The Golden Moment: An Olympic Love Story (TV Movie 1980) Poster

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7/10
My brief review of the film
sol-15 January 2005
An initially drone sports film with a love twist, it nevertheless becomes amusing and enjoyable as it goes along. During its lengthy duration, the characters and the story both become increasing involving. There are some stylish touches at times and at times it is quite well shot, but it is no masterpiece of its type. As interesting as the story and the characters become, the film hardly does anything brilliant. It is a good film – surprisingly not too long – but nevertheless nothing too special. It was first telecast in two parts to coincide with the actual 1980 Olympics. The two-part version ran for at least three and a quarter hours; for video release the film was cut down, and that is version that I've seen (173 minutes on a PAL cassette).
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8/10
A well written movie, and good acting from Zimbalist and Lawson.
mahmoodrazak14 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The story revolves around Wayne Robinson, a man seeking to become a football pro. After a head injury is aggravated after a fall during a rodeo contest off season back home, doctors told him it was a risk, and pro agents advised no one will sign him as he was an insurance risk.

Robinson then tries out for the US track and field olympic team, as he still has the speed as a football amateur. He makes the cut, and so goes into full training. He is always in the shadow of American star athlete Gene Davis aka The Black Shadow, tipped to become the fastest man on earth at the 1980 Moscow Games.

During the run-up to Moscow, a US-Russia "friendly games" is organised in USA, and Robinson meets Viktor Andreyev, a track and field athlete from Russia. They both of course lose out to Davis, but stuck a friendship. Robinson invites him to dinner, and they end up watching Andreyev's sister, Anya, perform at a gymnastics competition. Robinson is awe-struck by Ms Andreyev's beauty. They have secret meetings during the tournament, which was rebuked by her coach.

Still, they meet again in Moscow, and Viktor even invited Robinson to the family home for dinner. The competition then begins, and when they are discovered, Viktor blames Robinson. Anya even showed Robinson an apartment and how she wishes to decorate it when Robinson marries her.

After the games, in the plane, Robinson gets a parcel from Anya. She gifts him her gold medal, and pledges her love for him eternally, writing "there's no miles, no politics, that can change my feelings for you".

I enjoyed this movie a lot, and now have a copy on order from truetvmovies.com.

in Moscow,
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7/10
Made-for-TV miniseries as a tribute to 1980 USA Olympic athletes
BobbyT247 April 2020
I remember this two-part NBC miniseries running when the 1980 Moscow Olympics were boycotted by the United States. It was supposed to coincide with the Games, but instead was run as a tribute. I saw both parts when I was still in high school and it made a distinct, positive impression on me.

Plot: Wayne Robinson is a college football player drafted into the NFL. But before he joins the team, he gets a head-injury during a rodeo. He is diagnosed as a "health risk" by the doctors so he is no longer insurable by professional football. Since he still has his elite speed, he tries out for the Olympic team in the decathlon and makes the cut to begin training alongside brash American phenom, Gene Davis. Leading up to the 1980 Moscow Games, a "friendly" series of athletic events are held where Wayne meets Viktor Andreyev, a friendly Russian decathlete and they become fast friends. Viktor invites Wayne to watch his little sister, Anya, compete in gymnastics at the same event. Wayne and Anya are immediately smitten but need to keep it a secret. As they arrive in Moscow for the Olympics, Viktor invites Wayne to dinner with his family. Wayne and Anya date secretly on the side until Viktor finds out and pushes them apart. I won't give any further details, but suffice to say this is a romantic drama between two star-crossed (re: Cold War) lovers during a boycott.

I remember being immediately smitten with the lovely Stephanie Zimbalist (pre-"Remington Steele). I'm sure she broke many a schoolboy's heart with her sweet Russian accent and tear-stained eyes. As any athlete/ex-athlete will attest, love in the midst of athletic competition is not only heightened, but can be either the ultimate euphoria or the most devastatingly catastrophic low, depending on the outcome.

This film was one of my "white whales". Whenever I would mention "The Golden Moment" as one of my most special memories, everyone I spoke to had never heard of it. Who remembers a "one-off" miniseries from 40 years ago?? I had to search for decades before FINALLY coming across an old VHS copy recently (the bland brown cardboard box was uninspiring and the tape had been edited down to 1hr-58mins VHS vs. the original 3+ hour network premiere). This has never been released on DVD to my knowledge. It is standard "movie-of-the-week" fare -- cheap sets (re: high school track meets, dark backgrounds for cheering crowds, obvious stand-ins doing the events, etc.), weak dialogue/accents, predictable storyline... but this movie still checks many boxes in relation to competition, casting, and long-distance love affairs. And look at that cast... James Earl Jones, Merlin Olsen, Victor French, Jack Palance, David Keith, Stephanie Zimbalist... My goodness! The plot may be considered cheesy by most standards, but if you saw it back in the day, you really felt for the two attractive leads and their pre-Communist downfall dilemma.

I still think people like Wayne and Anya could exist in this world. I would hope that they would have met again under much happier, less political times. In my heart, I hope they were able to unite their medal count under the same roof. And, yes, Anya still has a special place in my memories!

This movie was very standard stuff. Nothing groundbreaking. But it still hits a sweet spot in my heart. "The Golden Moment" may not win the gold medal, but it definitely is worth being a member of the Olympic team - even if it is the only American to ever appear at the 1980 Moscow Olympics.
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7/10
The best laid plans,...
minicinema26 August 2008
I haven't seen this since the original airing and the recently concluded 2008 olympics reminded me of it. I recall it being a cut above the typical made-for-TV fare. David Keith was a football player who's injured just before beginning his pro career so he decides to become an Olympic decathalete instead. The decathalon was big back then because of Bruce Jenner.

Ironically enough, the film is set during the 1980 Moscow games which the US wound up boycotting. So instead of being a tie-in to the games, it would up being broadcast as a "tribute" to the athletes who couldn't compete.
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