Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
GENERAL TOPICS => Books & Movies => Topic started by: caps on August 09, 2011, 12:58:19 PM
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Just watched this on netflix and enjoyed it very much. Firearms were correct, Henry rifles looked loaded. Clothing was correct. Good show.
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Just watched this on netflix and enjoyed it very much. Firearms were correct, Henry rifles looked loaded. Clothing was correct. Good show.
Yes, is a good movie, although the brass-framed '63 Remington never existed. A nice authentic touch was the wearing of the Union belt plate upside down.
RCJ
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Just watched this on netflix and enjoyed it very much. Firearms were correct, Henry rifles looked loaded. Clothing was correct. Good show.
This has been one of my favorite movies for a long time now. They did a pretty good job (for hollyweird) and it has a good storyline as well.
One of my most well used DVDs in my collection. :D
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I know a goodly number of the Reenactors that lent their talents to that show...
Ang Lee was intentive to suggestions and even worked some in...
However, where the brass frame Remingtons were concerned, props bought these for the principals.
They were told they were incorrect on location , but props had spent the budget, and
could not or would not budget correcting it....
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Yeah, prop guys don't always do the right thing. At least they weren't using Colt peacemakers and 92s like John Wayne always did when he was depicting a Civil War person. Not that I fault the Duke, but they didn't care much about authenticity back in the day.
At least they've gotten a lot better. ;D
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In "Red River" when the Duke & Walter Brennon first break off
Wayne has a OT Colt not sure if it's a conversion or C&B either way it's got to be an original.
Every show I did I tried my best to get PC hardware....
"Into The West" was about my last.... I bought over Doz. each of Uberti 51's & 60's
along with other long guns too (both Flint & cap lock some were originals , others distressed some )
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The film was based on Daniel Woodrell's novel "Woe to Live On." It's a great read if you can find it. It was reissued with the title "Ride With the Devil" when the film was released. Woodrell has been called "the hillbilly Shakespeare." Another of his books was filmed recently as "Winter's Bone." The Missouri Ozarks form the setting for much of his work.
I loved the use of 19th century language in the film. One character, asked why he is sprucing up his beard and moustache, says: "I go to call upon a young lady who finds my attentions, if I do not flatter myself unduly, not unwelcome."
I guess only a foreign director like Ang Lee would dare to make a movie that depicts Missouri Bushwhackers sympathetic.
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Us bushwackers are sympathetic! ;D
One of my favorites, lots of Kansas City folk in the back drop.
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In my opinion, there was really no right or wrong side in the Civil War. Both sides had their heros and villians and both sides did things they should not be proud of. Also, many misinformed people don't even know the reason the war was fought in the first place. They just believe the PC reason and it is not the main reason. It is terrible there is so much ignorance about a war that was so important in our history.
I always believe the addage, those who ignore the mistakes of history are condemned to repeat them.
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In my opinion, there was really no right or wrong side in the Civil War. Both sides had their heros and villians and both sides did things they should not be proud of. Also, many misinformed people don't even know the reason the war was fought in the first place. They just believe the PC reason and it is not the main reason. It is terrible there is so much ignorance about a war that was so important in our history.
I always believe the addage, those who ignore the mistakes of history are condemned to repeat them.
Agreed.
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I really enjoyed the movie. It appeared pretty accurate, and showed lots of the "Racial/Ethnic" Discriminations on both sides.
The Dutchies (as the Deutch were referred to in the movie) were not liked by the locals and harrassed beyond belief. Before you can comment on the "sympathy to the Bushwhackers". The RedLegs were not free of their guilt in the meanness that went on either. All sides were equal in my opinion as to their mean acts. The Border war wasn't really a war but more just plain hatred between different peoples.
I do believe the movie did help people understand some of the underpinnings of the feelings on both sides.
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I agree. When the Dutchie Jake (a pre-Spiderman Tobey Maguire) risks his own safety to persuade his Bushwhacker companions to spare his Redleg childhood friend and they grudgingly accede, the Redleg goes home and immediately murders Jake's father. It was that mean on the Kansas-Missouri border.
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Excellent movie. As to realism, I expect it in the newer movies however, I can allow it to side a bit in older movies.
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One of my favorite movies! Really loved the music. It set the mood.
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Hi
I bought the DVD a year or so ago and finally watched it over Xmas. That was a damn fine movie and well done. Those were crazy times and I think that they got worse during "Reconstruction". The quotes are because from I could tell there wasn't much reconstructing going on except for do it yourself.
Later
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Yes, is a good movie, although the brass-framed '63 Remington never existed. A nice authentic touch was the wearing of the Union belt plate upside down.
RCJ
....not to pick but would like to know the reference to wearing US buckles upside down. I know when I got involved in reenacting the CW in the early 90's. I was told this was "what Rebels did". I have no doubt it was done. In all the books I've read have never seen reference to it. I often wonder if it became a reenactorism because of reverse images in photographs? In that light, I do know that there are references to Confederate commanders frowning on the wearing of Union clothing. The war in the Trans Mississippi was a different animal. Union supply trains were sometimes the western Confederacies best resource. In the conflict between Missouri and Kansas even more so.
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If you google Rebels wearing Union belt plates upside down there are numerous tintypes of such.
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/confederate-soldier-upside-down-union-1634721135
And a reverse image would not have turned the "US" upside down. It would be an upright backward "S" followed by an upright backward "U".
RCJ
(Upon closer inspection of enlarged image of the above example, the belt plate is not upside down, just reversed as in a typical tintype.)
Here's an actual example:
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/civil-war-cased-image-confederate-474825383
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If you google Rebels wearing Union belt plates upside down there are numerous tintypes of such.
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/confederate-soldier-upside-down-union-1634721135
And a reverse image would not have turned the "US" upside down. It would be an upright backward "S" followed by an upright backward "U".
RCJ
....alright, I will admit to having seen the photos. Just didn't give them much thought. Guess I always looked at belts as tools. Just didn't think the common Confederate would've cared that much. Same as captured clothing from a supply train. I imagine the truth of all this was even stranger.