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| ACTORS: | Peck, Keach, Page, Stacy Keach |
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 01 January, 1982 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Columbia/Tristar Studios |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Color, Closed-captioned |
| TYPE: | Feature Film-drama |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 3 |
| UPC: | 043396065444 |
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Customer Reviews of The Blue and the Gray
Worth a watch...... This is a nice tv mini-series, and explains the Civil War and it's era pretty well. It's about a neutral Virginian farmboy/amateur artist (played by John Hammond) who leaves his home and family to work as a newspaper artist up north, eventually becoming a war artist for Harper's Weekly. Along the way, at the trial of John Brown, he befriends Stacy Keach's character, a U.S. army scout and good friend of Abe Lincoln named Jonas Steele. While his brothers fight for the Confederacy, his cousins fight for the Union, tearing their family in two.
It is, as other customers have said, a good introduction piece to the War Between the States. It tells the basics of the war and it's time period pretty well. However, it is not without it's errors: I don't know why there's the murder subplot....it's kind of odd, but still spooky. The love stories are a bit corny at times, but otherwise the story is interesting. The music score is VERY early eighties, but that's okay. The thing that made me want to laugh though is that each army seems to have about 50 people on each side, though the battle scenes are pretty good. The cavalry battles are great though! Oh well, if you want vast armies, watch Gettysburg (a GREAT Civil War movie), or something. Hammond and Keach give good performances, while the best is Gregory Peck's performance as Lincoln. He fits the part very well, and is quite believable. (but stay away from the overacting of sister Emma's overacting!) So, if the Civil War is your thing like it is mine, take a look at this. It's worth a watch!
Interesting approach to the Civil War
Everything can't be perfect. Being 2002 it's easy to look back and be critical of filming in the early 80's. As we see some 80's filming styles and approaches common of television come through. This 3-DVD set is perfect for those who really don't have a general knowledge of the war. The story follows historical timelines (most of the time) and also brings up key events to situations like John Brown's Raid, Bull Run, Vicksburg, Gettysburg,etc.. This movie includes common and popular situations that arose during the war such as an army trading coffee or tobacco with the enemy, or punishment procedures for being a coward, popular soldier and civilian life. It is almost like the movie has taken the most popular things of the Civil War and created a 6 hour movie from it.
Sometimes I thought the acting and romance was a bit "sappy" for the movie but I realize that it is nearly 20 years old. As far as actors I found Gregory Peck acting as Lincoln to be more believable than most of the characters in the story. This movie isn't a Gettysburg though it isn't a flop. It is a perfect movie for people learning about the Civil War. Blue and Gray explores the realities of families broken up by war and how people had to ask and find themselves when choosing to fight for the North or South. It brings a well rounded view of the war and puts it together in a fine movie. I would recommend it for many ages as I think children learning about the Civil War can find great value in this movie.
Civil War 101
Once upon a time in a place far, far away, I was a Civil War buff. I couldn't read enough books about the massive war between the North and the South from 1861 to 1865. I paged through texts about ironclads, reveled in the descriptions of Shiloh, Bull Run, and Cold Harbor. I studied pictures of the movements of troops led by George McClellan and Ulysses S. Grant, Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee. I thrilled to the drama of Lee's surrender to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse. And I mourned as Abraham Lincoln fell to a southern assassin's bullet at Ford's Theater. I would read books by Bruce Catton, a sort of everyman's historian of the war who churned out books by the boatload twenty or thirty years ago. Moreover, and probably most importantly, I yearned to watch shows and movies based on events during the war. I remember being presently surprised at the time to learn that a huge mini-series, called "The Blue and the Gray," would soon air on television. Finally, I would see the events, people, and places I had only read about before. Yep, I vividly remember watching this series when it first premiered on television over twenty years ago. And I liked it, at the time. When I saw it coming out on DVD, I decided to watch it all over again.
The passing of years can definitely modify prior assumptions. While I found parts of "The Blue and the Gray" intriguing, far too often the film descended into the deepest depths of sentimentality of the sappiest sort. The star of the picture is John Geyser (John Hammond), a young man with a knack for drawing who lives on his parents' farm in Virginia. He's got a bunch of brothers, a sister preparing to marry a successful businessman from Vicksburg, and several slaves. He yearns to head north, to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania where his Uncle Jacob runs a newspaper. John figures his relative will hire him on the spot once he shows the man his drawings. Geyser gets the job when his uncle assigns him to cover the John Brown trial and the abolitionist's subsequent execution. At the proceedings, John meets Jonas Steele (Stacy Keach), a shady character with ties to the Pinkerton Agency and to the White House. A fast friendship forms between the two, with an even faster bond emerging between Steele and John's cousin Mary Hale (Julia Duffy). John heads back to his Virginia farm just in time to witness a bunch of bounty hunters commit a heinous crime against Jonathan Henry (Paul Winfield) for harboring a fugitive slave. At one point, young Geyser even meets the newly elected Abraham Lincoln (Gregory Peck).
By the time the war breaks out, John Geyser's artwork covering the Brown trial lands him a job at Harper's as a war correspondent. It's just as well since John refuses to fight for the Union or the Confederacy, a position that alienates him from his pro-southern family. His anti-war views do not stop him from facing danger as he rescues the daughter of Senator Reynolds (Robert Vaughn), a girl named Kathy (Kathleen Beller), at the Battle of Bull Run. Predictably, John and Kathy become an item. So do Jonas Steele and Mary Hale when they tie the knot after Jonas joins the Union Army. We also learn Steele possesses an annoying psychic power that allows him to foresee disastrous events. Meanwhile, as Vicksburg falls to the North, John's sister loses her husband and nearly loses her child in the siege of that city. As the war grinds on and on with no end in sight, members of both branches of the family, Hale and Geyser, fall on the battlefield from bullet, disease, or both.
This rather slipshod summary will have to suffice for a series that runs nearly six hours. The filmmakers did a good job covering many of the important issues of the day. John's internal conflict over whether he should fight or not, and for what side, is one many Americans faced during that conflict. Battle sequences inevitably rely on budgetary restrictions, so the only lengthy combat sequence is the Battle of Bull Run. It seems the filmmakers wished to focus on things not widely known about the Civil War, such as the use of hot air balloons for aerial surveillance, a repeating carbine, and the horrible conditions of prisoner of war camps. The movie keeps violence to a minimum, as per television standards, but a viewer does get the sense that the Civil War was no walk in the park for both soldiers and civilians. What do not work as well are the inaccuracy of the uniforms, the occasional digressions into comedy and romance, and the tendency of characters to teleport themselves across the country. I realize the whole idea of the movie is to show the war through the eyes of one man, but it gets ridiculous after a time when you see John Geyser popping up everywhere from Vicksburg to Bull Run.
The cast roster is enormous. In addition to the actors listed above, you will see Sterling Hayden, Lloyd Bridges, Colleen Dewhurst, Rip Torn, Rory Calhoun, Warren Oates, and Geraldine Page filling roles both major and minor. Mr. Bentley from "The Jeffersons" even shows up for a minute or two! I think I can safely recommend this film to movie buffs. It's not perfect, not even close, but it would give a viewer a general idea of the issues that led to the war. You can't really hope to adequately inform through the medium of television, but what you can hope to do is get someone interested in reading more about a topic. "The Blue and the Gray" will do that, with a little luck.