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Pirates of the 20th Century

Pirates of the 20th Century (1979)

August. 08,1980
|
6.7
| Adventure Action

A Soviet cargo ship carrying medical opium gets attacked by pirates of an unknown nationality. The crew is left to die on a sinking ship but they manage to escape and now must fight the pirates for survival.

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Reviews

Karry
1980/08/08

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Listonixio
1980/08/09

Fresh and Exciting

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Kien Navarro
1980/08/10

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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Kamila Bell
1980/08/11

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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Leofwine_draca
1980/08/12

PIRATES OF THE 20TH CENTURY is a Russian thriller about hijackers attacking the crew of a Russian ship carrying medical supplies. It has much in common with the recent likes of CAPTAIN PHILLIPS and A HIJACKING but obviously feels a bit rusty and inferior given that it was made on a lower budget decades before. What is a surprise is how well-paced and fast this film is, the kind of thriller that keeps you watching throughout.Some reviewers on this site make this sound like a martial arts movie and there are a few fight scenes, but they're certainly not constant. The early fight back against the pirates is the main set-piece. The rest keeps the narrative going with various twists and turns and unforeseen events, and it's filmed in a gritty, realistic way which I found to be a nice change of pace for Russian cinema.

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hte-trasme
1980/08/13

This film was very successful when it came out, for reasons that also make it difficult to evaluate in a vacuum today. In 1979 action'adventure films with Kung Fu were something new in Soviet cinema, and this example caused a sensation. There's even a sense that the filmmakers new this is all they had to do -- the movie has manifestly no designs on a complicated plot or characters, or on anything other than being a straightforward, fast-moving crime film. It almost seems to be shooting at being a plain, unadorned, platonic example of a genre film, which makes it suit nicely the needs of an introduction to Soviet action thrillers, but ensures it doesn't seem like anything special in comparison with similar films of other countries and/or future years. While it presents something new in the realm of contextualized genre for its viewers, it relies on some very old tropes and some rather imperialistic views of island life, and generically-drug-related international criminals. It's also surprisingly open in its violence, with people shown being shot, burned, and tortured quite unflinchingly. This against a rather idyllic-looking spotless blue sea. On it's own, this movie doesn't seem like much apart from easily- digested but insubstantial light action such as may have been produced anywhere, but the fact of its release and success in context give it some historical interest as well.

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_Sergey_
1980/08/14

It was the first action movie made in banned in USSR Hollywood action style. It is not even close to the Hollywood action movies of that time. The plot is childish, the directing is so-so. This movie succeeded because it was first of its kind in Russia. Even though I watched it many times I have to admit it was kind of naive and I did not like it. This is not the best example of Russian action movie. This is just the first experience.

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atolk
1980/08/15

Exotic locations, big guns, long, tan legs, martial arts -- this movie had everything Soviet teens so longed to see. Back in the days when Rocky and Rambo where denounced as propaganda of violence, VCR's were scarce and movie tickets still cost 50 kopeks, the question to any Russian young man was not whether he saw "The Pirates of the XX Century", but how many times. A "10" in the 1979 Soviet Union, it is no match for today's Die Hard type movies. It does not have the THX sound, or big budget explosions, or even a big star, who can not only flex muscles, but deliver a large than life emotional performance. In fact, it is more realistic than Die Hard in that it pitches a whole ship's crew against the bad guys, rather than a superhuman loner. Naturally, there are talented and brave leaders, but every deck hand gets an important job he has to carry out before the Soviet freighter, hijacked by the modern day pirates, is freed. A concept so close to the Soviet propagandists' hearts that the movie actually made it to the screens - the first of its kind. It paved the way to many more homegrown action flicks, some better, most worse, all eventually beaten out by Hollywood. But if one wants to know what stuff the Russian boys of the 80's are made of, "Piraty" is a must.

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