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The End of the Civil War (2009, History Channel): a collection of four separately produced and aired films sold as a single title: Sherman's March (2007), April 1865 (2003), The Hunt for John Wilkes Booth (2007), and Stealing Lincoln's Body (2009). The collection is also known as The Last Days of the Civil War. Gettysburg (broadcast on History ...
A civil war has engulfed the United States between the authoritarian federal government, led by a third-term president, and secessionist movements. Despite the president claiming victory is imminent, it is widely expected that Washington, D.C. will soon be reached on the Fourth of July by the "Western Forces" (WF) led by Texas and California, while forces of the southeast "Florida Alliance ...
Freedom's Path is a 2022 historical war drama film written, directed and produced by Brett Smith in his feature length debut. It stars Gerran Howell , RJ Cyler , and Ewen Bremner . Based on the American Civil War , it won multiple film festival awards in 2022 and had a limited theatrical run from February 3, 2023.
Kirsten Dunst is great as a veteran war photographer in Alex Garland's "Civil War," a terrifying look at where our political divisions could lead. 'Civil War' is one of hardest movies to watch ...
The New Yorker film critic Richard Brody gave it a positive review, saying, "It's tempting to shunt Free State of Jones into the familiar genre of the white-savior tale, but Newton Knight appears as something else—not so much as a savior but as an avatar of a new South. By seeing his own interests clearly and considering the economic and ...
Gangs of New York; The General (1926 film) General Spanky; Gettysburg (2011 film) Gettysburg (1993 film) Ghost Brigade; The Girl Spy: An Incident of the Civil War; Glory (1989 film) Gods and Generals (film) Gone with the Wind (film) The Good, the Bad and the Ugly; Grandma's Boy (1922 film) Great Day in the Morning; The Guerrilla
Civil War, too, decontextualises violence and deliberately tosses the entire idea of power out the window. We’re never told what this conflict is about, who might be oppressed, or what freedoms ...
[9] Writing for the Orlando Sentinel, critic Roger Moore noted that "cadets sympathetically help slaves at every turn, even though this was the patrician class that insisted upon the war and the preservation of that 'peculiar institution.'" [10] Nick Shager's review in The Village Voice was entitled "Civil War Drama Field of Lost Shoes Argues ...