Deb is away until tomorrow evening....a four day stay at her mother's house, lots of girl time, hen sessions and what not. So, I have had the house all to my self...well, as far as people go at any rate....still have 2 dogs, a cat and three tanks of fish. Even the other side of the duplex is empty....so I have total control of the TV and the volume on the surround sound....and can be as loud and proud as I want without driving anyone crazy.
Today, I watched Gettysburg...the superb TNT mega-production. First time I have been able to really enjoy it on a large wide screen TV with the surround sound turned up nice and loud. I gave the subwoofer some extra volume to really bring the bass and vibration of the canon shots and explosions into the living room.
Wow! Still totally blown away by the movie and the scale on which it was done. Superb acting, superb camera work, superb effects. To see thousands of men, dressed in period correct attire, marching across the actual site of Picket's Charge....simply mind blowing...and very emotional. At many points in the movie, I found myself crying.
One downside to watching the movie on a large TV (42 inch Plasma)....I saw a lot of things that simply stood out as "wrong". On many of the Civil War re-enactors, I saw the white band around their wrists where they would normally be wearing watches and I saw one guy popping a piece of Wrigley's Juicy Fruit into his mouth...that green gum was unmistakable.
Gettysburg was released in 1993....17 years ago...and I still had the same gut level reactions to the movie as I did the first time I watched it. The degree to which the actors were made to resemble the real life people they portrayed, the scope of the production, watching 40 field pieces being fired one after another in a long line. It took 15 years, from the beginning of the scripting, through all the research, finding a production company willing to finance such a risky period piece (thank you Ted Turner....who had a small appearance in the film....he portrayed a Confederate officer during Picket's Charge...he died), to bring the movie into reality. 15 years that were well worth the effort.
OBIO
Since Thursday afternoon, I have watched Spiderman 1, 2 and 3, Flyboys, We Were Soldiers, Saving Private Ryan, The Thin Red Line, The Lost Battalion (the best work Ricky Schroder did), To Hell and Back, and Gettysburg. Tomorrow....Gods and Generals is on the list to watch.
Today, I watched Gettysburg...the superb TNT mega-production. First time I have been able to really enjoy it on a large wide screen TV with the surround sound turned up nice and loud. I gave the subwoofer some extra volume to really bring the bass and vibration of the canon shots and explosions into the living room.
Wow! Still totally blown away by the movie and the scale on which it was done. Superb acting, superb camera work, superb effects. To see thousands of men, dressed in period correct attire, marching across the actual site of Picket's Charge....simply mind blowing...and very emotional. At many points in the movie, I found myself crying.
One downside to watching the movie on a large TV (42 inch Plasma)....I saw a lot of things that simply stood out as "wrong". On many of the Civil War re-enactors, I saw the white band around their wrists where they would normally be wearing watches and I saw one guy popping a piece of Wrigley's Juicy Fruit into his mouth...that green gum was unmistakable.
Gettysburg was released in 1993....17 years ago...and I still had the same gut level reactions to the movie as I did the first time I watched it. The degree to which the actors were made to resemble the real life people they portrayed, the scope of the production, watching 40 field pieces being fired one after another in a long line. It took 15 years, from the beginning of the scripting, through all the research, finding a production company willing to finance such a risky period piece (thank you Ted Turner....who had a small appearance in the film....he portrayed a Confederate officer during Picket's Charge...he died), to bring the movie into reality. 15 years that were well worth the effort.
OBIO
Since Thursday afternoon, I have watched Spiderman 1, 2 and 3, Flyboys, We Were Soldiers, Saving Private Ryan, The Thin Red Line, The Lost Battalion (the best work Ricky Schroder did), To Hell and Back, and Gettysburg. Tomorrow....Gods and Generals is on the list to watch.