Someone Who Turns Away From the Norm Renegade Clip Art

1990 flick directed by John McTiernan

The Hunt for Red Oct
The Hunt for Red October movie poster.png

Theatrical release poster

Directed by John McTiernan
Screenplay by
  • Larry Ferguson
  • Donald East. Stewart
Based on The Chase for Scarlet October
by Tom Clancy
Produced by Mace Neufeld
Starring
  • Sean Connery
  • Alec Baldwin
  • Scott Glenn
  • James Earl Jones
  • Sam Neill
Cinematography Jan de Bont
Edited past
  • Dennis Virkler
  • John Wright
Music by Basil Poledouris

Production
companies

  • Mace Neufeld Productions
  • Nina Saxon Motion-picture show Pattern
Distributed by Paramount Pictures

Release engagement

  • March 2, 1990 (1990-03-02) (Us)

Running fourth dimension

135 minutes[ane]
Country U.s.a.
Languages
  • English language
  • Russian
Budget $30 million[ii]
Box role $200.5 meg

The Chase for Carmine October is a 1990 American submarine spy thriller film directed by John McTiernan, produced past Mace Neufeld, and starring Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin, Scott Glenn, James Earl Jones, and Sam Neill. The motion picture is an adaptation of Tom Clancy's 1984 bestselling novel of the aforementioned name. It is the first installment of the picture serial with the protagonist Jack Ryan.

The story is set during the tardily Cold State of war era and involves a rogue Soviet naval captain who wishes to defect to the United States with his officers and the Soviet Navy'south newest and near avant-garde ballistic missile submarine, a fictional improvement on the Soviet Typhoon-class submarine. A CIA analyst correctly deduces his motive and must prove his theory to the U.South. Navy before a tearing confrontation between the Soviet and the American navies spirals out of control.

The movie was a co-product between the movement picture studios Paramount Pictures, Mace Neufeld Productions, and Nina Saxon Film Design. Theatrically, information technology was commercially distributed by Paramount Pictures and by the Paramount Dwelling house Entertainment division for home media markets. Post-obit its wide theatrical release, the film was nominated for and won a number of accolades. At the 63rd Academy Awards, the film was honored with the University Award for Best Sound Editing, along with nominations for All-time Sound Mixing and Best Film Editing. On June 12, 1990, the original soundtrack, composed and conducted by Basil Poledouris, was released by MCA Records. The Hunt for Red October received mostly positive reviews from critics and was the 6th acme-grossing domestic film of the year, generating $122 million in North America and more $200 one thousand thousand worldwide in box office business.

Plot [edit]

In November 1984, Soviet submarine captain Marko Ramius (Sean Connery) is given control of Crimson Oct, a new Typhoon-class ballistic missile submarine with a stealth "caterpillar drive", rendering it undetectable to passive sonar. Ramius leaves port to conduct exercises along with Alfa-course assault submarine V. K. Konovalov, commanded by his old student Captain Tupolev (Stellan Skarsgård). Once at sea, Ramius secretly kills political officer Ivan Putin (Peter Firth) and relays fake orders that they are to conduct missile drills off America's east declension. At the same time, American Los Angeles-class attack submarine USS Dallas, tasked with identifying and shadowing Soviet subs every bit they leave port, detects Ruddy October equally information technology begins its mission, but immediately loses contact once the sub'due south caterpillar bulldoze is engaged.

The next morning time, CIA annotator and onetime Marine Jack Ryan (Alec Baldwin), after consulting with Vice Admiral James Greer (James Earl Jones), the Deputy Managing director of the CIA, briefs government officials on Cerise Oct and the threat it poses. Later learning that the majority of the Soviet Navy has been deployed to the Atlantic to find and sink the sub, they conclude that Ramius plans a renegade nuclear strike. During the conference, Ryan hypothesizes that Ramius, really a native built-in Lithuanian widower with few remaining personal ties to the Soviet Matrimony, instead plans to defect to the United States, and National Security Advisor Jeffrey Pelt (Richard Hashemite kingdom of jordan) gives Ryan three days to confirm his theory. He is sent to an aircraft carrier in the mid-Atlantic. Meanwhile, afterwards some filibuster, Tupolev also receives orders to intercept and destroy Ruby-red October.

Due to an unknown saboteur's deportment, Cherry-red October 's caterpillar drive malfunctions during risky maneuvers through a narrow undersea canyon. Petty Officer Jones (Courtney B. Vance), a sonar technician aboard Dallas, has discovered a style to detect Red Oct using his underwater acoustics software, and Dallas plots their own intercept course. After a hazardous mid-ocean transfer, Ryan is able to lath Dallas, where he attempts to persuade its captain, Commander Bart Mancuso (Scott Glenn), to contact Ramius and determine his actual intentions.

The Soviet ambassador (Joss Ackland) informs the U.S. government that Ramius is a renegade and asks for assist in sinking Red October. That club is sent to the U.S. fleet, including Dallas, which has institute the Soviet sub. Ryan, nonetheless, is convinced that Ramius plans to defect with his officers and finally convinces Mancuso to contact Ramius and offering aid. Ramius, stunned that the Americans correctly guessed his programme, accepts. He then stages a nuclear reactor "emergency", ordering his crew to go on deck and abandon ship. Afterward a U.S. frigate is spotted heading right for them, Ramius submerges, leaving his crew in life rafts. Meanwhile, underwater, Ryan, Mancuso, and Jones come aboard via a rescue sub, at which betoken Ramius requests asylum for himself and his officers.

Ruddy October is suddenly attacked by Konovalov. As the two Soviet subs maneuver, one of Cherry-red October 'south cooks, Loginov (Tomas Arana), an hugger-mugger GRU agent and the secret saboteur who witnessed Ramius' confiscation of Putin's missile key, opens fire on the span. Loginov fatally wounds offset officeholder Vasily Borodin (Sam Neill) before retreating to the nuclear missile bay. Ryan and Ramius pursue him, and Loginov wounds Ramius in the shoulder, but Ryan kills Loginov earlier he tin ignite a missile engine. Meanwhile, 5. Chiliad. Konovalov fires upon Carmine October with a torpedo, which Dallas is able to divert toward herself and evade though countermeasures and conducting an emergency blow to the surface. The torpedo, now seeking a new target, so acquires and destroys Konavalov. The crew of Ruddy October, now rescued, witness the explosion from the deck of the U.S. frigate. Unaware of the second Soviet submarine, they believe that Ramius has sacrificed himself and scuttled Red Oct to avoid being boarded.

Ryan and Ramius, their subterfuge complete, navigate Red October to the Penobscot River in Maine. Ramius admits that he defected because later on he was handed the plans for Carmine October, he apace deduced that the vessel'south true purpose was to launch a preemptive nuclear first strike confronting the Usa, and concluded that he could never support such an activity. From atop the submarine'due south sheet deck, Ramius, pleased to have made it safely to America, offers Ryan a quote from Christopher Columbus: [3] "And the ocean will grant each man new hope; as sleep brings dreams of abode." Ryan nods in understanding and offers in return, "Welcome to the New Earth, sir."

Cast [edit]

  • Sean Connery as Captain 1st rank Marko Ramius, Commanding Officer of Reddish October
  • Alec Baldwin equally Jack Ryan, CIA intelligence analyst, author, Professor of Naval History at the United States Naval Academy
  • Joss Ackland as Andrei Lysenko, Soviet Ambassador to the United States
  • Tim Curry every bit Dr. Petrov, Medical Officeholder on Red October
  • Peter Firth as Ivan Putin, Political Officeholder of Cerise October
  • Scott Glenn as Commander Bart Mancuso, USN, Commanding Officeholder of USSDallas
  • James Earl Jones as Vice Admiral James Greer, USN, Deputy Manager of the CIA
  • Jeffrey Jones equally Skip Tyler, a quondam submarine commander who identifies Red October 's propulsion system
  • Richard Hashemite kingdom of jordan as Jeffrey Pelt, National Security Advisor
  • Sam Neill as Helm 2nd rank Vasily Borodin, Executive Officeholder of Red October
  • Stellan Skarsgård equally Helm 2nd rank Viktor Tupolev, Commanding Officer of Konovalov and Ramius'southward former student
  • Fred Thompson equally Rear Admiral Joshua Painter, USN, Commander of the Enterprise carrier battle grouping
  • Courtney B. Vance as Petty Officer Jones, Sonar operator of USS Dallas
  • Tomas Arana as Loginov, a GRU agent on Red October
  • Timothy Carhart equally Lt. Commander Pecker Steiner, USN, officer in charge of the US Navy'southward deep-submergence rescue vehicle Mystic
  • Daniel Davis as Captain Charlie Davenport, Commanding Officer of USSEnterprise
  • Anatoly Davydov as Officeholder #1, Red October
  • Rick Ducommun as C-2A Navigator
  • Larry Ferguson as Master Chief Lilliputian Officer Watson, USN, Main of the boat, USS Dallas
  • Ronald Guttman every bit Lt. Melekhin, Master Engineer of Red October
  • Christopher Janczar as Yevgeni Bonovia, Executive Officeholder of Konovalov
  • Anthony Peck as Lt. Commander Thompson, Executive Officer of USS Dallas
  • Ned Vaughn every bit Seaman Beaumont, a junior Sonar operator on USS Dallas
  • Gates McFadden every bit Caroline/Cathy Ryan, Jack's wife
  • Peter Jason every bit USS Reuben James Commanding Officer (Uncredited)

In addition, the manager's father, John McTiernan Sr., has a credited cameo as one of the attendees at Ryan'due south briefing of the National Security Advisor.

Production [edit]

Development [edit]

Producer Mace Neufeld optioned Tom Clancy'southward novel afterward reading galley proofs in February 1985. Despite the volume becoming a best seller, no Hollywood studio was interested because of its content. Neufeld said, "I read some of the reports from the other studios, and the story was besides complicated to sympathize".[4] Later on a year and a half he finally got a high-level executive at Paramount Pictures to read Clancy's novel and agree to develop it into a film.

Screenwriters Larry Ferguson and Donald Stewart worked on the screenplay while Neufeld approached the U.S. Navy for approval. They feared top secret information or engineering might be revealed. However, several admirals liked Clancy'south volume and reasoned that the flick could do for submariners what Pinnacle Gun did for the Navy'due south jet fighter pilots.[4] Helm Michael Sherman, director of the Navy's western regional information function in Los Angeles, suggested changes to the script that would present the Navy in a positive light.[5]

The Navy gave the filmmakers admission to several Los Angeles-class submarines, assuasive them to photograph unclassified sections of both Chicago and Portsmouth to use in set and prop pattern. Louisville was used for the scene in which Baldwin is dropped from a helicopter to the submarine. Cardinal bandage and crew members rode along in subs, including Alec Baldwin and Scott Glenn, who took an overnight trip aboard Salt Lake Urban center commanded past and then Commander Thomas B. Fargo. Glenn based his portrayal of Commander Bart Mancuso on Fargo.[iv]

The moving-picture show is a somewhat faithful accommodation of Clancy'south novel, though there are many deviations, including Crimson Oct traveling up the Penobscot River in Maine to dry dock, the omission of the Royal Navy task force including Ryan'south time aboard HMSInvincible, the decease of Borodin rather than Kamarov, and Five. K. Konovalov being serendipitously destroyed past its own torpedo as opposed to being rammed past Ruby-red October, with the planned explosion of USS Ethan Allen as a subterfuge.

Casting [edit]

Some of the principal cast had previous military service which they drew on for their roles. Sean Connery had served in the Royal Navy, Scott Glenn in the United States Marine Corps and James Earl Jones in the United States Army. Baldwin and Glenn spent time on a Los Angeles-course submarine. Baldwin was trained to drive an assail submarine.[six] Some extras portraying the Dallas crew were serving submariners, including the pilot of the DSRV, Lt Cmdr George Billy. Submariners from San Diego were bandage as extras because it was easier to rent them than to train actors. Coiffure from USSLa Jolla, including Lt Marking Draxton, took exit to participate in filming. According to an commodity in Sea Classics, at least two sailors from the Atlantic Fleet-based Dallas took leave and participated in the Pacific Fleet-supported filming. The crew of Houston called their calendar month-long filming schedule the "Chase for Red Ops." Houston made more than forty emergency surfacing "blows" for rehearsal and for the cameras.[4]

The filmmakers' start choice to portray Jack Ryan was Kevin Costner, who turned downwards the moving picture in order to star in and direct Dances with Wolves.[7] Harrison Ford was also approached to play Jack Ryan but turned it downward; he would later on replace Alec Baldwin as Ryan in Patriot Games.[8] Baldwin was approached in December 1988, just was not told for what role. Klaus Maria Brandauer was cast as Soviet sub commander Marko Ramius but quit two weeks into filming due to a prior commitment.[4] The producers faxed the script to Sean Connery, who at showtime declined considering the script seemed implausible in portraying the Soviet Union every bit an ambitious naval ability. He was missing the first page which set the story earlier Gorbachev's coming to power, when the events of the book would take seemed more plausible.[9] He arrived in L.A. on a Fri and was supposed to start filming on Monday but he requested a day to rehearse.[ten] Principal photography began on April 3, 1989 with a $30 million upkeep.[ten] The Navy lent the film crew Houston, Enterprise, 2 frigates (Wadsworth and Reuben James), helicopters, and a dry-dock coiffure.[five]

Filmmaker John Milius revised some of the film'south script, writing a few speeches for Sean Connery and all of his Russian dialogue.[eleven] He was asked to rewrite the whole motion-picture show but was just required to do the Russian sequences.[12] Rather than choosing between the realism of Russian dialog with subtitles, or the audience-friendly use of English (with or without Russian accents), the filmmakers compromised with a deliberate conceit. The motion picture begins with the actors speaking Russian with English language subtitles. But in an early on scene, role player Peter Firth casually switches in mid-sentence to speaking in English on the word "Armageddon", which is the same spoken word in both languages. Subsequently that point, all the Soviets' dialogue is communicated in English. Connery continued using his native Scottish accent for the rest of the move moving picture. Merely towards the climax of the film, at the offset of the scene in which the Soviet and American submariners run into, do some of the actors speak in Russian again.

Filming [edit]

Filming in submarines was impractical. Instead, five soundstages on the Paramount backlot were used. Two fifty-foursquare-foot (4.6 gii)[ verification needed ] platforms housing mock-ups of Cherry-red October and Dallas were built, standing on hydraulic gimbals that simulated the sub'due south movements. Connery recalled, "It was very claustrophobic. At that place were 62 people in a very confined space, 45 feet (14 g) above the stage flooring. It got very hot on the sets, and I'1000 besides prone to sea sickness. The prepare would tilt to 45 degrees. Very disturbing." The veteran actor shot for four weeks and the rest of the production shot for additional months on location in Port Angeles, Washington and the waters off Los Angeles.[5]

Made before sophisticated CGI became the norm in filmmaking, the film's opening sequence featured a long pull-out reveal of the immense titular Typhoon-course sub. It included a most total-scale, to a higher place-the-water-line mockup of the sub, constructed from two barges welded together. Each country'southward submarine had its own background color: Soviet submarines, such as Red October and 5.K. Konovalov, had interiors in black with chrome trim. American ships, such equally Dallas and Enterprise, had grayness interiors. Early on filming was aboard USS Reuben James in the surface area of the Juan de Fuca Strait and Puget Sound in March 1989. The ship operated out of U.S. Coast Baby-sit Station Port Angeles. The SH-60B detachment from the Battlecats of HSL-43 operated out of NAS Whidbey Isle, subsequently being displaced by the filmcrew. About underwater scenes were filmed using smoke with a model sub connected to 12 cables, giving precise, smooth control for turns. Computer effects, in their infancy, created bubbles and other effects such every bit particulates in the water.[thirteen]

By March 1990, simply earlier the film'southward theatrical release, the Soviet Parliament removed the Communist Party from government, effectively ending the Cold State of war. Prepare during this menstruum, in that location were concerns that with its stop, the film would be irrelevant but Neufeld felt that it "never really represented a major problem". To compensate for the change in the Soviet Spousal relationship's political climate, an on-screen clamber appears at the showtime of the film stating that it takes place in 1984 during the Cold War. Tony Seiniger designed the moving picture's poster and drew inspiration from Soviet poster art, using bold red, white and black graphics. According to him, the whole ad campaign was designed to take a "techno-suspense quality to it". The idea was to play up the thriller aspects and downplay the political elements.[ten]

The film caused a minor awareness in the black projects submarine warfare technology customs.[fourteen] [xv] In one scene, where USS Dallas is chasing Ruby-red October through the submarine canyon, the crew can be heard calling out that they have various "milligal anomalies". This essentially revealed the apply of gravimetry as a method of silent navigation in The states submarines. Thought to exist a billion dollar black project, the development of a total-tensor gravity gradiometer past Bell Aerospace was a classified technology at the fourth dimension. It was thought to exist deployed on only a few Ohio-class submarines afterwards information technology was first developed in 1973. Bell Aerospace later sold the technology to Bong Geospace for oil exploration purposes.[16] The concluding Typhoon-form submarine was officially laid downward in 1986, nether the name TK-210, simply according to sources was never finished and scrapped in 1990.[17]

Music [edit]

The Chase for Red October: Music from the Movement Picture
Flick score by

Basil Poledouris

Released June 12, 1990
Length 29:48
Label MCA Records
Jack Ryan soundtrack chronology
The Hunt for Cerise Oct: Music from the Motility Moving-picture show
(1990)
Patriot Games
(1992)

The musical score of The Hunt for Red October was composed and conducted by Basil Poledouris. A soundtrack album equanimous of x melodies was released on June 12, 1990.[eighteen] The album is missing some of the musical moments present in the film, including the scene where the crew of Ruby October sings the Soviet national hymn. The soundtrack is express due to the fact that it was originally compiled to fit the Compact Cassette. Later, it was remastered for the CD. An expanded version was released in late 2013 by Intrada Records. It features 40 additional minutes of the score, including the until-then-unreleased finish titles.[19]

Release [edit]

Home media [edit]

For the 30th anniversary celebration, Paramount Dwelling house Entertainment released a 4K Steelbook + Blu-ray+Digital version of the film.

Reception [edit]

Box office [edit]

The Hunt for Ruby-red Oct opened in 1,225 theaters on March 2, 1990, grossing $17 million on its opening weekend, more one-half its upkeep. The pic opened at number one at the U.Due south. box office and remained there for three weeks.[2] Its opening was the 20th biggest weekend of all time and the biggest non-summer, non-Thanksgiving weekend to date.[20]

The moving picture went on to gross $122,012,643 in North America with a worldwide total of $200,512,643.[2]

Critical response [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes the movie holds an blessing rating of 88% based on 73 reviews, with an average rating of 7.70/10. The site's consensus states: "Perfectly cast and packed with suspense, The Hunt for Red Oct is an former-fashioned submarine thriller with enough of firepower to spare."[21] On Metacritic, information technology has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100 based on 17 critics, indicating "mixed or average views".[22] Audiences polled past CinemaScore gave the motion-picture show an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.[23]

Roger Ebert gave the flick three-and-a-half stars out of four, calling information technology "a skillful, efficient motion picture that involves united states of america in the clever and deceptive game being played",[24] while Gene Siskel commented on the film'southward technical achievement and Baldwin'south convincing portrayal of Jack Ryan. Nick Schager, for Slant magazine'southward review, noted, "The Hunt for Red October is a thrilling edge-of-your-seat trifle that has admirably withstood the test of fourth dimension".[25] In dissimilarity, Newsweek 'southward David Ansen wrote, "But it'south at the gut level that Ruddy October disappoints. This smoother, impressively mounted motorcar is curiously ungripping. Like an overfilled kettle, information technology takes far too long to come to a boil".[26] Vincent Canby, writing for The New York Times, opined that "the characters, like the lethal hardware, are simply functions of the plot, which in this case seems to be a lot more complex than it really is".[27]

Accolades [edit]

The Hunt for Red Oct was nominated and won several awards in 1991. In addition, the film was also nominated for AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills.[28]

Award Category Nominee Upshot
1991 63rd University Awards[29] All-time Film Editing Dennis Virkler, John Wright Nominated
Best Sound Richard Bryce Goodman, Richard Overton, Kevin F. Cleary, Don J. Bassman Nominated
All-time Sound Effects Editing Cecelia Hall, George Watters Ii Won
1991 44th British Academy Film Awards Best Actor Sean Connery Nominated
Best Production Design Terence Marsh Nominated
Best Audio Cecelia Hall, George Watters Two, Richard Bryce Goodman, Don J. Bassman Nominated
1991 BMI Film Music Awards BMI Moving-picture show Music Award Basil Poledouris Won
1991 Motion Picture Sound Editors Awards Best Audio Editing – ADR ———— Won

See as well [edit]

  • 1990 in flick
  • Video games based on the motion motion-picture show

References [edit]

  1. ^ "The Huntsman for Red October (PG)". British Board of Film Classification. March xv, 1990. Archived from the original on September 16, 2016. Retrieved September iv, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c The Hunt for Ruby-red October at Box Role Mojo
  3. ^ "And the Body of water Will Grant Each Man New Hope, As Sleep Brings Dreams of Habitation". quoteinvestigator.com. Archived from the original on May 9, 2021. Retrieved April seven, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e Thomas, Bob (March 2, 1990). "Loftier-Tech Novel Took Five Years to Reach Screen". Associated Press.
  5. ^ a b c Donohue, Cathryn (March 2, 1990). "Blood-red October Surfaces every bit a Picture show". The Washington Times.
  6. ^ Scott, Walter. "5 Things You Didn't Know About Alec Baldwin". Parade. Archived from the original on February eleven, 2017. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  7. ^ "14 Deep Facts About The Hunt for Blood-red October". www.mentalfloss.com. June 12, 2015. Archived from the original on March 18, 2020. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
  8. ^ "10 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Jack Ryan". Vanity Fair. January 17, 2014.
  9. ^ Thomas, Bob. "Submarine thriller surfaces with Connery in control". Lawrence Journal-Earth. Associated Press. Archived from the original on May 9, 2021. Retrieved Apr 30, 2016.
  10. ^ a b c Kilday, Gregg (March two, 1990). "Reds Canvas into the Sunset". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on June half dozen, 2011. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  11. ^ Plume, Ken (May 7, 2003). "An Interview with John Milius". IGN. Archived from the original on February 17, 2007. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
  12. ^ Segaloff, Nat, "John Milius: The Good Fights", Backstory iv: Interviews with Screenwriters of the 1970s and 1980s, Ed. Patrick McGilligan, Uni of California 2006 p 308
  13. ^ Wichert, Cynthia, ed. (2003). Below the Surface: The Making of "The Chase for Red October" (25:07). Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. nosotros did want to brand sure we did all the ripple furnishings and distortions and become those added in equally computer graphics.
  14. ^ "Hunt for Scarlet October Commodity" (PDF). Vol. 53. CIA. Summer 2009. p. 24. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
  15. ^ "Gravity Gradiometry Article". Scientific American. June 1998. Archived from the original on June 10, 2011. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
  16. ^ "Bell gradiometer history". BellGeospace. Archived from the original on December 12, 2009. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
  17. ^ Podvodnye Lodki, Yu.Five. Apalkov, Sankt Peterburg, 2002, ISBN v-8172-0069-4
  18. ^ McDonald, Steven. "The Hunt for Red October [Original Move Picture Soundtrack]  – Overview". AllMusic. All Media Network, LLC. Archived from the original on October 31, 2013. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  19. ^ "Hunt for Ruby October, The". Intrada Records. Archived from the original on October 31, 2013. Retrieved February 14, 2014.
  20. ^ "'Hunt' turns up b.o. records in bow; best not-Thanksgiving, not-summer debut". Variety. March seven, 1990. p. 8.
  21. ^ "The Hunt for Ruby October (1990)". Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on January 3, 2021. Retrieved August eighteen, 2021.
  22. ^ "The Chase for Crimson Oct". Metacritic. Archived from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  23. ^ "CinemaScore". Archived from the original on Dec twenty, 2018.
  24. ^ Ebert, Roger (March two, 1990). "The Hunt for Cherry October". Chicago Dominicus-Times. Archived from the original on April 25, 2020. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  25. ^ Schaer, Nick (2003). "The Hunt for Ruby October". Slant Magazine. Archived from the original on Oct 24, 2007. Retrieved October v, 2018.
  26. ^ Ansen, David (March ii, 1990). "The Chase for Red October". Newsweek.
  27. ^ Canby, Vincent (March 2, 1990). "Reviews/Picture; Connery as Captain of a Renegade Soviet Sub". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March half-dozen, 2016. Retrieved Jan 17, 2014.
  28. ^ "AFI'southward 100 Years...100 Thrills Nominees" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2012.
  29. ^ "The 63rd Academy Awards (1991) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Archived from the original on April 17, 2018. Retrieved Oct 20, 2011.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • The Hunt for Carmine Oct (1990) at the American Motion-picture show Institute Catalog
  • The Hunt for Reddish October (1990) at AllMovie
  • The Hunt for Red Oct (1990) at IMDb
  • The Hunt for Red October at Box Part Mojo
  • The Hunt for Carmine October at the TCM Moving-picture show Database

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunt_for_Red_October_(film)

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