History vs Hollywood  
How the Past is Filmed
Author(s): M J Trow
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399066525
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781399066525 Price: INR 960.99
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Film studios have been making historical movies now for over a century. In that time, thousands of films have been made covering not just centuries but millennia. Did Neanderthal woman really look like Raquel Welch in her bearskin bikini? Did 6,000 rebellious slaves claim that they were Spartacus? Did Berengaria complain to her husband, Richard the Lionheart, ‘War, war; that’s all you think about, Dick Plantagenet’? Was El Cid strapped to his horse’s saddle to lead his army after he was dead? These aren’t questions of history; they are questions of Hollywood.

Charlton Heston was a foot too tall for General Charles Gordon. John Wayne was a tad too American for Genghis Khan. Eric von Stroheim’s bald head was an odd choice for the perfectly hirsute Erwin Rommel. And Warren Beatty and Fay Dunaway were far too gorgeous for bank robbers Bonnie and Clyde.

Hollywood never gets it right. History and its characters are endlessly complicated, and producers, directors and screenwriters have a simple story to tell. They have a maximum of two hours to explain what happened over weeks or months or years and many of it give it their best shot.

Yet for all Hollywood’s shortcomings in recreating the past, it has managed to evoke eras and people long dead in a magical way that has kept millions of us enthralled for generations.
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Film studios have been making historical movies now for over a century. In that time, thousands of films have been made covering not just centuries but millennia. Did Neanderthal woman really look like Raquel Welch in her bearskin bikini? Did 6,000 rebellious slaves claim that they were Spartacus? Did Berengaria complain to her husband, Richard the Lionheart, ‘War, war; that’s all you think about, Dick Plantagenet’? Was El Cid strapped to his horse’s saddle to lead his army after he was dead? These aren’t questions of history; they are questions of Hollywood.

Charlton Heston was a foot too tall for General Charles Gordon. John Wayne was a tad too American for Genghis Khan. Eric von Stroheim’s bald head was an odd choice for the perfectly hirsute Erwin Rommel. And Warren Beatty and Fay Dunaway were far too gorgeous for bank robbers Bonnie and Clyde.

Hollywood never gets it right. History and its characters are endlessly complicated, and producers, directors and screenwriters have a simple story to tell. They have a maximum of two hours to explain what happened over weeks or months or years and many of it give it their best shot.

Yet for all Hollywood’s shortcomings in recreating the past, it has managed to evoke eras and people long dead in a magical way that has kept millions of us enthralled for generations.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Overture Lights! Camera! Action!
  • Chapter 1 Swords and Sandals: From Genesis to the Fall of Rome
  • Chapter 2 The Dark Ages: From the Fall of Rome to Alfred the Great
  • Chapter 3 The Middle Ages: From Hastings to Bosworth
  • Chapter 4 The Renaissance: From Bluff King Hal to Gloriana
  • Chapter 5 The Swashbucklers: From the Musketeers to the Pirates
  • Chapter 6 The New World: From the Halls of Montezuma to Uncle Sam
  • Chapter 7 The Age of Empire: From Bonaparte to Ekaterinburg
  • Chapter 8 Westerns: Heading Them Off at the Past
  • Chapter 9 To Hell and Back: War from the Trenches to the Killing Fields
  • Chapter 10 Shoot! Crime Films: From Cain to Bundy
  • Chapter 11 Ice-Cream and Popcorn
  • Chapter 12 The One-Eyed Monster
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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