrender; while the mayor persuades the boys to give up, Cho executes Sergeant Eckert after he refuses to cooperate and actively encourages them to resist.

Later, Jed announces that he intends to fight and the others agree to join him, calling themselves the Wolverines after their school mascot. After acquiring weapons, establishing a base in an abandoned mine, and being trained by Jed, the Wolverines begin a series of guerrilla attacks against soldiers and collaborators, including Pete. As Matt manages to free Erica from her imprisonment, he jeopardizes the mission resulting in Greg's death. The North Koreans retaliate by bombarding the surrounding woods to destroy the Wolverines' base, killing Danny and Julie, with the remaining survivors fleeing deeper into the woods.

The Wolverines eventually encounter Marine Sergeant Major Andrew Tanner and two other Marines, Corporal Smith and Sergeant Hodges. They reveal that the Russian-backed North Korean invasion used an EMP weapon that crippled the U.S. electrical grid and military, followed by landings along the east and west coasts (Camp Pendleton is hinted by the Marines as having been destroyed in the invasion, as most likely was the rest of coastal Southern California), with American counterattacks eventually halting their advances, leaving an area stretching from Michigan to Montana and Alabama to Arizona as "Free America", using the Rocky Mountains in the west and the Appalachians in the east as geographic buffers, as pockets of patriotic guerrillas in the Cascades and the Sierra Nevada mountains continue to fight. They also reveal that Captain Cho's suitcase contains an EMP-resistant radio telephone, that if captured would enable the U.S. command to listen in on enemy communication, and gain a tactical advantage in a counter-offensive. The Wolverines assist Tanner, Smith, and Hodges in infiltrating the local police station, the North Koreans' center of operations. They succeed in stealing the suitcase with Jed avenging his father's death by killing Cho, though Hodges is killed in the firefight.

After they successfully escape with the suitcase, the Wolverines and Marines regroup in a safe house. After a brief conversation between Jed and Matt, however, they are ambushed by Russian Spetsnaz and Jed is killed in the firefight. Visibly shaken, Matt and the rest of the group escape with the suitcase. Robert realizes that during the escape from the police station, Daryl was tagged with a subcutaneous tracking device that the Russians used to find them. After some thought, Daryl accepts the fact that he cannot go on with them and decides to stay behind, his fate unknown. The rest continue on to the Marines's extraction point.

Tanner and Smith depart in a UH-1 with the suitcase. The remaining Wolverines decide to stay behind and continue to fight, recruiting more members and raiding prisoner camps, with Matt now leading the effort to continue opposing the occupation. The flag of "Free America" is carried by patriots in a daring raid on a North Korean concentration camp in the final shot of the film.

Cast[]

  • Chris Hemsworth as Jed Eckert
  • Josh Peck as Matt Eckert
  • Josh Hutcherson as Robert Kitner
  • Adrianne Palicki as Toni Walsh
  • Isabel Lucas as Erica Martin
  • Connor Cruise as Daryl Jenkins
  • Edwin Hodge as Danny Jackson
  • Brett Cullen as Spokane Police Sergeant Tom Eckert
  • Alyssa Diaz as Julie Goodyear
  • Julian Alcaraz as Greg Goodyear
  • Will Yun Lee as Captain Cho
  • Jeffrey Dean Morgan as Sergeant Major Andrew "Andy" Tanner, USMC
  • Kenneth Choi as Captain Smith, USMC
  • Matt Gerald as Sergeant Hodges, USMC
  • Michael Beach as Mayor Jenkins

Production[]

In May 2008, at the Festival de Cannes, Harry Sloan and Mary Parent from MGM announced that a remake of Red Dawn was in the early stages of pre-production, with the remake due to be directed by Dan Bradley, who had previously worked as a second unit director and stunt coordinator on films such as The Bourne Ultimatum, Spider-Man 3, Independence Day, and Quantum of Solace. MGM subsequently announced that Red Dawn would be remade "keeping in mind the post-9/11 world that we're in".[5][6] Later the same month, MGM announced that Dan Bradley had been confirmed as the director with Carl Ellsworth, screenwriter of Red Eye and Disturbia, writing the updated screenplay.[5][7] Ellsworth worked from a story written by Jeremy Passmore. Vincent Newman (A Man Apart) was announced as the producer.[8] Australian Chris Hemsworth was cast in a lead role:[9] other cast members include Josh Peck, Adrianne Palicki, Josh Hutcherson, Isabel Lucas, Edwin Hodge, and Connor Cruise.[10]

Principal photography began September 2009 in Mount Clemens, Michigan.[11] The closed Notre Dame High School in Harper Woods, Michigan (Greater Detroit) was used as a filming location.[12] Mark Binelli, author of Detroit City is the Place to Be, wrote that the school cafeteria was used as the catering hall for the employees.[13] According to photographs taken on set, the film features propaganda pamphlets, posters, and banners featuring People's Liberation Army symbols, such as the August 1 star. The posters attempt to garner support for a Chinese occupation, with slogans such as "Rebuilding Your Reputation", "Repairing Your Economy", and "Fighting Corporate Corruption".[14][15]

In June 2010, release of the film was delayed by MGM’s financial difficulties. The delay came amid growing controversy in China after excerpts of the script were leaked on the website The Awl. The film drew sharp criticism from the Global Times, one of the leading Chinese state-run newspapers, with headlines such as "U.S. reshoots Cold War movie to demonize China" and "American movie plants hostile seeds against China". One of the articles stated: "China can still feel U.S. distrust and fear, especially among its people. Americans' suspicions about China are the best ground for the hawks to disseminate fear and doubt, which is the biggest concern with the movie, Red Dawn."[16][17]

In January 2011, the first cast photo was released along with news that MGM would release the film once their Chapter 11 restructuring is completed. Red Dawn was one of three already completed MGM projects scheduled to be released in 2011.[18]

In March 2011, the Los Angeles Times reported that MGM changed the villains in its Red Dawn remake from Chinese to North Korean in order to maintain access to China's lucrative box office. The changes reportedly cost less than $1 million and involve changing an opening sequence summarizing the story's fictional backdrop (dropping the original storyline of Chinese "repossession" after the US defaults on loans for a North Korean invasion), re-editing two scenes, and using digital technology to change Chinese symbols and dialogue to Korean.[19] The film's producer Trip Vinson stated: "We were initially very reluctant to make any changes, but after careful consideration we constructed a way to make a scarier, smarter and more dangerous Red Dawn that we believe improves the movie."[20]

Images from the Film[]

Images from the Set[]

Promotional Images[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Red Dawn. American Film Institute. Retrieved on November 13, 2016.
  2. Red Dawn (12A). British Board of Film Classification (March 8, 2013). Retrieved on October 28, 2016.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Red Dawn (2012). Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on April 3, 2013.
  4. O’Connor, Sean (October 28, 2015). DIRECTED BY HOLLYWOOD, EDITED BY CHINA: HOW CHINA'S CENSORSHIP AND INFLUENCE AFFECT FILMS WORLDWIDE.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Fernandez, Jay A.. "'Red Dawn' redo lands director, scribe; MGM will remake the 1984 action drama", The Hollywood Reporter, July 9, 2008. 
  6. Zeitchik, Steven. "MGM: Two up for a remake treatment — MGM may remake the '80s action films", The Hollywood Reporter, May 17, 2008. 
  7. Bartyzel, Monika (July 9, 2008). 'Red Dawn' Remake Finds Writer and Director. Archived from the original on July 22, 2012. Retrieved on June 17, 2009.
  8. Ellsworth Penning Red Dawn Remake. Retrieved on June 17, 2009.
  9. Nikki Finke's Deadline Hollywood Daily » EXCLUSIVE: Chris Hemsworth Is 'Thor'. Retrieved on June 17, 2009.
  10. Fernandez, Jay A.. "Two cast in 'Red Dawn' remake", The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved on June 17, 2009. 
  11. Pics From The Set Of The RED DAWN Remake!! (September 15, 2009). Retrieved on September 15, 2009.
  12. Binelli, p. 260.
  13. Binelli, p. 260-261.
  14. Hollywood remakes Cold War era blockbuster, "Chinese soldiers" wearing 07 camouflage "invade America" (好莱坞翻拍冷战时大片 "中国军人"穿07迷彩"入侵美国") (in Chinese). Tiexue (Original report from XINHUA). Retrieved on October 4, 2009.
  15. Xiao, Dazhong. "Hollywood remake of Cold War epic film, with strong drama depicting a Chinese "invasion of the United States"", Phoenix TV News, September 30, 2009. Retrieved on October 10, 2009. (in Chinese) 
  16. Russ Fischer (June 10, 2010). More MGM Fallout: Red Dawn Delayed, Perhaps Indefinitely?. /Film. Retrieved on June 15, 2010.
  17. Jonathan Landreth. "Chinese press rails against 'Red Dawn'", The Hollywood Reporter, June 1, 2010. Retrieved on June 15, 2010. 
  18. Pietro Filipponi (January 3, 2011). New Cast Photo & Release Info for RED DAWN Starring Chris Hemsworth & Jeffrey Dean Morgan. The Daily Blam!. Retrieved on January 4, 2011.
  19. Brodesser-Akner, Claude. "The Long-Delayed Red Dawn Remake Could Have Been Scarily Topical", Vulture, January 11, 2011. Retrieved on January 5, 2013. 
  20. "Reel China: Hollywood tries to stay on China's good side", Los Angeles Times, March 16, 2011. Retrieved on March 16, 2011. 

External links[]

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