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Alivia 2022-03-28 09:01:08
It was tragic when General Longstreet ordered the Pickett Charge. In addition, through the mouths of several figures on both sides, almost each of them delivered a "Gettysburg Address", explaining from their own quite reasonable perspectives why they fought in this tragic civil war. Of course, it is unavoidable to express the sadness for the mutual destruction of good...
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Tremayne 2022-03-28 09:01:08
Old movie review music is too classic, let Mead be damned, top...
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Braden 2022-03-28 09:01:08
Please don't abuse the word "epic" any more, idiots, what the Lord of the Rings is called epic is really insulting the word "epic"! Gettysburg is the best land battle movie I've ever seen! Great shot! 4 and a half hours to perfectly reproduce the battle that decided the fate of the American Empire! A masterpiece of war...
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Nakia 2022-03-28 09:01:08
It's so long~ When the mini-series is...
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Reinhold 2022-03-27 09:01:15
The cruelty of civil war is that you sometimes capture a cousin captive, or shoot one of your own relatives. Nice documentary film, but firmly rejects civil war, for whatever...
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Harmony 2022-03-27 09:01:15
The Civil War turned out to be completely different from what was imagined. . . Heroes and honor, blood and sacrifice. The ambitions of the North will be won, and the ambitions of the South are unpaid, both are worthy of admiration. The magnificent music in the opening paragraph will always linger in my...
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Deshawn 2022-03-27 09:01:15
I read it on and off, I don't understand the history of the Civil War and I am...
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Shaun 2022-03-27 09:01:15
After watching Puget's tragic attack, I suddenly felt that it was okay for the Japanese generals to be defeated. One person's misjudgment caused so many parents to lose their sons, their wives to lose their husbands, and their children to lose their fathers. what happened? What's more, what about victory, and what about epic victories? Wouldn't Austerlitz kill 10,000 enemies and hurt himself 8,000? What's more, aren't the enemy soldiers human? Is it just a statistic in military...
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Annetta 2022-03-27 09:01:15
The military-blind and history-blind said that they could not...
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Jordy 2022-03-27 09:01:15
I was exhausted but had a high level of reductiveness and no personal bias. I thought of watching domestic war history films before and I would ask, "Who is the bad guy and who is the good guy?" All want to change their country, this is...
Gettysburg Comments
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Kayden 2022-01-13 08:02:24
Hollywood theme
I have recently become interested in the history of the Civil War. I want to find a few movies to see. It seems that "Cold Mountain" and "Dancing with Wolves" all use history as the background board, and "Gettysburg" is the real historical movie. , So I found it very hard to have a look....
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Jason 2022-01-13 08:02:24
Battle of Gettysburg
The first part of Ronald F. Maxwell's "Civil War Trilogy", "The Battle of Gettysburg" is a genuine war epic film. The 4 hours and 20 minutes movie fully reproduces the 5 days of the Battle of Gettysburg: On July 1, 1863, a total of 150,000 troops from the North and the South fought in the small...
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General Robert E. Lee: What day is it now, Major?
Maj. Walter H. Taylor: [takes out his pocket watch] It's long after midnight, sir. It's already Friday.
General Robert E. Lee: Friday, July the 3rd?
Maj. Walter H. Taylor: Yes, sir.
General Robert E. Lee: Then tomorrow is the Fourth of July.
Maj. Walter H. Taylor: Sir?
General Robert E. Lee: Independence Day?
Maj. Walter H. Taylor: Huh. I'd quite forgotten.
General Robert E. Lee: The good Lord has a sense of humor. I'm very sorry to keep you up so late.
Maj. Walter H. Taylor: It is my pleasure, sir.
General Robert E. Lee: We should have a larger staff.
Maj. Walter H. Taylor: I would be insulted, sir.
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Brigadier General Lewis A. Armistead: [Armistead sees a young soldier cowering behind a fence on the Emmitsburg Road during Pickett's Charge and stoops down next to him] Come on, boy, come on! What'll you think of yourself tomorrow?
[he stands back up]
Brigadier General Lewis A. Armistead: Virginians! Virginians!
[he takes off his hat and impales it on his sword, then holds it aloft]
Brigadier General Lewis A. Armistead: With me! Who will come with me?
[he charges ahead, his brigade hot on his heels]