This is the movie that led to my becoming a history buff, especially of the Civil War. Gettysburg was a film over a decade in the making. It’s source material was Michael Shaara’s historical novel Killer Angels, which attempted to dive into the heads of several real-life Union and Confederate figures in America’s greatest battle. Maxwell was unable to get the backing to actually make the movie because of some notable failed epic films, but finally Ted Turner, who also saw the idea of a Civil War mini-series as a passion project, finally got things going.
Gettysburg was originally
made to be a mini-series for TNT, but Turner was so impressed with the final
product that, with a few scenes cut, it was given a limited theatrical release
first. Thanks to its four hour length, the longest for any theatrical release
in American history, it didn’t make back its budget, but it got lots of praise
and positive buzz. Thus it was a smash hit on TV and home video. I remember my
family having the two-tape set. It’s size always impressed me and it was
watched a lot in the house. After seeing a few other images in my family’s book
collection and getting the BMC toy soldier set for my birthday, I one day
decided to check out a couple books from the library and I turned into a Civil
War nerd for the rest of my life.
For
those who don’t know, Gettysburg is considered the greatest battle of the Civil
War. It didn’t have the most men involved (that honor goes to the Battle of
Fredericksburg), but it saw the heaviest casualties in killed and wounded.
General Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia,
wanted to take the war north and score a decisive victory that would end the
war in his favor. Nearly by accident, the Confederate and Union Armies collided
at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863. After three days of fighting, Lee’s army
suffered its first massive defeat. Along with the loss of the last strongholds
on the Mississippi River and the major Tennessee railroad junction of Chattanooga, this battle was a major turning point and is argued to have signaled
the eventual defeat of the Confederacy.
| Ted Turner (left) cameos as Colonel Waller T. Patton, World War II general George Patton's great-uncle. Ron Maxwell stands to the right. (https://davethecaveman.blogspot.com/2018/11/my-favorite-films-gettysburg-1993.html) |
By the way, if you’re wondering why the movie didn’t retain the title Killer Angels, marketing warned that people would think of biker gangs instead of the Civil War. Now into the movie’s content and historicity. I also already did a list of some historical inaccuracies, a few which I’ll touch on in this review, but others I won’t, so check it out.