Posted on 06/24/2013 5:11:08 AM PDT by Kaslin
Dont give up on Hollywood. I just had the exciting opportunity to pre-screen Gettysburg director Ron Maxwells third Civil War movie premiering Friday, June 28. If you see just one movie this summer, make it Copperhead.
Copperhead is worth seeing because it re-tells American history with an intimate, engaging and non-textbook approach. Away from the mighty battlefields and memorable generals we finally get to experience behind-the-scenes struggles of the Civil War through a few friends, lovers, neighbors and family members trying to speak their minds while practicing what they preach.
Copperhead is based on a novel by Harold Frederic, who lived through the Civil War as a boy. The lead character, Abner Beech, opens the movie by saying: They called us people in the North that didnt want the war Copperheads. When Abners hired boy puzzles over the hatred and violence exerted by one-time friends and neighbors, Abner explains: War is a fever son puts you out of your right mind; you do things you wouldnt do when youre sick
President Obama is on the verge of bypassing Congress and hauling the United States into a war in Syria much like his war in Libya, which he called kinetic military action in order to sneak past the Constitution. When it comes to war, Obama is hardly transparent with the American people.
Obama feigns that he is only now contemplating arming sketchy Syrian rebels. But the truth is that he and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have been secretly arming Syrian rebels with links to terrorism for a very long time; by all major accounts, Obamas gun-running program played a key role in the deaths of four Americans in Benghazi, Libya on September, 11, 2012.
War, especially civil war, comes at a price and it is far easier to get into war than out of war. Copperhead takes us into the homes of a few families who started out as neighbors with different beliefs. Instead of free speech and open debate, violence became the mode of making ones points clear. In a particularly emotional scene, two grown men and neighbors-turned-enemies cling to each other in open despair, tears filling their eyes, as they realize they may have lost their most precious possessions in their rage.
As our own young men and women come home without their limbs after bravely fighting Obamas perpetual wars in the Middle East, Copperhead reminds us that young boys also lost their eyes and limbs fighting in the Civil War and that African Americans were: bought and sold and whipped just cause the color of their skin. The movie was humbling to watch; it forces one to contemplate what it means, and how hard it is, to truly love your neighbor as yourself. As one teenage boy tells his abolitionist father pushing him to fight: I didnt know the Lords work was killing. Theres too many folks carryin swords; not enough pulling plows.
Maxwell describes his vision behind Copperhead and how it is different from his previous Civil War films: I wanted to explore something more intimate. My previous pictures focused on officers and leaders, but, in reality, the war was fought by teenage boys, most from small towns whose families ended up devastated by the war even if no battles were fought nearby. Not everybody who hated slavery or loved the U.S. Constitution was willing to send their children off to die or be maimed in a bloody battle against fellow Americans. That fascinating reality is the force driving Copperhead.
Copperhead also drives home the importance of free speech as a way to resolve conflict before jumping into outright war. If theres a political point to the film, its a defense of dissent, says screenwriter Bill Kauffman.
Thomas J. DiLorenzo, Professor of Economics at Loyola College in Maryland recently wrote a book called Lincoln Unmasked where he explains history in a way that echoes the message in Copperhead. DiLorenzo explores how, after the Civil War, Americans forgot that the founders intended our union to remain strong and voluntary: The Jeffersonian, states' rights tradition, for example, has been whitewashed from the history books thanks to the efforts of several generations of gatekeepers and court historians. [states rights] was an important Northern as well as a Southern political doctrine prior to 1865.
There are valuable lessons in life and history folded into this fascinating new film coming out of Hollywood. You can request the movie in a theatre near you by visiting this site.
Sorry, but the link at the end does not work
Maxwell has done a pretty good (if somewhat PC) job with the other two.
Think i will check it out.
Are we saying that this novel waswritten before 1950?
Maxwell describes his vision behind Copperhead and how it is different from his previous Civil War films: I wanted to explore something more intimate. My previous pictures focused on officers and leaders, but, in reality, the war was fought by teenage boys, most from small towns whose families ended up devastated by the war even if no battles were fought nearby. Not everybody who hated slavery or loved the U.S. Constitution was willing to send their children off to die or be maimed in a bloody battle against fellow Americans. That fascinating reality is the force driving Copperhead.
Copperhead also drives home the importance of free speech as a way to resolve conflict before jumping into outright war. If theres a political point to the film, its a defense of dissent, says screenwriter Bill Kauffman.
Thomas J. DiLorenzo, Professor of Economics at Loyola College in Maryland recently wrote a book called Lincoln Unmasked where he explains history in a way that echoes the message in Copperhead. DiLorenzo explores how, after the Civil War, Americans forgot that the founders intended our union to remain strong and voluntary: The Jeffersonian, states' rights tradition, for example, has been whitewashed from the history books thanks to the efforts of several generations of gatekeepers and court historians. [states rights] was an important Northern as well as a Southern political doctrine prior to 1865.
There are valuable lessons in life and history folded into this fascinating new film coming out of Hollywood. You can request the movie in a theatre near you by visiting this site.
I moved from Seattle to rural Kentucky in 2011. We live relatively close to a few battlegrounds. The Perryville re-enactment is wonderful.
But the one thing that keeps niggling at me regarding the war is that it must have been HELL for the troops for two rarely discussed reasons:
1. Ticks
2. Chiggers
My introduction to the latter after weedeating in shorts and no shirt or bug spray (common activity in Seattle) resulted in a trip to the doctor.
Maxwell has done a pretty good (if somewhat PC) job with the other two.
Oops, I don’t think this is the 3rd installment of CW historic films is it? Gettysburg, Gods and Generals........
Dont give up on HollywoodThat is what killed it for me. If Hollywood is involved, so will be revisionism.
That’s the way it is being marketed...
Christian faith of men in the South? Remember, God determines the outcome of wars, so there must have been something wrong with that faith, with all due respect to those men. They seem to have worshiped their earthly institutions more than God, especially the one about enforced lifetime servitude (versus voluntary), which the Bible does not permit (Jeremiah 34:11).
For all of Lincoln’s alleged foibles and faults, it was he who called for prayer and fasting before God so that the Union would be preserved.
The last book in the Sharra trilogy was "The Last Full Measure". This does not appear to be the basis for this film.
Where was free speech suppressed prior to the war breaking out?
1893.
Harold Frederic (born Harold Henry Frederick; August 19, 1856 October 19, 1898)
The Copperhead. New York 1893
Yes nothing like a said faith over a real faith. Even the mythology surrounding Robert E. Lee's supposed heroism. The man who knew slavery was wicked and evil and still because of human pride took the easy way out and did not want to ruffle feathers and maintain his societal standing within is Virginia family. A real man of principal<.sarcasm off>. Lee and the other leaders of this wicked movement should have been tried and hung. Reconstruction as Lincoln envisioned and Johnson implemented in historical perspective was a abysmal failure. The South and what it stood for quantifiably evil, period. I imagine if we treated the Nazis like we did the South after Civil War. Outrageous you say, well study up on your history of Southern POW camps, the genocide that happened there, may not have been murder on an industrial scale like the Nazis but just as evil.
The good guys won and the bad guys lost, enough with the rebel flags and the revisionist history.
Has anyone heard when that one comes out? Understand it will start from after Gettysburg through Appamattox.
Thanks. I alwasys like to know who the RINOs are here at FR.
Thanks. I tried to look it up and my computer kept rebooting before I could get the answer.
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