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Reagan

  • 2024
  • PG-13
  • 2h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
11K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,233
351
Reagan (2024)
A drama based on the life of Ronald Reagan, from his childhood to his time in the oval office.
Play trailer2:57
2 Videos
99+ Photos
DocudramaBiographyDramaHistory

A drama based on the life of Ronald Reagan, from his childhood to his time in the oval office.A drama based on the life of Ronald Reagan, from his childhood to his time in the oval office.A drama based on the life of Ronald Reagan, from his childhood to his time in the oval office.

  • Director
    • Sean McNamara
  • Writers
    • Paul Kengor
    • Howard Klausner
  • Stars
    • Dennis Quaid
    • Penelope Ann Miller
    • Jon Voight
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,233
    351
    • Director
      • Sean McNamara
    • Writers
      • Paul Kengor
      • Howard Klausner
    • Stars
      • Dennis Quaid
      • Penelope Ann Miller
      • Jon Voight
    • 225User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
    • 22Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:57
    Official Trailer
    Reagan
    Trailer 2:57
    Reagan
    Reagan
    Trailer 2:57
    Reagan

    Photos215

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Dennis Quaid
    Dennis Quaid
    • Ronald Reagan
    Penelope Ann Miller
    Penelope Ann Miller
    • Nancy Reagan
    Jon Voight
    Jon Voight
    • Viktor Petrovich
    Mena Suvari
    Mena Suvari
    • Jane Wyman
    David Henrie
    David Henrie
    • Young Reagan
    Tommy Ragen
    Tommy Ragen
    • Dutch Reagan
    Kevin Dillon
    Kevin Dillon
    • Jack Warner
    Mark Moses
    Mark Moses
    • William 'Judge' Clark
    Trevor Donovan
    Trevor Donovan
    • John Barletta
    Olek Krupa
    Olek Krupa
    • Mikhail Gorbachev
    Alex Sparrow
    Alex Sparrow
    • Andrei Novikov
    Robert Davi
    Robert Davi
    • Leonid Brezhnev
    Amanda Righetti
    Amanda Righetti
    • Nelle Reagan
    Justin Chatwin
    Justin Chatwin
    • Jack Reagan
    Jennifer O'Neill
    Jennifer O'Neill
    • Older Nelle Reagan
    Dan Lauria
    Dan Lauria
    • Tip O'Neill
    Lesley-Anne Down
    Lesley-Anne Down
    • Margaret Thatcher
    Will Wallace
    Will Wallace
    • Edwin Meese
    • Director
      • Sean McNamara
    • Writers
      • Paul Kengor
      • Howard Klausner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews225

    6.111.2K
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    Featured reviews

    TxMike

    Good profile of the important events in the life of Reagan.

    My wife and I enjoyed this movie at home, on DVD from our public library. We are in our 70s, we lived through most of the things depicted in the movie so we probably related better than some of the younger crowd.

    In fact Reagan played a critical role in my own life, even though he didn't know it. He was governor of California in 1967 when I was looking at graduate schools. My first choice was Berkeley but as governor he had put a freeze on financial aid to out-of-state students. As a student in Louisiana I was locked out and so accepted an offer from my second choice, a Midwest university.

    It all worked out well for me, and my eventual kids, but my life likely would have been greatly different, had I attended Berkeley in the late 1960s with the prevailing culture at the time. So Ronald Reagan and I are forever intertwined.

    I am glad we watched this movie. Although, of course, it contains some fictionalized elements, it pretty much follows the important events in his life, his stint as California governor, and his stint as US President. He will probably be most remembered for his role in bringing down the Berlin Wall.

    Dennis Quaid, although he has his own distinctive voice, and looks different, ended up doing a fine job as Ronald Reagan. Same can be said for Penelope Ann Miller who played his second wife, Nancy.

    Jon Voight has an interesting role as Russian Viktor Petrovich. He is the continuity through the decades, essentially narrating Reagan's story to a younger Russian agent and the movie being a series of flashbacks to Reagan.
    6bradjhadfield

    Both too much and too little

    "Reagan" tries to do too much, and as a result, offers too little. To do a "womb to tomb" biopic in just over 2 hours about a man with such a storied life was a near impossible feat. This would've been better suited for a limited series on Netflix perhaps. The decision to structure it with narration from a fictional Russian spy studying Reagan was also a head-scratcher.

    Reagan was the President I grew up with (7-15 years old during his terms) so I remember him fondly. However in the years since I've come to understand his flaws, such as his bullishness on SDI (shown, but only in a positive manner), his mishandling of the AIDS crisis (mentioned once in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it montage) and his lying about the Iran-Contra affair (big lead up to this, only to brush it away as an oopsie). The film wants to keep the rose-tinted glasses on though, and refuses to paint a well-rounded portrait of the man; he's simply Saint Ronald here.

    Quaid acquits himself pretty well, especially when recreating speeches (the famous Berlin speech is a knockout). His scenes with Gorbachev are also very well done. I didn't buy Miller as Nancy though. She seemed a bit too "flighty."

    Overall, I give this a solid bipartisan 6 and wish it'd shown Reagan, both the good and the bad, in a longer length format with perhaps a bit more inspired direction.
    6timdalton007

    A Fantastic Quaid Anchors a Mixed Bag

    As a history movie and biopic nerd, I've been following the development of it for most of the last decade. Given its long development, not to mention some of its supporting cast choices (including politically conservative actors Jon Voight, Robert Davi, and Kevin Sorbo) and the fact it's been sitting on a shelf since it was filmed in 2020-21, I wondered what the final product would be.

    I'll be honest: I've got very mixed feelings about the thing I spent two and a bit hours watching.

    Quaid was fantastic, as I expected. A little airbrushed/over made-up looking in some of the younger scenes but damn good all the same. His reading of Reagan's 1994 Farewell Letter was remarkable. And, as predicted when the trailer dropped earlier this summer, Quaid didn't share a single scene with any of the aforementioned outspoken actors. A part of me suspects they have been brought in to get a bit more money without causing too much fuss.

    And it's a film that clearly needed money if the production values are anything to go by. They're a couple of steps up from a Lifetime or cable tv movie. They tried but the budget wasn't quite there and you can tell it in the production values and the odd CGI shot that looked cheap. One area where the film had value put was in its score which was good, though overbearing in places due to the sound mix, with a highlight being the main title Cold War crash course (though The Man from UNCLE film in 2015 did the concept better).

    Then there's the script. It tried to cram his whole life into two hours and it's deeply unfocused as a result. There's some stuff in it that's misrepresentation (such as the 1983 war scare) or just made up (including a sequence that shows the "Tear Down this Wall" speech covered live worldwide, a speech that was boosted to its current status mythic status well after Reagan left office). Like the production values, it's a couple of steps up from Lifetime or a Christian DVD movie (which it becomes in a few places rather jarringly) but it's got its moments. There's almost no nuance or sense of Reagan beyond politics or Nancy (their children barely appear), with AIDS covered in a brief montage and Iran-Contra dealt with in about eight minutes with no real look at what Reagan did or did not do. Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer this was not, with neither screenwriter Howard Klausner or director Sean McNamara capable of doing anything but highlight the positives.

    Reagan the movie is a mixed bag, to put it mildly. Worth the wait of a decade? Probably not. Is there still a better film to be made about Reagan?

    No doubt.
    6redban02

    No educational or historical value; but good for Reagan fans

    The movie's biggest upside is that Dennis Quaid is awesome as Reagan. When I first saw images of him as Reagan, I was skeptical because I was concerned that he didn't look like Reagan. When I watched the movie, however, I found Quaid to be convincing in his voice and mannerisms; and I think the film's crew did a fine job with the makeup and prosthetics. In addition to Quaid's awesome performance, I think Penelope Ann Miller is convincing as Nancy Reagan: she looks and sounds like Nancy. I love the visuals of Reagan's California ranch and the Oval Office. The closing image of Quaid's smiling on horseback, with a cover of John Denver's "Take Me Home Country Roads" playing, kinda hit me emotionally. At times, the movie can provoke 1980s nostalgia with the images and soundtrack.

    That said ... the critics of this movie have a few valid points. The biggest criticism is that the movie goes at a breakneck speed and feels like a bare-bones cliffnotes version of Reagan's life. The movie attempts to cover all of Reagan's life, so the movie gives time to his job as a lifeguard, his days as a choir boy, his first marriage, his acting career, his time as the SAG President, his governorship, his time as president, and the onset of Alzheimer's. The result is that a lot of topics are left out altogether (e.g. Just based on this movie, you might figure that Reagan had no children). Of the topics covered in the movie, many are just skimmed over. For example, I feel as if I blinked my eye and missed Reagan's first wife (played by Mena Sevari); the topic of Grenada is covered in one line that Reagan says to Margaret Thatcher; and George H. W. Bush appears for about 5 seconds in a meeting.

    The movie often cuts to newspaper clippings and historical clips to try to condense loaded historical events, and there is a frame narrative involving Jon Voight's character, an aged KGB. I like the idea of having Voight narrate Reagan's story, as his narration often helps keep the movie organized and allows the movie to condense some events. Voight could've worked a little more on his Russian accent, but it's nothing too bad

    The other flaw, which critics have stressed, is that the movie is extremely pro-Reagan. I admit that I am a fan of Reagan, and I'm a Republican. So I'm not as angry about the movie's pro-Reaganism as many critics are. But even I have to admit that the movie's extreme pro-Reagan POV hinders its potential to offer historical insight or historical knowledge. The movie straight-up glosses over all of Reagan's flaws or mistakes. Even during its discussion of the Iran-Contra affair, the movie makes Reagan look like an unsuspecting and innocent party. I also found some scenes felt like campaign advertisements. When Reagan is giving a speech during his run as governor, for example, the movie shows several people (e.g. A waitress, a barber, and a man getting a shave) all stop what they're doing and stare at Reagan on TV as if mesmerized. This same scene basically re-occurs when he does the "Tear Down that Wall!" speech. Ronald Reagan in this movie is basically a one-dimensional, anti-communist patriot who almost never commited sin or error knowingly

    The movie offers no drama, and there is little educational or historical value. And obviously, you should stay away from his movie if you dislike Ronald Reagan. But if you're a fan of Reagan, you will leave the movie feeling uplifted; Quaid's performance will be enough for you to overlook many of its flaws.
    7ghettoplex

    Solid pacing for a Bio Pc

    When there is so much to tell about the life of a person like Ronald Reagan, the choice for using motion graphics plus live action footage to give the audience these important pieces of narrative information in bite size bits was very strategic and well executed.

    Dennis Quaid is fantastic, the man can carry a film like a pro. John Voight is the second heart of this film. He plays a character that I would say is a rival to Quaid's Reagan, but not necessarily an antagonist.

    Now for the con, there is only one. The prosthetics for the actors to make them younger in the flash backs is noticeable, but not the worst thing ever.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Most of the film was shot in Oklahoma due to a state tax rebate launched in 2020, and COVID-19 restrictions that were much lighter compared to other states. Filming took place in Oklahoma City, Guthrie, Edmond, and Crescent. Using CGI and special effects, the Oklahoma City Capitol Building was dressed up to look like the United States Capitol Building, and the Temple of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry in Guthrie doubled for The White House.
    • Goofs
      In a scene identified as taking place in 1945 near the end of World War II with Ronald Reagan wearing his Army uniform, he is wearing the Cavalry branch insignia of crossed sabers on his lapels. Reagan started in the Army Reserve as a Cavalry officer in 1937, but after being called to active duty in 1942 shortly after the US entered World War II, he was transferred to the Army Air Forces, whose lapel branch insignia was a 2-bladed propeller superimposed over eagle wings, and remained in the Army Air Forces for the remainder of the war.
    • Quotes

      Ronald Reagan: As I see it, we don't mistrust each other because we're armed. We're armed because we mistrust each other. But I think that we both agree on the most important thing. That nuclear war can never be won, and must never be fought.

    • Crazy credits
      The credits show archive footage of several moments from Reagan's life, as well as his funeral. Halfway through, there's an epilogue of what happened to these real-life individuals. The credits continue. Afterwards, there's an image of a letter sent to Reagan by Prince Hussain Aga Khan when he was a child (a voice actor reads it).
    • Connections
      Featured in Greg Kelly Reports: Jon Voight (2021)
    • Soundtracks
      Don't Fence Me In
      Written by Cole Porter

      Used by the permission of WC Music Corp. (ASCAP)

      Performed by Bob Dylan

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 30, 2024 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Apple TV Store (MENA)
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Рейган
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Monica, California, USA(Reagan Ranch)
    • Production companies
      • Rawhide Pictures
      • Alluwee Productions
      • MJM Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $25,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $30,047,417
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,650,720
      • Sep 1, 2024
    • Gross worldwide
      • $30,107,173
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 21 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39:1

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