Top 10 American Civil War Films - Historian Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 408

  • @VloggingThroughHistory
    @VloggingThroughHistory  Год назад +236

    I should note that "Spaghetti Westerns" were often filmed in other European nations like Spain, but produced and directed by Italians (thus the name)

    • @chancellor1055
      @chancellor1055 Год назад +6

      And starred Italians and other European actors and actresses

    • @DreynHarry
      @DreynHarry Год назад +4

      you took my reply away - so you get the posting here as answer 🙂

    • @PaulMcElligott
      @PaulMcElligott Год назад +2

      @@chancellor1055 And every actor was speaking his or her native language during filming.

    • @chancellor1055
      @chancellor1055 Год назад

      @@PaulMcElligott very true

    • @chancellor1055
      @chancellor1055 Год назад

      @@PaulMcElligottI believe it was called the ‘tower of babel shooting style’ but I may be wrong ( I learned that from once upon a time in Hollywood)

  • @JohnnyOlsson
    @JohnnyOlsson Год назад +84

    One of my favorite random facts is about Robert Gould Shaw (so greatly portrayed by Matthew Broderick) and the aftermath of his death. The Confederates would return the bodies of fallen Union officers, but in the case of Shaw, they buried him in a mass grave with his black troops. This was meant as an insult, but Shaw's family openly declared it as an honor and that "We would not have his body removed from where it lies surrounded by his brave and devoted soldiers. ... We can imagine no holier place than that in which he lies, among his brave and devoted followers, nor wish for him better company."

    • @corkyduke8673
      @corkyduke8673 5 месяцев назад

      That is proof that there were people living in the 19th century that weren't racist!

  • @markadams7046
    @markadams7046 Год назад +54

    I loved Day-Lewis's voice of Lincoln. I've heard that those who wrote about Lincoln's voice in his day wrote that he had a somewhat high pitch and squeaky voice which Day-Lewis seems to have presented in this movie, unlike the deep and low voice that so many other portrayals by other actors have done.

    • @msspi764
      @msspi764 Год назад +4

      He also kept his Kentucky accent throughout his life, as did Mary. That's a kind of southern accent with a slight drawl.

  • @chrisj.9882
    @chrisj.9882 Год назад +33

    I remember when Gettysburg came out, Shelby Foote praised Martin Sheen's perfomance as Lee, saying we tend to portray Lee as all stoic and made of marble, and Foote thought that Sheen's performance did a better job capturing what he was really like in a battle. Take that for what it's worth.

  • @steve3847
    @steve3847 Год назад +29

    The Outlaw Josey Wales is a phenomenal film. I can appreciate how it showed Union soldiers and commanders in a more realistic light. They were the good guys but a lot of them weren’t angels.

    • @steve3847
      @steve3847 Год назад +3

      @geraldh3932 I know, but the film isn’t saying those are admirable qualities.

    • @karlketamine8172
      @karlketamine8172 Год назад +2

      @geraldh3932 but the movie wasn't made by white supremacists and they didn't even know that the book was. The important part is at the end of the movie is about love and tolerance

    • @marknewton6984
      @marknewton6984 Месяц назад

      A great movie! 😮

  • @user-oh6eg4ny3h
    @user-oh6eg4ny3h Год назад +10

    Fun fact in gettysburg the guy who plays Pickett is the same guy who plays the antagonist in avatar. “Your not in Kansas anymore, your on pandora”

    • @aptech1119
      @aptech1119 Год назад +2

      He also played stonewall Jackson in God's n Generals

    • @stc3145
      @stc3145 Год назад +2

      He was the good guy in Avatar

  • @coachgoltzbizpro23
    @coachgoltzbizpro23 Год назад +23

    If you choose to see Gone With The Wind for Hattie's performance, you will NOT be disappointed. The energy she brought to Mammy still sticks out to me as one of the best parts of the movie.

    • @grizzledmillennial4765
      @grizzledmillennial4765 Год назад +7

      McDaniel then was escorted, not to the Gone With the Wind table - where Selznick sat with de Havilland and his two Oscar-nominated leads, Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable - but to a small table set against a far wall, where she took a seat with her escort, F.P. Yober, and her white agent, William Meiklejohn. With the hotel’s strict no-blacks policy, Selznick had to call in a special favor just to have McDaniel allowed into the building.

    • @Alexs.2599
      @Alexs.2599 Год назад +4

      @@grizzledmillennial4765 Yeah that was an absolute travesty. She and other African Americans did not deserve that kind of treatment. So disrespectful.

    • @terryp3034
      @terryp3034 Год назад

      This film also captured the strain and anxiety of the civilian population. The "hard war" made survival more difficult for both Whites and Blacks. Also, the slaves obviously looked forward to the freedom that came with advancing union armies but there was great uncertainty about what those soldiers would be like. The film expresses all that.

  • @iandhunt80
    @iandhunt80 Год назад +33

    Just gotta say. As a kid who remembers when the wall fell in Europe your ability to explain not only the history but how you felt about history as you watched it unfold is completely refreshing for some reaction channels. Your ability to provide insight and relevant information is what makes your channel stand out. Keep it up!

  • @charliet1535
    @charliet1535 Год назад +18

    Hattie's Acceptance Speech...
    HATTIE McDANIEL:
    Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science[s], fellow members of the motion picture industry and honored guests. This is one of the happiest moments of my life, and I want to thank each one of you who had a part in selecting me for one of the awards for your kindness. It has made me feel very, very humble and I shall always hold it as a beacon for anything I may be able to do in the future. I sincerely hope I shall always be a credit to my race and to the motion picture industry. My heart is too full to tell you just how I feel. And may I say thank you and God bless you.

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie2640 Год назад +26

    I think "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" is also a very good anti-war movie, not so much because it is about the US Civil War but because of Sergio Leone's own experiences in Italy during WW2. It reflects the "ugly" aspects of warfare in general, like the drumhead executions of enemies or deserters, the maltreatment of POWs, the futility of fighting for specific "strategical" objectives, etc.

    • @Nosliw837
      @Nosliw837 Год назад +2

      The part near the end where Blondie let's that young, mortally wounded kid drag on the cigar gets me every time.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 Год назад

      @@Nosliw837 Yeah, me too.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 Год назад

      @Gerald H I agree. And the fact that this was a real bridge that was really blown up (twice), makes it even better.

  • @edmeister4031
    @edmeister4031 Год назад +10

    I wish there were more Civil War movies like Lincoln. We always talk about and see the battles (in movies), but rarely the politics and diplomacy that was going on behind the scenes. The Lincoln movie only dealt primarily with the Passage of the 13th Amendment, and the politics behind it, and I found it so fascinating to see just that small portion of the Civil War be brought to the screen. I would love to see more movies or series exploring the politics and the factionalism within the Union during the Civil War Era, and how Lincoln dealt with it.

    • @celston51
      @celston51 Год назад +2

      There are a few. Copperhead (2013) and The Conspirator (2010) are both largely political and social history movies. Gangs of New York is...loosely based on the Draft Riots of 1863 and its definitely about factionalism.

    • @karlkarlos3545
      @karlkarlos3545 Год назад +3

      @@celston51I always found it funny that Daniel Day-Lewis plays the lead in both Gangs of New York and Lincoln. Makes for a epic double feature.

  • @douglasiles2024
    @douglasiles2024 Год назад +8

    Stephen Lang's casting as Pickett was a great choice too, as Lang is an avid reader of history. I think he portrayed the "dashing cavalier" attitude and persona that Pickett was known to have exceptionally well.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 Год назад +11

    Speaking of Clark Gable, my father was in the Army Air Corps during World War Two and was stationed at the same base as Clark Gable. We have a photo of my dad and Clark standing together in front of one of the bombers at the base. My dad got introduced to him because of his drawing skills- he did cartoon type portraits of his fellow soldiers and celebrities and did some of Clark that gained the attention of his commanding officers. We have some of those drawings still in our family photo collection. (Except the one of Clark, it disappeared before he came home.) Damn!😢

  • @Equilibrium21
    @Equilibrium21 Год назад +47

    I'm Greek but your videos and Grand Tactician: Civil War got me hooked on the American Civil War

    • @BlueSideUp77
      @BlueSideUp77 Год назад +4

      Awesome!

    • @anonrex565
      @anonrex565 Год назад +3

      I am also Greek and his reaction videos got me hooked on the Civil War!

    • @BlueSideUp77
      @BlueSideUp77 Год назад +2

      ​@@anonrex565 There's a lot of great men, tactics, and lessons to be learned from the struggle.

  • @RichardDicksondlyrch68
    @RichardDicksondlyrch68 Год назад +6

    I always liked how Red Badge of Courage showed how unnerving hearing the Rebel yell coming towards you must have been.

  • @jasonkiefer1894
    @jasonkiefer1894 Год назад +3

    Glory is the only choice for #1. Set during the Civil War, about the Civil War, showing the Civil War. Great acting, great themes. I like the list and have seen most of the movies. Like you, I have not seen Gone with the Wind. Got it for Christmas one year and watched the bonus features, but not the movie yet. 😮

  • @Letterman0412
    @Letterman0412 Год назад +2

    I had to rewatch Glory after seeing this video and it turns out Robert Shaw's letters to his family are actually available to read online which is fascinating to me. They even have the letter sent to his family informing them of his death at Fort Wagner.

  • @imjusthereish
    @imjusthereish Год назад +3

    A fun fact about the Red Badge of Courage: Stephen Crane (the author) never served in the war himself (in fact, he was born in 1871), but the story was praised by Civil War veterans for its accurate depiction, not just of battle, but of the different emotions that the men experienced in battle. Many veterans would express astonishment upon learning Crane himself had never served in the war. A wonderful video, as always, Chris. Best of luck and blessings!

  • @alpharius4434
    @alpharius4434 Год назад +3

    Chris, I love how your passion can be felt in this video and commentary.

  • @bold1066
    @bold1066 Год назад +1

    In Glory, that end where they are line up and march/charge to the fort and the bells start ringing… gets me every time. What a great movie, it deserves the top spot for sure.
    As for Ricard Jordan in The Hunt for the Red October, my favorite line was again from the end, “Andrei, you’ve lost another submarine?”

  • @jaredmize960
    @jaredmize960 Год назад +2

    I remember watching glory in my 8th grade American history class. Since then I’ve probably rewatched it over 20 times. Absolutely fantastic movie, no doubt it should be number one.

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie2640 Год назад +21

    Buster Keaton's "The General" certainly is one of the great film classics in cinematic history. Keaton was an absolute madlad. He insisted on doing all effects in reality, even the scene where the locomotive falls into the river. So what you saw in that scene where the bridge collapses - that's a real locomotive, a real collapsing bridge and one of the most expensive (in relative terms) movie effects of all times.

    • @deteon1418
      @deteon1418 Год назад

      Scheiße, I was about to comment that movie when I saw this comment. But YES, "The General" is a fantastic movie, one of the best of the silent era, and Buster Keaton's best achievement! The stunts and action are phenomenal in all of Keaton's movies, but this one in particular. It is unfortunate that it failed at the Box office however. A must see!

    • @briangarrow448
      @briangarrow448 Год назад +1

      Buster Keaton makes Tom Cruise look like a amateur.

    • @deteon1418
      @deteon1418 Год назад +3

      @@briangarrow448
      "Tom Cruise? Never heard of him. Anyways, back to having walls falling on me."
      Buster Keaton's Ghost Probably

    • @insightfulhistorian1861
      @insightfulhistorian1861 Год назад

      The Outlaw Josey Wales has to be one the best civil war movies in my view.

    • @insightfulhistorian1861
      @insightfulhistorian1861 Год назад

      ​@@deteon1418 Sadly, I doubt most people would take a silent movie on the Civil War seriously, especially because of Birth of a Nation.

  • @JGKrump
    @JGKrump Год назад +1

    The scene in Glory showing the 54th Regiment just before the climatic battle is one of the best in any film of all time.

  • @GodlessScummer
    @GodlessScummer Год назад +2

    Hi mate loved your channel.
    I should just say that I had a very minor part in the making of Cold Mountain.
    I used to do US Civil War re-enactments and a sound crew came to record us firing some volleys for use in that movie.

  • @RBomb62
    @RBomb62 Год назад +1

    A movie that you should watch thats based off of history is Ridley Scott's "The Duellists". I know that it doesn't have anything to do with the civil war, but if anyone can appreciate the history behind it, it would be you and the community.

  • @McCroda
    @McCroda Год назад +1

    Glory has been my favorite movie since I first saw it back in '89. Can't even count the number of times I've seen it.

  • @Clicint
    @Clicint Год назад

    I love the line in Gettysburg where a lady asks "Is there to be a disturbance in our town?" To which one of Buford's officers replies "Nothing the cavalry can't handle, ma'am."

  • @alexanderg1297
    @alexanderg1297 Год назад +2

    A lot of spaghetti westerns were also shot in Spain. The finale of The Good The Bad and The Ugly was filmed in desert in Spain.

  • @GeoJesser
    @GeoJesser Год назад +2

    Can we also just talk about Gettysburg's soundtrack? We watched that movie in high school as part of our Civil War unit and then visited Gettysburg, and just hearing the soundtrack brings back all those memories. What a movie.

  • @nikos5507
    @nikos5507 Год назад +2

    I wasn’t aware that Gettysburg had so much criticism. I watched it a year ago, and have rewatched it multiple times since. It has become one of my favorite war films, though I understand it isn’t for everyone.

  • @jimivey6462
    @jimivey6462 Год назад

    In 1939, my Great Aunt took her teenage nephews (my father & uncle) to the GONE WITH THE WIND Premiere in Atlanta Georgia. They saw all the actors and Margaret Mitchell. It was my mothers favorite movie.

  • @theendistheend123
    @theendistheend123 Год назад +1

    "Ride with the Devil" is one of my favorite movies(which happens to be a civil war movie.) No one has heard of it. But it will surprise you. Fantastic story

  • @Taskicore
    @Taskicore Год назад +2

    Fun fact: The Outlaw Josey Wales is Atun-Shei's favorite Civil War film.

  • @nunyabiznizz5619
    @nunyabiznizz5619 Год назад +1

    You should look into Hattie McDaniels Oscar story. She was excluded from a lot of stuff and was (apparently) almost banned from coming to the ceremony.
    I still haven't seen Glory. On my to-do list now.

  • @terryp3034
    @terryp3034 Год назад +1

    Though I can never argue with Glory being #1, my personal favorite didn't even make the list. You absolutely MUST see Ride With The Devil, directed by Ang Lee and starring Tobey McGuire, Skeet Ulrich and Jewel. Amazing film, intense and absorbing, about the border war in Missouri.

  • @TheMontross
    @TheMontross Год назад +3

    Ride with the Devil is a criminally underrated Civil War film. That it didn't even make the honorable mentions gives me the sads.

    • @theendistheend123
      @theendistheend123 Год назад +1

      So glad I'm not the only one that commented about RWTD. One of my favorite movies.

  • @pierredelasalle4731
    @pierredelasalle4731 Год назад +4

    I am really really glad that you take recommendations from the comments, i have a recommendation but it's for a series with 6 videos in total, it's one of the best history series in all of RUclips and i really hope you check it, it's called Rome Strikes Back by Epic History TV, the series is about Justinian's wars of reconquest and is Soo good for multiple reasons:
    1- the production quality is simply amazing with very beautiful maps and battle set-ups + excellent natation of Charles nove.
    2- the series is centered around a very brilliant general (one if the most brillant in history like Julius Caesar and Hannibal) but also is very humane in his approche to war
    3- you didn't cover that time period a lot in your channel so it's a good opportunity to do what this channel is all about "learning History together"
    I really hope you check it.

  • @justinlay4593
    @justinlay4593 Год назад +1

    re cameos in Gettysburg, and this one really surprised me when I found out about it: James Bond himself, I mean, George Lazenby as General Johnston Pettigrew,

  • @David-fm6go
    @David-fm6go Год назад +1

    10:31 Dances with Wolves was a commonly played movie in our house in the early 2000s, typically on a Sunday afternoon. However, there were days when I would try to cram Gods and Generals and Gettysburg in one after another after school. A combined eight hours of Civil War movies. Good times!

  • @MrKarlMANno1
    @MrKarlMANno1 Год назад +2

    Hattie McDaniels did win the Oscar, but she was also black so she could not enter the premier through the front gate. Clark Gable almost didn’t come to the premier because of it.

  • @inconspicuousiago2358
    @inconspicuousiago2358 Год назад +4

    Only a few minutes but truly missing is the opening scene from movie Free State Of Jones, gritty, dirty trench warfare without even seeing the enemy.

  • @derps8690
    @derps8690 Год назад +2

    Daniel Day-Lewis is English, however you were close... he does hold Irish citizenship, as his father was born in Ireland, though as an Anglo-Protestant. If I recall correctly, however, his first real big shot film that propelled him to stardom was his portrayal of an Irishman in "The Father" (heavily recommend, a true story), so I can see why you would think he was Irish... he's very convincing to me, an Irishman myself.

  • @danielfoster8879
    @danielfoster8879 Год назад

    Both Shenandoah and The General were filmed in my home state of Oregon. The General was filmed in the hills just east of my home town of Cottage Grove.

  • @insightfulhistorian1861
    @insightfulhistorian1861 Год назад +4

    As a civil war buff who has seen nearly every movie about the Civil War, I must nominate Ride with the Devil as an honorable mention. It's such an underrated movie, capturing the savage reality of neighbor vs neighbor on the Missouri-Kansas border.

  • @Rogue_4
    @Rogue_4 10 месяцев назад

    I am glad you called out Richard Jordan's portrayal of Armistead in Gettysburg. He is fantastic in that role and under-appreciated in general, I think. That movie did an amazing job of humanizing the men on both sides of the battle.

  • @TheHistoryUnderground
    @TheHistoryUnderground Год назад +1

    A few thoughts:
    1.) Throwing Dances With Wolves into a Civil War top 10 is a stretch.
    2.) Hollywood needs to give us a modern treatment of The General. And I want Chris Pratt to be involved somehow.
    3.) What? No “Gods and Generals”? 😂😂😂

  • @shirleybewley6646
    @shirleybewley6646 Год назад

    You MUST see Gone with the Wind! And Hattie will steal your heart! My all time favorite movie is The Good, the Bad and the Ugly!

  • @annemariecronen9096
    @annemariecronen9096 Год назад +3

    I recently found out through Ancestry and my aunt that I had a great great uncle who was a captain in the First Minnesota company B. He was wounded at Bull Run and Gettysburg, where he was third in command of the regiment. His name was Mark William Downie. Had some controversy about him, but an interesting character. There was a great article published in the Stillwater(MN)Gazette about him(where he lived after he emigrated from Canada) if interested

    • @andrewgraham4585
      @andrewgraham4585 Год назад

      My great, great, great grandfather, entered Gettysburg a lieutenant and exited captain in command of the First Minnesota, given the amount of casualties the regiment sustained in the battle, officers included. His name was Henry C. Coates. We have copies of the letters he wrote back home to the Minnesota governor and legislature describing the actions of the regiment at Gettysburg, including the heroic but costly charge to help save the Cemetery Ridge position as ordered by Hancock on the second day. So I have seen the name of your great, great uncle before.

  • @BadAxeEntertainment
    @BadAxeEntertainment Год назад +1

    We watched Andersonville in my history class in High School. Very good movie!

  • @gamelandmaster3680
    @gamelandmaster3680 Год назад

    14:42 I remember when me and my father went and bought a movie on VHS (in the late 80s) and watch 39’ movies. When I come by to my fathers home he sometimes watches a 39’ film on the tv and we both say, “Another smash in 39’ “. Now I’m back home and you say equivalently the same thing in 4 digits.

  • @carlitosmarro
    @carlitosmarro Год назад +1

    They are called spaghetti Westerns because the director, the producers and a big part of the cast were Italian. They were filmed in southern Spain (most of it) because it's a very dry and desert like area.

  • @peytonthomas4338
    @peytonthomas4338 Год назад +3

    Fun fact, the Army of the New Mexico, the Confederate Army that participated in the New Mexico Campaign, was composed almost entirely of Texans. So almost every Confederate soldier you see in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly is a Texan. So I feel the same pride watching Texan units fight the same way you feel when an Ohio unit fights. (Btw I am not a pro-Confederate. I just like seeing Texan units represented in movies).

    • @mayalackman7581
      @mayalackman7581 Год назад

      An someone from Michigan and Wisconsin I feel that way about the Iron Brigade!

  • @JohnReedy07163
    @JohnReedy07163 Год назад +1

    I absolutely love Elliot as Buford, but the same criticism for that casting can be made as Hood. John Buford was 36 at Gettysburg. Sam Elliot was 50

  • @brandonarmienti7734
    @brandonarmienti7734 Год назад +5

    Glory is the best American Civil War film I've ever seen.

  • @kiplingslastcat
    @kiplingslastcat Год назад +3

    Hey Chris! Have you ever reacted to the Lazerpig channel? That would be interesting!

  • @jstevinik3261
    @jstevinik3261 Год назад +1

    Hey, Chris! Atun Shei films made a video on why he Loves the Outlaw Josey Wales.

  • @EthanBSide
    @EthanBSide Год назад +1

    I tend to agree with your views and choices. (As a sidenote, I prefer my elder namesake be related to Sideburns... not the 2 epic failures of Generalship...)

  • @frostyfrenchtoast
    @frostyfrenchtoast Год назад

    The General is so great, especially that stunt where Buster is on the train as the wheels are turning; that stunt was so dangerous that one mistake and he’s chopped liver lmao

  • @ClergetMusic
    @ClergetMusic 6 дней назад

    Richard Jordan also played Duncan Idaho in David Lynch's 1984 version of Dune.

  • @AnnieVanAuken
    @AnnieVanAuken Год назад +1

    Before beginning this video, I'd like to mention my all time #1 war picture.
    It's GETTYSBURG (1993). For four hours you can time travel to experience this three day disaster. No victor at Gettysburg.

  • @lugerpants
    @lugerpants Год назад +1

    It's scary how much Matthew Broderick looks like Robert Gould Shaw...he could be a distant relative...Glory was so inspiring but devastating at the same time

  • @curtisferguson968
    @curtisferguson968 Год назад

    Hey Chris. Long time fan first time comment. I love your content. Me being a Conservative Christian called into the ministry and a resident of the Youngstown area there was an instant connection. You were talking about The Great Locomotive chase. But have you ever watched the movie. It's a Disney movie with Fess Parker. I remember watching it at my pastor's house when I was little. It was one of my favorite memories with him.

  • @truckstontruckston2008
    @truckstontruckston2008 Год назад +1

    Love the content and the work you put in the videos! Keep it up!

  • @salinagrrrl69
    @salinagrrrl69 Год назад

    I was at the filming of "The Blue & The Grey". I had friends in the film including Pete (an Apache American) who had a speaking part with Stacy Keatch. I saw Gregory Peck as Abe. Shanandoah had a serious flaw...of a few. The family would be hunted as guerillis for the train sabotage even after the war.

  • @brianmaphar9685
    @brianmaphar9685 Год назад

    Nice collection of Civil War movies and I agree that Glory is the top one!
    little side note: I got your reaction from Oct 5 2021, where you react to this content creator, about the WWII top 15. Here you are reacting to their top WWII movies, and wearing a Mayflower shirt as well. ;-)

  • @kellinwinslow1988
    @kellinwinslow1988 Год назад +3

    Glory is obviously great but the director, Edward Zwick,is great as well. Not only did he do Glory but also The Last Samurai which is also connected to the civil war. He also helped make the great TV show,Thirty something,and made Courage Under Fire. So his credentials are spot on. Let's not forget Cary Elwes in Glory and James Horner's fantastic soundtrack. Right up there with his music for Star Trek The Wrath Of Khan and Field Of Dreams.

  • @samuelsmith5400
    @samuelsmith5400 Год назад

    My great Aunt was once the number one Gone With The Wind collector in the world and I had the pleasure of visiting her warehouse where she holds all of her merchandise. One of the most interesting pieces, for me, had to be a photograph of Hattie McDaniel with her distinct signature. Still one of the coolest things I got to see up close and actually hold.

  • @fredlist7091
    @fredlist7091 Год назад +2

    Apologies up front, because I know you’ll have many folks chiming in with their favorite Civil War film, BUT allow me to suggest that RIDE WITH THE DEVIL starring Toby McGuire and Jeffrey Wright is a must see ACW film. Taking place in divided Missouri it follows the irregular Confederate militias and their fights in Missouri and Kansas. It particularly portrays the moral dilemmas of people forced to choose a side and the eventual disillusionment of defending the indefensible.

    • @theendistheend123
      @theendistheend123 Год назад +1

      So glad to see a few people acknowledging this GREAT movie.

  • @richardmardis2492
    @richardmardis2492 Год назад

    My Great Grandfather, lost his leg and there for missed being blown up at The Crater in Petersburg.
    His unit 18th South Carolina was right on top of the mine.

  • @Niel2760
    @Niel2760 Год назад +1

    A Jonathan Frakes shoutout? Excellent!

  • @DreynHarry
    @DreynHarry Год назад +5

    Glory was one of the first american civil war movies I have ever seen and remained to be my second favorite CW movie since then. It looses to "The General" which is my number one movie ever. Never was movie making that creative, brave and artistic. Keaton invented techniques which are still used to day and he wrote cinema history with this masterpiece.

  • @David-fm6go
    @David-fm6go Год назад

    10:18 I love Dances with Wolves and the score is just amazing.

  • @croakzyy44
    @croakzyy44 Год назад +1

    History and Film are two of my top interests so I really like this idea.

  • @beslim15
    @beslim15 Год назад

    The Glory Soundtrack is amazing. Also, in a month I will be visiting Charleston. I want to see many of the sites that the 54th fought and where a lot of them are buried.

  • @anathardayaldar
    @anathardayaldar Год назад +1

    The greatest scene "from" Gone With The Wind was Carrol Burnet's stairway scene.

  • @Abdus_VGC
    @Abdus_VGC Год назад +3

    Hi there, I wish you would talk of excellency of General Winfield Scott, I believe a huge huge proponent of union victory is his Anaconda plan blockade and throughout assisted tactically while being away after Mc Clellan took over.
    And his unreal campaign to conquer to Mexico City making him a real hero, it pains me that he is under appreciated for the achievement he had. Least we could do is to pay little homage for his excellency!

    • @Abdus_VGC
      @Abdus_VGC Год назад +3

      Another thing, Winfield Scott according to his memoirs instructed the people in union to show humility against the confederacy since he always knew reconciliation would be the toughest!

  • @SLACKPLAN9
    @SLACKPLAN9 Год назад

    Richard Jordan also played Duncan Idaho in the David Lynch "Dune".

  • @Jamessmith-xk3fh
    @Jamessmith-xk3fh 11 месяцев назад

    Dances With Wolves is one of my favorite movies. I'm 39 amd enjoyed it as a kid

  • @markdroka
    @markdroka Год назад

    Once again a great episode! A couple of things I would like to add.
    "Shenandoah" was actually made into a (mediocre) Broadway musical in 1974, starring John Cullum.
    Matthew Broderick appeared on PBS's "Finding Your Roots", where they uncovered a Civil War Veteran ancestor who fought in the battles Broderick portrayed.

  • @deborahgibson9039
    @deborahgibson9039 Год назад

    Love the choices! My favorite actor and director is Clint Eastwood! And what are you waiting on? Give a watch to "Gone With The Wind"!

  • @Nosliw837
    @Nosliw837 Год назад

    The brothers being named Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John reminds me how William Pendleton christened the first four batteries apart of the Stonewall Brigade similarly. (edit: spelling)

  • @dodgecharger1656
    @dodgecharger1656 6 месяцев назад

    I watched Glory in school and it along with The Good, The Bad and The Ugly are among my favorite movies

  • @SentinelGhost
    @SentinelGhost Год назад

    I finally sat down and watched Glory a few weeks ago. I have to agree, it's such a great movie

  • @crusader2112
    @crusader2112 Год назад +1

    The Outlaw Josef Wales is a classic. Great film.
    Can you check out Mark Felton’s videos on Generals in the East & West German Militaries. They’re great, especially the East German one.

  • @TribeTaz
    @TribeTaz 2 месяца назад

    I agree with Glory number 1. I actually had Gettysburg 2 and a movie called Ride With The Devil at number 3.
    Great list

  • @taco4242
    @taco4242 Год назад +1

    Recommendation: A short fun reaction would be to the comedic song from 2005 from Jonathan Coulton The President. He explains every president in ine sentence. A nice mix between historical and goofy.

  • @Shadowkiller-dq2ju
    @Shadowkiller-dq2ju Год назад

    I’ve seen the General with my grandfather when I was younger and I loved it

  • @tumadre50
    @tumadre50 Год назад

    At the time Glory came out I was living in PG County MD and had such a profound effect on me. It sparked my desire to learn more about Civil War history. Living so close to so many battlefields and Washington DC had a huge influnece but probably even more so was growing up among descendants of people who had been enslaved and gained their freedom because of these events but also played such a huge role in these events as well

  • @tomlantgen6941
    @tomlantgen6941 Год назад +1

    If you haven't seen Gone with the Wind you really need to. It's a fantastic movie.

  • @David-fm6go
    @David-fm6go Год назад

    9:40 There was also a remake in the 50s/60s staring Fess Parker of Daniel Boone/Davy Crockett fame.

  • @papaquonis
    @papaquonis Год назад

    I realise why Gone With The Wind is seen less favourably today, but I have to say I still really like it. I've seen it several times, and I would gladly watch it again.

  • @darrellmarcks6304
    @darrellmarcks6304 Год назад

    Gettysburg also had Stephen Lang as Pickett and was in Tombstone.

  • @jkarpet
    @jkarpet Год назад +2

    I remember taking a film history class in high school and the first movie we watched was the general and i really enjoyed it, I didn’t think my high school self would really find entertainment in a black and white silent movie but I was definitely wrong

  • @chief117s15
    @chief117s15 Год назад +1

    Glory is the best Civil War movie hands down. So good. Doesn't shy away from the brutality like other films and captures the racism and and how everyone handled at the time so well. Fantastic movie.

  • @joshridderhoff2050
    @joshridderhoff2050 Год назад

    Shenandoah is such a lovely movie, but then again I’m biased: always a sucker for Jimmy Stewart films. You’ll definitely have to give it a watch!

  • @JollyOldStNick1
    @JollyOldStNick1 Год назад

    You did a reaction to smashing UKs top 15 World War II movies about a year or so ago. That was another good list they seem to have high quality content!

  • @TrekBeatTK
    @TrekBeatTK Год назад

    DEFINITELY watch Gone With the Wind! You can split it over 2 nights. I’d love a video afterward breaking down the pros and cons you saw.

  • @johnrice893
    @johnrice893 7 месяцев назад +1

    Love your insight into historical films. However you made a slight error when explaining why The Good the Bad and the Ugly was called a "spaghetti western."While some scenes were filmed in Italy, most were filmed in Spain. That they were directed by Italian Sergio Leone is why they were dubbed the spaghetti western.

  • @doc_adams8506
    @doc_adams8506 Год назад

    Armistead and Hancock were best friends. They attended West Point together and fought in the Mexican War together. Armistead refused to carry a weapon during the engagement. He walked down the fence at the top of the ridge for fear that he would fire on his friend. Armistead died that day.

  • @CherylSllane
    @CherylSllane Год назад

    Shanondoh and Josey wells are the two I’m familiar with. Cool vid bro.