Post includes a brief documentary and the cannon-punctuated finale of Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, conducted by Leonard Bernstein.
To: harpygoddess
Best movie is the 1966 RUSSIAN version of WAR AND PEACE. I have the Russian Cinema Counsel version. Excellent color, wide screen. Don’t waste your money on the KULTUR pan and scan version. Faded color and too many “de-violence” cuts for TV.
Criterion has recently released a HD version of the 1966 film.
The 1956 Henry Fonda version is the equivalent of a “Cliff’s Notes”. 10 minutes of Borodino whereas the Russian version is over an hour of battle scenes.
Then follow it up with WATERLOO staring Rod Steiger as Napoleon and Christopher Plumber as Wellington.
To: harpygoddess
Wasn’t war and peace originally going to be called war, what is it good for?
To: harpygoddess
""The cudgel of the people's war was lifted with all its menacing and majestic might, and caring nothing for good taste and procedure, with dull-witted simplicity but sound judgment, it rose and fell, making no distinctions."" Now there is the correct strategy/philosophy that will be required if we ever hope to restore the Constitutional Republic... Or, at least some semblance of it...
6 posted on
09/07/2019 11:18:52 AM PDT by
SuperLuminal
(Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
To: harpygoddess
Frontal assault disaster from which you’d think Napoleon would have learned a lesson. But instead...Waterloo.
8 posted on
09/07/2019 11:49:42 AM PDT by
BenLurkin
(The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
To: harpygoddess
Borodin is the perfect example of winning a battle at the cost of the war. Or the classic Pyrrhic victory. Although it allowed Napoleon to continue his march to Moscow, it cost him so dearly that his Grand Armee would never be the same. Then, when discipline broke down in Moscow and the city burned, the Russians simply abandoned it for the countryside, knowing that the French would have to retreat with winter approaching. They harassed the battered army to the point that it was virtually ineffective by the time it got back to Paris.
And the beginning of the end was Borodin.
9 posted on
09/07/2019 12:40:33 PM PDT by
IronJack
To: harpygoddess
When I was a child I was told that one of my ancestors was a survivor of Napoleon's invasion of Russia (he wasn't French but from an area Napoleon had brought under French control). When I asked my grandfather about it many years later he claimed not to know anything about it--he was very old then and may have just forgotten. I think it may be true and may have been his grandfather (who would have been 32 in 1812). If it is true, then I wouldn't be here if he had not been one of the lucky ones to survive the campaign.
I have read War and Peace and thinking about that made Tolstoy's account of the battle of Borodino more interesting to me.
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