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  1. Reviews. Gorky Park. Action. 128 minutes ‧ 1983. Roger Ebert. December 16, 1983. 3 min read. Mystery fans talk about the “police procedural,” a crime novel that follows police work, step by meticulous step, from the opening of a case to its eventual resolution. The crimes aren’t always solved, but then the solution isn’t really the point.

  2. Gorky Park is a 1983 American mystery thriller film based on the 1981 novel by Martin Cruz Smith.The film was directed by Michael Apted.. The film stars William Hurt as Arkady Renko, Lee Marvin as Jack Osborne, Joanna Pacuła as Irina Asanova, Rikki Fulton as Major Pribluda, Brian Dennehy as William Kirwill, Ian McDiarmid as Professor Andreev, Michael Elphick as Pasha and Ian Bannen as Prosecutor Iamskoy.

  3. Gorky Park. R Released Dec 16, 1983 2h 8m Mystery & Thriller CTA List. 78% Tomatometer 27 Reviews 59% Popcornmeter 2,500+ Ratings. Soviet detective Arkady Renko (William Hurt) uncovers a vast ...

    • (27)
    • Michael Apted
    • R
    • William Hurt
  4. Dec 19, 2023 · Gorky Park is a gripping crime thriller that captivated audiences when it was released in 1983. Based on the novel of the same name by Martin Cruz Smith, the movie takes viewers on a thrilling journey through the depths of Soviet Moscow. Directed by Michael Apted, Gorky Park stars William Hurt as Arkady Renko, a Moscow police investigator ...

  5. Gorky Park is well done and unique amid the films of its day. ... William Hurt is superb as a Moscow militia detective caught between his desires to be simply a good cop and the unfathomable ...

  6. Gorky Park: Directed by Michael Apted. With William Hurt, Lee Marvin, Brian Dennehy, Ian Bannen. A Moscow police officer investigates a vicious triple homicide and stumbles upon a high-level international political conspiracy.

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  8. "Gorky Park" lacks in flow and rhythm, painfully slow and morose, only hitting good notes when creating moments of enjoyable action. On the bright side, we must appreciate the excellent use of locations in Helsink doubling for URSS, since they couldn't film in there, and Helsink proves to be a fine choice, beautifully photographed by cinematographer Ralf D. Bode.