Born on August 18, 1936, in Santa Monica, California, to Charles Robert Redford, an accountant for Standard Oil, and Martha Hart. His mother died in 1955, the year after he graduated from high school. Charles Robert Redford Jr. was a scrappy kid who stole hubcaps in high school and lost his college baseball scholarship at the University of Colorado because of drunkenness. After studying at the Pratt Institute of Art and living the painter’s life in Europe, he studied acting in New York at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Lola Redford Van Wagenen (consumer activist), born in 1940, dropped out of college to marry Redford on September 12, 1958. They divorced in 1985 after having four children, one of whom died of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Daughter Shauna Redford, born November 15, 1960, is a painter who married Eric Schlosser on October 5, 1985, in Provo, UT. Her first child, born in January 1991, made Redford a grandfather. Son James Redford AKA Jamie Redford, a screenwriter… read more
A totally everyday film.You probably watched a hundred films like this.But.Redford's scenes are not just good...he is of class acting.The kid is irritating amateur by the way.The Streep and Cruise characters are absolutely irreal.The screenplay is ridiculously childish.I was bored,but couldn't regret the films boring but true message.10/1.
Considering that war always is a complex topic Redford's film feels quite trivial. There is a lot of talk, there are lions (Tom Cruise's power-hungry senator), there are lambs (two underprivileged students fighting in Afghanistan) and there is the realisation that the narrative is going nowhere. It merely functions as a dull and force-fed lecture on morality.
In my humble opinion, this is Meryl Streep’s best performance in a dramatic film. I clung to her character, the head journalist of a major news outlet, each step of the way and relied on her intellectual… read review
All I have heard about Robert Redford’s Lions for Lambs, Tom Cruise’s first foray with his United Artists studio, is that it is boring, long, and anti-war to the fullest. Even with that going in, I… read review