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HistoryDocumentary

Seeing Red: Stories of American Communists

- They were a special breed of American outlaw... and their story has never been told.

A unique documentary that looks at the political activities of the American Communist Party in the early to mid-twentieth century.

Release Date : 1983-10-04

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Heartland Productions

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Oscar Hunter

Character Name : Himself - Printer

Original Name : Oscar Hunter

Gender : Male

Rose Podmaka

Character Name : Herself - Steel Mill Worker

Original Name : Rose Podmaka

Gender : Male

Sylvia Woods

Character Name : Herself - Auto Worker

Original Name : Sylvia Woods

Gender : Male

Howard 'Stretch' Johnson

Character Name : Himself - College Professor

Original Name : Howard 'Stretch' Johnson

Gender : Male

Bill Bailey

Character Name : Himself - Seaman and Longshoreman

Original Name : Bill Bailey

Gender : Male

Edna Whitehouse

Character Name : Self - Legal Secretary

Original Name : Edna Whitehouse

Gender : Male

Ruth Maguire

Character Name : Self - Program Administrator

Original Name : Ruth Maguire

Gender : Male

Stanley Postek

Character Name : Self - Seaman

Original Name : Stanley Postek

Gender : Male

Dorothy Ray Healey

Character Name : Self - Party Leader (as Dorothy Healey)

Original Name : Dorothy Ray Healey

Gender : Male

Carl Hirsch

Character Name : Self - Writer

Original Name : Carl Hirsch

Gender : Male

Pete Seeger

Character Name : Self - Folksinger

Original Name : Pete Seeger

Gender : Male

Marge Frantz

Character Name : Self - Southern Activist

Original Name : Marge Frantz

Gender : Male

Rose Kryzak

Character Name : Self - Actuarial Clerk

Original Name : Rose Kryzak

Gender : Male

Al Prago

Character Name : Self - Labor Educator

Original Name : Al Prago

Gender : Male

Muriel Eldridge

Character Name : Self - Secretary

Original Name : Muriel Eldridge

Gender : Male

Flo Lorenz

Character Name : Voice over (voice)

Original Name : Flo Lorenz

Gender : Male

Leon Holster

Character Name : Voice over (voice) (as Leon Hollster)

Original Name : Leon Holster

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2025-06-22

The introduction from the then President Reagan gives us an indication of what’s to come as he adopts that hale-fellow-well-met approach of his to warn of the continuing dangers to the USA of ever-expanding Communism. Thereafter, for about ten minutes, we see examples of the congressional accusatory and defensive rhetoric that abounded during the “witch-hunt” period and subsequently. Then, though, rather counterintuitively it starts to talk to people . Ordinary people. Ordinary socialists or people of the left wing involved in the trades union movement as far back as the 1930s or with anti-war protests - and what many of them say makes eminent sense. They refer back to the whole principles of the founding fathers creating a free America. Free for thought, work, bringing up your family. Free from government interference, censorship and bullying. Many of these contributors are professional, coherent, sensible and rational as they put forward plans, extolled contemporaneously but now largely reported retrospectively, to provide for education, religious freedom, an end to racial segregation and sexual discrimination. Indeed, the vast majority of the views put forward here have little, if anything, to do with the perceptions prevalent of the Stalinist or Brezhnev’s Soviet Union. Often, it’s a communism in it’s undiluted, depoliticised, form that could convince readily that it is something all can benefit from. Latterly, it does inject a little more realism to that idealism as it clearly illustrates that communist principles don’t always transfer well to government. All too easily, radicalised Orwellian scenarios can develop and lies and deceit can be used to convince those naïve and gullible that everyone is working, eating, warm and safe - when actually the situation is largely the same only the political class is just wearing a different coloured rosette. There is a great deal of well researched and powerful archive here that vacillates from the verbal shenanigans of the politicians to the more measured and reasoned commentators, both pro and anti, who actually formulate a less reactionary and more considered debate. It’s that debate that I can’t imagine was what the producers actually wanted, because they most certainly don’t present us with a film that would have your curtains twitching to report your neighbour Ivan to the feds. It’s full of fear and paranoia, certainly, but if you are watching with any sense of perspective then this might not be as ominous as you might expect.