After several very arty and innovative olympic movies this is the return to dry documentary without much artistic ideas. Yes, we get plenty of information, pretty good cinematography and a lot of interviews but ot much more. For middle aged americans it is close to hearts because Los Angeles 1984 were ultra reaganist, ultra american, ultra cold war olympics and some of them love this era. But still, for nonamericans it has not much to offer.
16 Days of Glory
1985
Action / Documentary / Sport
16 Days of Glory
1985
Action / Documentary / Sport
Plot summary
The definitive photographic record of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, told "from the inside" through the lives of the participants, the words of David Perry, and the singing voice of Placido Domingo. From the opening to closing ceremonies, this unique style of storytelling shows a side of the Olympic Games not seen by television audiences.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
Boring and dry documentary of the olympics
1984 Los Angeles Olympics definitive documentary
This documentary deals with the personal stories of Olympic athletes at the 1984 Gsmes in Los Angeles. They all have one common denominator, the motivation to compete at the highest level and to sacrifice a good portion of their lives to their sport. At the end of the day, they know they've done well by just being there and win or lose, they find the years of training have left them with something of great value. The Americans dominated these Olympics and to be honest, these Games were a huge gift to the United States performing on their own turf without the competition of East Bloc countries, who followed the lead of the Soviet Union in withdrawing from the Olympics. Los Angeles nonetheless did register a great triumph in their second time as host city; the first was in 1932. The huge Art Deco arch was once again on display as a magnificent backdrop for the competitions. The successes and heartbreaks, the physical pain and heroism, the suspense and rivalries were all there. The history of the Olympics is a great drama, and like the world we live in, it is often marred by war, politics and even terrorism. Yet the athletes themselves show us so much inspiration, courage and epic achievement that we cannot fail to be impressed time and again by these tremendous spectacles.
Worth Every Minute
I just finished watching this documentary by Bud Greenspan. It was worth every minute of the almost 5 hours of film (4:42). It covers athletes from all over the world (well, it's the Olympics)... their challenges, victories, defeats... and no political commentary. The final 10 minutes with Placido singing "Hymn to the Nations" along with the coverage of the closing ceremonies... absolutely inspirational. (Minus 1 star for the monotone almost robotic voice of the narrator.)