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Sons of Liberty: A Review
Americans for a Free Republic ^ | January 30, 2015 | Nelson Hultberg

Posted on 02/04/2015 11:19:44 AM PST by Nelson Hultberg

History channel, January 25-27, 2015. Directed by Kari Skogland; written by Stephen David and David C. White.

The History channel’s new miniseries, Sons of Liberty, will anger the purists and the prudes. But it will delight the swashbuckler in the rest of us. It is a big, bodacious screening with superb production values that covers the lead-up years to the American Revolution, 1765-1775. Yes, certain liberties are taken with some of the facts and events. The main characters are glamorized. But the essential theme of America’s birth is kept intact: we as a nation were spawned by a band of rebels made up of assorted firebrands, smugglers, and philosophers all coalescing together under the rubric of Thomas Paine’s “Rights of Man.” Besides, what depiction of history is not romanticized by making the main characters a bit handsomer and younger than they, perhaps, were. Certainly not any depiction made for television.

The main character striding through Sons of Liberty is the famous Samuel Adams, played robustly by British actor, Ben Barnes, who doesn’t give us an actualization of Adams’ role in history, but rather a symbolization of it. First of all, Barnes is in his early thirties, and Adams was 51 years old when he fomented the Boston Tea Party. So the producers of Sons of Liberty are trying to give us the symbolic Sam Adams and what his role was in the creation of America. Sam Adams was the quintessential rebel mind. He didn’t have the scholarly genius of Thomas Jefferson, but he had a brilliant revolutionary mind. And valor permeated his entire life. He blended mind and defiance as well as, and perhaps better than, any of our Founders.

Sam Adams told his fellow patriots in 1773 in the build-up to the Boston Tea Party, “It does not take a majority to prevail…but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of freedom in the minds of men.”

This is what brings about all revolutionary change in history – small minorities of men and women fervently committed to a cause that will require courage and resourcefulness to bring into fruition. Yes, luck is also necessary, but mostly courage and resourcefulness because luck eventually descends upon us all. It’s the ones with courage who ride the luck into history and change the fate of mankind. Sam Adams and the “Sons of Liberty” were these kind of men. They seized the opportunity that the arrogant, blundering British gave to them.

The valor of Sam Adams was the spark that made him one of our most important Founders. As we all know, the colonists were by no means united. Sons of Liberty portrays this Rebel-Tory division clearly, and it demonstrates how remarkable the likes of Sam Adams, John Hancock, Paul Revere, and Dr. Joseph Warren were. They were willing to break from the security and stability of life under the British Crown to venture into uncharted waters for a new future – a break that offered them certain death or prison if they failed, yet they eagerly proceeded. In the process they galvanized a band of rebels and lit the match to “the shot heard round the world.”

THE PARTNERSHIP

In the first segment, we see Sam Adams and John Hancock initiate their partnership, which eventually leads to the Boston Tea Party in 1773. Adams is a scruffy, roguish firebrand, while Hancock is portrayed as a rich, cautious, unbearably foppish socialite who relies on trade and imports to bring him the lavish life he desires. In dddition, the director, Kari Skogland, has him constantly urging Adams and his band of street rebels to “stop their insanity.” Unfortunately this is not the historical Hancock at all. Yet at every turn, Skogland and her writers insist on painting this false picture of Hancock as timidly opposing the rebellion, even opposing the dumping of the tea into Boston Harbor.

All historical records clearly show Hancock was a vigorous supporter of the colonial protests against the British from 1765 on in concert with Adams. Yet Skogland has him reluctantly and timidly dragging his feet throughout these crucial years. Hancock was not a warrior, but he was very much a willing rebel who financed the agitations and the dumping of the tea. He was upper class, yes, but hardly a fop. He fervently favored the revolution, and served admirably in various roles of political leadership for the American cause from the beginning. For some reason, however, Skogland’s writers have quite incorrectly portrayed him. Not good.

THE BRITISH ARE COMING

In the second segment, we are introduced to the tyrannical British Gen. Thomas Gage (played to menacing perfection by Marton Csokas) and also to the renowned Paul Revere and his epic ride (played forcefully by the rugged Michael Raymond-James). Revere was a silversmith, but he had a warrior persona. The Boston Tea Party is presented in a sensationalized manner with Sam Adams standing astride one of the ships to stare down a regiment of British regulars with muskets raised on the wharf, daring them to shoot him. Quisling Governor Hutchinson arrives just in time to halt the British regiment leader for fear of making the heroic Adams into a martyr.

If director, Skogland, is lacking in historical accuracy, she is certainly not deficient in the ability to entertain her viewers. She gives us action, conflict, suspense, and charismatic characters we care about, as well as a salacious romance between Dr. Joseph Warren and Gen. Gage’s ravishing wife, Margaret, played by Emily Berrington. Ryan Eggold is very appealing as the clever and courageous Dr. Joseph Warren. Berrington is pristinely beautiful as Margaret Gage. Their love affair is total fiction; but it’s insertion into the story allows Sons of Liberty to avoid being just a litany of politics and battles. It becomes a sexy romp as well. After all, America’s rebels were not prudes; they lusted after women in their day as we do in ours. This tale is not meant to be a staid documentary with sidebar commentaries by dreary Doris Goodwin types. It is meant to be a TV blockbuster. Sex is necessary for that.

LEXINGTON AND BUNKER HILL

The third and final segment begins with the British rout of the rebels at Lexington Green on April 19, 1775 and the following rebel victory at the Concord munitions storage. Thus begins our War for Independence. These and the later battle scenes are carried off spectacularly with big sophisticated production values. The Concord surprise victory for the rebels shakes Gage and his troops severely, which is demonstrated by Gage’s hurried request to London for more troops and his demand to recklessly attack the rebels at Bunker Hill despite the certainty of heavy British casualties and warnings from his subordinate officers. Gage is vile and icy in demeanor. He will surely go down as one of the great villains of TV entertainment. There is a grisly inhumanity about the man. Gen. Washington termed him a ruthless cancer.

At John Adams’ insistence, our rebel heroes then pay a visit to Benjamin Franklin for advice and support. Apparently the historical Franklin is not in Skogland’s memory bank either, for the Franklin we encounter here seems more like a brawny biker with a Harley outside at the hitching post. He is played by Breaking Bad’s robustious Dean Norris. He pours forth the braininess we expect from Franklin, but Skogland has injected a few choice morsels of modern dialogue into his part. “You’re talking about a new country,” he informs a startled contingent of Sam and John Adams, and Paul Revere. They reply hesitantly that they guess they are, to which Franklin responds, “That’s a bat shit crazy idea.” But he assures them that he agrees with this crazy idea. Inserting modern slang into the revered mouths of the Founders may be “progressive” and “avant-garde” to Skogland, but to me it is a stink bomb for the script.

Next comes the Battle of Bunker Hill, and it is as gritty and grotesque as a battle can be. Huge casualties are suffered by the rebels as they are overrun by the monster British war machine and Gage’s fanaticism. In the aftermath, Gen. Washington, who up till now has remained a non-participant in the rebel hostilities, manifests as the heroic leader we know from history and assures the rebels that all is not lost. A fierce war is coming, but he will lead them.

The finale is a stirring speech for liberty by Sam Adams in front of the delegates of the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia in July of 1776 that prefaces the signing of the Declaration of Independence. John Hancock inscribes his now famous signature to the storied document, a war begins, and a new country is born.

THE LESSON FOR US TODAY

In conclusion, Sons of Liberty is far from accurate history, but it is splendid entertainment. Most importantly it is true to the fundamental fount of America – that we were spawned by a new philosophical vision of strictly limited government instituted to protect men’s rights rather than manipulate men’s lives.

How did these scruffy “Sons of Liberty,” and the rag-tag army they morphed into, pull off defeating the most powerful military force in the world at that time? They did it because there exists a dynamic force in our lives that all tyrannical systems lack and all rational revolutionaries possess – moral truth! This is what brings the most powerful of tyrannies down. No matter how much military or regulatory control they possess, no matter how ruthless they are – they are always vulnerable in face of men and women who are in possession of truth and willing to take a moral stand against overwhelming odds. Moral truth connected to unbending human will is what eventually destroys the most entrenched of evil.

We have this force on our side today in the crisis we now face, which is identical in principle to the crisis our Founders faced. We possess the same moral truth that they had, and we can use it to overcome today’s Washington tyrants. We just have to design the right strategy to implement it. There are countless Americans out there just waiting for the right mix of political savvy and passion to come along and sweep them up into a crusade.

In 1776, the Tories timidly hid behind closed doors where it was safe and popular. They wallowed in pessimism and lamented that nothing could be done. The British were too strong. Why make a big fuss? But the rebels – men like Samuel Adams and John Hancock, Paul Revere and Joseph Warren – would have none of it. They knew they had moral truth on their side, and that the British Gargantua would fall precisely because of that. And if they weren’t absolutely certain they would prevail, they knew they still must fight, or their lives were meaningless. This is the lesson we glean from the Sons of Liberty for our lives today.

Sam Adams, John Hancock, Paul Revere, and Dr. Joseph Warren are eternal archetypes of what is required as human beings to live freely and justly. If you missed this original History channel presentation of their fight, it will come around again. Don’t miss its rerun.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: historychannel; revolution; samadams; sonsofliberty
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“Sons of Liberty” does not claim to be immaculately factual. It is a TV blockbuster, done with sophisticated production values, made to draw huge ratings and excite the viewing audiences of Western culture. Its discrepancies in the details are justified because it very clearly portrays what is important – that America was a “new philosophical vision of government instituted to protect men’s rights rather than manipulate men’s lives.”
1 posted on 02/04/2015 11:19:44 AM PST by Nelson Hultberg
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To: Nelson Hultberg

Fat, childish actors playing our strong, raw-boned ancestors. We last 10 minutes with it...


2 posted on 02/04/2015 11:24:38 AM PST by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: Loyalty Binds Me)
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To: Nelson Hultberg

I have seen the first two installments, probably will watch the third tonight.

My 0.02 cents:

1. Of course the is a lot of literacy license. So what? The movie “The Ten Commandments” did the same and most people think that was wonderful.

2. There is enough factual material to make it worthwhile. I wouldn’t use it to study for a US history test, but that is not the purpose.

3. Love the portrayal of the Colonialists being against taxes and an oppressive government. That is enough to make it a great conversation starter with others.


3 posted on 02/04/2015 11:24:42 AM PST by Gamecock (Joel Osteen is a minister of the Gospel like Captain Cruch is a Naval line officer.)
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To: Nelson Hultberg

Have I missed it already or is it scheduled on the History Channel sometime in February?


4 posted on 02/04/2015 11:26:58 AM PST by PapaNew (The grace of God & freedom always win the debate in the forum of ideas over unjust law & government)
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To: Nelson Hultberg
I guess I'm a prude.

I think something claiming to be based upon historical fact should in some way resemble the history it claims as its base.

5 posted on 02/04/2015 11:33:23 AM PST by skeeter
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To: PapaNew
Streaming here now.
6 posted on 02/04/2015 11:34:14 AM PST by Gamecock (Joel Osteen is a minister of the Gospel like Captain Cruch is a Naval line officer.)
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To: Nelson Hultberg

The only thing worse than “Sons of Liberty”, was this review. The show was a garbage strewn wreck of a cheesy hipsterian morality play, with visions not of liberty and freedom, but rather visions of aspiring to be counted as a worthy parallel to Pirates of the Caribbean. This doesn’t make me a “purist”. It merely makes me capable of seeing that making a show that panders to the lowest common denominator audience doesn’t elevate that audience, but rather debases the show, and whatever ideas may have inspired that show, to the gutter as well.

This wasn’t a platform which showcases the ideas that made this country great. It was a platform that showcased 5-day old beard growth, snappy meaningless dialogue, cartoonish villainry, and video-game action sequencing. Anyone who wasn’t appalled by this dreck should be ashamed of themselves.


7 posted on 02/04/2015 11:36:20 AM PST by jjsheridan5 (The next Ronald Reagan will not be a Republican, but rather a former Republican)
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To: Nelson Hultberg

It will find a way to gratuitously overemphasize blacks women homosexuals and any other minority

I’d bet

Just like Torn

Rare is a period piece today that doesn’t

Directors and producers and writers do it on their own or at the behest of studios chiefs or network honchos

I miss just old fashioned gratuitous violence and sec


8 posted on 02/04/2015 11:37:32 AM PST by wardaddy (glenn beck is a nauseous politically correct conservative on LSD)
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To: Gamecock

Thanks, I’ll check it out.


9 posted on 02/04/2015 11:38:45 AM PST by PapaNew (The grace of God & freedom always win the debate in the forum of ideas over unjust law & government)
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To: Nelson Hultberg

The Real Sons of Liberty

“The Montresor Journals”, Volume 14 By John Montrésor, James Gabriel Montrésor, [edit. Scull]

“Allicock, Head of the Sons of Liberty, is the son of a mulattoe woman, p 368

1766 “’29th Seventeen hundred of the The Levelers with firearms are collected at Poughkeepsie. p376

1766 “11th A considerable mob asssembled on the Common, cosisting of 2 or 3000 Sons of Liberty
..the Tree of Liberty...when the mob drew instantly out of their pockets a case of pistols
each.

“The Sons of Liberty assembled at night in the fields...
To such a pass are matters come too, that at Philadelphia
in a Stationers Shop was found wrote in a blank Book
G____ by the C__se of G_d, us_per of G___t B__t__n,
and Dest_r_y of the Faith. Great Enquiries were made,
but unfortunately to no purpose.”
p.347”Montresor`s Journals” 1766. 19 Jan. [Scull]

March 1766 “This night the Sons of Liberty assembled and insolently sent Mr. Allecocke [son of a mulatto woman] and Seares, two of their Representatives on board the Garland Ship of War to demand the Lieut of His majesty`s Ship
for having said that the Printer of the Thursday`s Gazette, was he in England, would be hanged for the licentiousness of his Paper.” p.353

“This day a Seditious paper was published [nothing uncommon] by Mr. Holt, Printer, signed Philalethes, as per paper.” May 8, 1766. p.365

“The Sons of Liberty make no scruple of publickly [sic] declaring that they will fight to their knees in blood
rather than suffer the Stamp Act to be enforced...” p.365. 12 May 1766

“No advices received from Connecticut —the Inhabitants have deposed their governor and chosen another, turned out the members of the Assembly and have formed themselves into a committee of 500 men to oppose the present Stamp Act to be enforced...” May 19, 1766 p.367

Stamp Act Repealed- “All the bells set ringing again as soon as daylight appeared.
...Two large bonfires were constructed one for the Sons of Liberty...
Night ended in drunkeness, throwing of Squibbs, Crackers [firecrackers], firing of muskets and pistols, breaking some windows and forcing off the Knockers off the doors.” 21 May 1766. p.367 “Montresor`s Journals” Vol. 14, Scull

[SQUIBB 1. A pipe or tube, or ball of paper filled with powder, to be fired so as to burn and often to explode with a crack.

“A proclamation issued this day for apprehending 7 of the principal country Levelers [Sons of Liberty] for High Treason...” June 20, 1766 p.374

“Pendergast is indited [sic][leader of the Sons of Liberty was captured] for High Treason.”
6 Aug. 1766 p.380

“Wm. Pendergast, who was tried at Poughkeepsie and found guilty of High Treason and received Sentence of Death...” Aug. 19 1766 p.384


10 posted on 02/04/2015 11:39:51 AM PST by bunkerhill7 (re (`("The Second Amendment has no limits on firepower"-NY State Senator Kathleen A. Marchione.")))
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To: Nelson Hultberg

I enjoyed the series.
It as never touted as being a documentary.


11 posted on 02/04/2015 11:42:00 AM PST by Repeal The 17th (We have met the enemy, and he is us.)
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To: Nelson Hultberg

Wait, so Dr. Joseph Warren wasn’t really schtupping Mrs. Gage? ...and General Gage did not really personally kill Dr. Warren at Breed’s Hill and bring his blood back to Mrs. Gage? Bahaha! Look, I’m happy for any American history to be shown on American television, but was that BS really necessary? What, the original story is not good enough for the mindless morons in this country to watch? Give me a break!


12 posted on 02/04/2015 11:49:32 AM PST by Batman11 (The orange, weeping, drunk, squishy oompah-loompah and Yertle McTurd-le gotta go!)
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To: Batman11
Look, I’m happy for any American history to be shown on American television, but was that BS really necessary?

Well, look at the bright side, we did get to learn that Paul Revere was America's first ninja.
13 posted on 02/04/2015 11:55:36 AM PST by jjsheridan5 (The next Ronald Reagan will not be a Republican, but rather a former Republican)
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To: Batman11

This type of garbage just burns my rear. It is why we live in a society of illiterate morons. Unfortunately, this type of comic book history will displace the well researched history book as we plod on into Idiocracy.


14 posted on 02/04/2015 11:57:31 AM PST by gusty
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To: Repeal The 17th

“I enjoyed the series.
It as never touted as being a documentary.”

YES put me in your camp Rt17


15 posted on 02/04/2015 11:58:54 AM PST by aumrl (let's keep it real Conservatives)
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To: Nelson Hultberg
Sons of Liberty: A Review

Here's my review: it sucked. Hunky actors spouting poorly written dialoge that was very loosly based on a true story. I should have suspected as much when they used the Stones "Paint It Black" in the commercials.

16 posted on 02/04/2015 12:00:28 PM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: jjsheridan5

I totally agree.

This show was a travesty. The ONLY thing familiar about it was the names of the participants. They managed to mash together events in a morass of out of place occurances, broken timelines and melodramatic nonsense.
“Sam Adams” was portrayed more as a Son of Anarchy, rather than a Son of Liberty.

I found it all confusing and in the end disgustingly cloying.

For those many who don’t know Sam Adams from a beer, I can only imagine the total misinformation they might have absorbed. I KNOW they said it wasn’t a documentary but dang!: they might well have had Paul Revere driving a red mustang on his ride and being chased by Sheriff Roscoe B. Coltrane.


17 posted on 02/04/2015 12:03:34 PM PST by Adder (No, Mr. Franklin, we could NOT keep it.)
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To: DoodleDawg
It's history for people who don't know anything ABOUT history.

For THEM it's exciting and ‘cool’ to see a ‘story’ about the American Revolution.

THEY probably think it's fiction!

The characters seem to have NO gravitas and are completely ignoble... as if ALL of America in all its development was populated with badly behaved and ill bred creeps.

That's just me I guess. I think a little more effort could have been put into the dialog and presentation and STILL appeal to the least educated viewers, who have the least discernment.

18 posted on 02/04/2015 12:09:22 PM PST by SMARTY ("When you blame others, you give up your power to change." Robert Anthony)
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To: Adder

“I KNOW they said it wasn’t a documentary but dang!: they might well have had Paul Revere driving a red mustang on his ride and being chased by Sheriff Roscoe B. Coltrane.”

Ha! Don’t give them any ideas....


19 posted on 02/04/2015 12:12:40 PM PST by Batman11 (The orange, weeping, drunk, squishy oompah-loompah and Yertle McTurd-le gotta go!)
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To: Adder
That is the problem that I have with the "it wasn't pretending to be a documentary" crowd, as well as the original poster who claimed that it highlighted the principles behind the countries founding. It did no such thing, and actually works to subvert those principles.

Turning John Adams from a portly, thoughtful, mature man, into a 20-something hipster who didn't even take any money from his capitalistic enterprises (great, the country was founded by a hipster d-bag working for a non-profit), it turns the whole revolution from a principle-driven movement against the existence of oppression, to an emotionally-driven movement against the severity of that oppression.

This is not highlighting the principles of this country. It is, subtly, subverting them. In order to do this, they had to turn the English into something they weren't: monsters. The English didn't scream for vengeance, as in the movie, they did everything to avoid escalation. Gage wasn't some kind of monster; he was driven by a sense of law and order, and was fully committed to the colonies. His subordinates thought he did far too little, not to much, even to the point of allowing the militias to continue training in plain view. They didn't butcher our soldiers. IIRC, the only such butchering occured on our side. The military didn't flog civilians (or even involve themselves in civilian justice). But the writers, wanting to turn this from a conflict based on principle, into one based on what looks suspiciously like left-wing emotionalism, needed to have the English as the boogieman.

The worst part, though, is that so many who should know better, think: "well, it's just a show" or "it highlighted what this country was founded on". When they should be appalled at how the principles are being turned from the thoughtful output of men of reason, into the 200 year old equivalent of "hope and change".
20 posted on 02/04/2015 12:18:28 PM PST by jjsheridan5 (The next Ronald Reagan will not be a Republican, but rather a former Republican)
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