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Introduction by Executive Producer Ted Turner; Commentary by Director/Screenwriter Ronald F. Maxwell and Historical Adivsors Col. Keith Gibson and James I. Robertson Jr.; 3 Documentaries: Journey to the Past: The African-American Slave Experience in the Film's Era, the Life of Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, and the Authenticities of the Film; 2 Music Videos: Bob Dylan's Cross the Green Mountain and Mary Fahl's Going Home; Theatrical Trailer.
Full Product DetailsRon Maxwell, who directed the brilliant Gettysburg some years ago, brings us another sprawling Civil War saga, which is opulently mounted and painstakingly re-created to an almost fetishistic degree. Robert Duvall’s portrayal of Confederate general Robert E. Lee is dignified and, perhaps more important, refreshingly free of the Actors Studio-type quirkiness that occasionally mars his performances. But top-billed Stephen Lang, best known for his character work in supporting roles, dominates the film with his turn as General "Stonewall" Jackson, who sacrifices everything -- including, ultimately, his life -- for the cause of Southern secession. Gods and Generals focuses on the bloody campaigns that unfolded in the conflict’s early years, when it seemed that the rebels had a real chance of breaking free from the Union. Maxwell occasionally sacrifices dramatic effect to present the battle sequences with documentary-style accuracy: Individual fighting units are named in subtitles, military tactics are precisely rendered, and the period settings, costumes, and weaponry are duplicated with relentless accuracy. The film is truly larger than life, which makes it hard for supporting players to make much of an impression, but special mention should be made of Jeff Daniels portraying Lt. Col. Joshua Chamberlain, the erstwhile Yankee professor who entered the war reluctantly, and became one of its heroes. Also noteworthy are C. Thomas Howell (seen of late only in direct-to-video potboilers) as Sgt. Thomas Chamberlain and Donzaleigh Abernathy, who registers strongly as a slave who remains in a Southern home when its owners evacuate. At 220 minutes, Gods and Generals is seriously overlong, and the film's pro-Southern bias may offend some viewers (and delight others), but Civil War buffs in particular will find it an absorbing and engaging tour of duty. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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