Re: "Cold Mountain" film review
Andrew:
I know that you are young and just getting into the hobby (from a post in the cav section of this forum). Let me offer some advice:
1) MTV is not the place to go for historical information.
2) Regarding your comment on the uniforms in "Cold Mountain" - what do you know about North Carolina early issue jackets? What do you know about Peter Tait jackets and their provenance? Read Lee White's post below yours and the article on Don Trioiani and you might learn something.
3) There is some historical fact in "Cold Mountain." "Teague" was a real person. The murder of the fiddler and his "special needs" friend is a real event. Cold Mountain is a real place. You should see it for no other reason than to understand some of the suffering that the "folks at home" endured in the south. Your understanding of "bush wackers," the lawlessness that they envoked and "action" on the home front will be greatly expanded.
I'm sure that you are excited about your new hobby. I'm sure you read these posts and want to comment. But, a word of advice, read and learn, read and learn. At this point in the hobby, you don't know what you don't know.
No Hollywood movie is 100% historically accurate, but it seems that "Cold Mountain" made an effort in that direction.
Much better than "Gettysburg" and the much panned "Gods and Generals."
You might start watching "History vs. Hollywood" on the History Channel.
Originally posted by Secede1863
I know that you are young and just getting into the hobby (from a post in the cav section of this forum). Let me offer some advice:
1) MTV is not the place to go for historical information.
2) Regarding your comment on the uniforms in "Cold Mountain" - what do you know about North Carolina early issue jackets? What do you know about Peter Tait jackets and their provenance? Read Lee White's post below yours and the article on Don Trioiani and you might learn something.
3) There is some historical fact in "Cold Mountain." "Teague" was a real person. The murder of the fiddler and his "special needs" friend is a real event. Cold Mountain is a real place. You should see it for no other reason than to understand some of the suffering that the "folks at home" endured in the south. Your understanding of "bush wackers," the lawlessness that they envoked and "action" on the home front will be greatly expanded.
I'm sure that you are excited about your new hobby. I'm sure you read these posts and want to comment. But, a word of advice, read and learn, read and learn. At this point in the hobby, you don't know what you don't know.
No Hollywood movie is 100% historically accurate, but it seems that "Cold Mountain" made an effort in that direction.
Much better than "Gettysburg" and the much panned "Gods and Generals."
You might start watching "History vs. Hollywood" on the History Channel.
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