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Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst

Play trailer Poster for Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst Released Nov 26, 2004 1h 29m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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89% Tomatometer 45 Reviews 82% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
Director Robert Stone chronicles the bizarre story of Patty Hearst, granddaughter of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. In 1974, Hearst was kidnapped by a fringe domestic terrorist group known as the Symbionese Liberation Army while attending the University of California at Berkeley. She then joined the group, taking the pseudonym "Tania." Hearst would eventually be convicted for helping the group with a bank robbery, and become a poster child for Stockholm Syndrome.
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Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst

Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst

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Critics Consensus

Guerilla is a riveting documentary that chronicles in enlightening fashion the 1974 kidnapping of heiress Patty Hearst.

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Critics Reviews

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Owen Gleiberman Entertainment Weekly A gripping documentary that uses voluminous period evidence ... to brilliantly reconstruct the entire freak event. Rated: A Sep 7, 2011 Full Review Empire Magazine Rated: 4/5 Apr 1, 2006 Full Review Terry Lawson Detroit Free Press A mostly compelling and exceedingly fair-minded look back at the case. Rated: 3/4 Mar 25, 2005 Full Review Miles Fielder The List By rejecting the view of the SLA as folk heroes, Stone presents a compelling document of a misguided political movement that epitomizes the butt end of the protest movement come the mid-1970s. Rated: 4/5 Apr 24, 2019 Full Review Louis Proyect rec.arts.movies.reviews Urban terrorism inspired by Robin Hood. Jan 15, 2006 Full Review Film Threat Rated: 4.5/5 Dec 6, 2005 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Joel C An interesting look at kids in the 70's who tried to stand up against the US system. Their initial intentions seemed like what was needed in the country - for the poor to be fed and what not, but their methods were so stupid and contradictory to their message that they just seemed like kids with guns and crazy ideas. And Patty... Patty, Patty, Patty, gets off with a slap on the wrist and gets the celebrity life. Meanwhile, the rest get the bad end of the stick. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 03/16/21 Full Review Audience Member "Unsettling" is an apt word for describing director Robert Stone's documentary. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member "L'enlèvement de Patty Hearst" Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member An astonishing story, some great footage and field recordings. How they've managed to make this a rather dull 1.5hrs is beyond me. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member I looked all this stuff up on Wikipedia the other day; I don't remember why. My whole life, I'd known at least vaguely of who Patty Hearst was. I'd seen that picture, that famous picture, many, many times. I'd read the old [i]Doonesbury[/i] strips on the subject. I'd laughed hugely at her portrayal of Wanda's Mom in [i]Cry-Baby[/i]. And, eventually, I pieced together at least some of the story. As much of the story as most people know, I guess, and more than most people my age, almost certainly. But until a couple of weeks ago, I honestly had no idea why the group that kidnapped her was called the Symbionese Liberation Army. In my head, I vaguely paralelled it with the Palestinian Liberation Organization, a looming presence of my politically-aware childhood. I was never sure, however, what group the Symbionese were. (For the curious, it's a word invented by Donald DeFreeze, the group's original leader, based on the word "symbiosis.") This documentary really starts with the first major action of the SLA, the assassination of Oakland school superintendent Dr. Marcus Foster and wounding of his deputy, Robert Blackburn. Two SLA members went to prison for this shooting. Following that, on 4 February, 1974, the SLA kidnapped heiress Patricia Campbell Hearst, granddaughter of William Randolph Hearst. The SLA told the family that they would free her if the imprisoned members were released, which of course the family could not do. Then, they demanded that the family distribute enormous amounts of food to the poor, a program that didn't really work. Eventually, the tapes that they released from Patty had her declaring her rejection of her family and society and her taking the new name Tania. It was after this that she took part in the Hibernia Bank robbery, the group's most famous activity. Later, five SLA members (including DeFreeze) were killed as part of a firefight in Los Angeles. Eventually, Hearst was captured, tried, and convicted for her role in the Hibernia Bank robbery. She later had her sentence commuted by Jimmy Carter and was pardoned by Bill Clinton. The film takes essentially no stance on Hearst's claims that she was brainwashed by the SLA. While her story is used as a frame to hold the story together and her name features prominently in one of the titles under which this was released, there is little detail about Hearst herself mentioned. The details of the SLA's activities rate more mention. Hearst is not among those former SLA members interviewed, though I doubt she would have agreed to be so if asked. There is, at the end, a brief shot of a young, clean-cut Patty Hearst beaming at the camera after her commutation; this, I think, serves to remind us that no other member of the organization received such favourable treatment--though Russell Little, one of two men convicted in the Foster murder, was eventually acquitted in a retrial in 1981. He [i]is[/i] one of the ones interviewed. Groups like this frustrate me. They put so much effort into their bank robberies and their gun stockpiling. In fact, it was impulsive shoplifting on the part of member William Harris that indirectly caused the deaths of DeFreeze, Nancy Ling Perry, Angela Atwood, Willie Wolfe (after whom Stephen King named his infamous rabid dog--his [i]nom de guerre[/i] was Cujo), and Patricia Soltysik. The sequence of events is hard to follow and harder to believe, but it's true. Yes, the SLA got some poor people in California fed, but since the food distribution was poorly organized, the distribution in one area led to violence and all of it was shut down. Other than that, I am curious as to what anyone thinks they accomplished. The only member most people can name these days is Patty Hearst, and she has long since rejected their values if she ever really espoused them in the first place. Surely that effort could have been put to better use elsewhere. If Hearst has never shown real remorse about her crimes, it's hard to consider the others to have done so, either. In the disc's special features, there is footage from the Sacramento courthouse where four of the SLA members pleaded guilty to the murder of bank teller Myrna Opsahl, killed in the Crocker Bank robbery, where Hearst allegedly drove the getaway car. William Harris expressed the opinion that putting him in prison wouldn't solve anything--possibly true--and that it was a great hardship on his family, even comparing it briefly to the hardship Opsahl's family suffered upon her death. It's really horrible. Even if they do feel remorse, none of them went out of their way to ensure that they would make amends to the family for it. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Audience Member A decent documentary about the Symbionese Liberation Army and the whole Patty Hearst kidnapping episode. My only qualm was that it seemed just a tad one sided (Patty Hearst was notably absent in the interviews (I don't blame her since the movie doesn't exactly cast her in a favorable light.)) The documentary didn't exactly shed any more light into the matter or that time period for me, but it was still very interesting just to see the archival news footage, voice recordings, and interviews from former SLA members. As a bonus, you'll find yourself debating with your friends over the legitimacy of the Stockholm Syndrome and whether or not Patty Hearst was afllicted with that or was just another Proximity Infatuated whore. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/30/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst

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Movie Info

Synopsis Director Robert Stone chronicles the bizarre story of Patty Hearst, granddaughter of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. In 1974, Hearst was kidnapped by a fringe domestic terrorist group known as the Symbionese Liberation Army while attending the University of California at Berkeley. She then joined the group, taking the pseudonym "Tania." Hearst would eventually be convicted for helping the group with a bank robbery, and become a poster child for Stockholm Syndrome.
Director
Robert Stone
Producer
Robert Stone
Distributor
Magnolia Pictures
Production Co
Robert Stone Productions
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Nov 26, 2004, Wide
Release Date (Streaming)
Sep 6, 2016
Box Office (Gross USA)
$101.4K
Runtime
1h 29m
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