Grit
Posts: 142
Joined: 4/7/2010 Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58 quote:
ORIGINAL: cantona2 quote:
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ORIGINAL: bspeer One thing REALLY bugs me about the series. I enjoy hearing the Vets speak in the beginning but it begs for a subtitle telling who they were and their units. I'm assuming that they will follow from BoB and at the end of the last episode they have the vets sitting silently before the credits roll and then we are told who they are. I reckon the guy with the glasses has to be Sledge. If you watch Ken Burns' "The War" miniseries/documentary, you'll see Sledge as he appears today (well, four years or so ago.) He became a doctor. His sister is the main voice in "The War" for events in Mobile, Alabama during the war. "The War" takes a very different POV than most WWII documentaries. It examines in more micro-detail the events as they impacted four US communities and the men and women they sent to war: Sacramento, CA, Watertown, CT, Mobile, Alabama, and Luverne, MN. It's available on DVD and well worth watching. Will keep an eye out for it, thanks for the heads up. I see from your avatar box that you're in Gibraltar, so you may or may not know of Burns' work. He is most famous here, probably, for his masterpiece from 1990ish, "The Civil War." It's 12-hours, and has some of the best voice narration I've ever heard. Despite there being no moving pictures from the period he injects energy into the topic with music, photos, maps, and, again, superior narration. Shelby Foote is worth the price of admisison by himself. Burns has been interviewed extensively, and his initial impulse as a documentarian was to make "big" documentaries about what he sees as the three seminal things/events that made the USA what it is today: the Civil War, baseball, and jazz. Through each documentary he weaves in social history, politics, racial developments, women's rights, economics, etc. in a tapestry that makes people who don't like history, well, like history. He has been criticized here by some who say that he turns everyth8ing into a discussion of racial discrimination, and that is a core topic in all of his work, but I'd disagree it's "core." He does believe that racism and slavery were the fundamental flaws in the founding of the nation, but he's hardly the first or only historian to observe that. "The War" does examine race--African-American, Japanese-American, and American Indian--but in what to me were new ways with voices I hadn't heard before. The story told by the now very old Indian who managed to pass all of the war tests required to become a chief of his tribe, while fighting Nazis, was amazing. Of the three, "Baseball" is my persoanl favorite, and "Jazz", while deep and probing, left me colder. Since he finished his trilogy he's made "The War" as well as several smaller projects such as a series about the US National Park system and one about the western frontier. I had "The War" on my Tivo for over a year, in High Rez, eating up about 1/3 of my space, but I just couldn't erase it. I finally did, but I plan to buy the DVDs when finances are more stable. It really is a work any WWII grognard ought to see or own. "The War" is on Netflix on Demand right now. I missed it when it was on television, watching it now. I've got "The Civil War" on DVD, he changed the way documentaries are done.
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