DVD Review: American History Collector's DVD set
Published December 19, 2007
I can’t think of a better time than the cusp of a Presidential election year to brush up on US history. The History Channel, with its large library of programming, offers a perfect opportunity to begin with its American History Collector’s DVD set.
I confess. I am not a history geek. I have an interest in American history, particularly when it intersects with politics, but my husband is the real history go-to guy in our family. He agreed to subscribe to digital cable only because he could then have access to numerous History Channel channels. In fact, on a typical Sunday afternoon, if the Chicago Bears aren’t playing, chances are pretty good that one or another of those History channels are playing on the upstairs television.
On a more practical level, our high school junior is taking AP (Advanced Placement) US History right now, so the pressure is on to be able to answer any and all obscure questions about American history accurately and spontaneously. You never know when your knowledge of Fort Ticonderoga or the origins of the Gettysburg address might come in very handy during finals week cramming.
More seriously, and in a presidential election year, few things can be more important than understanding the underpinnings of our country, especially as some in our nation seek to re-define what the founding fathers meant, what civil liberties are meant to be, and how the early days of our country frame our present and will frame our future.
How do the presidents of the distant past measure up against the presidents of more recent vintage? On what principles was our country founded? Context in the face of social and political change is always necessary, and in that light, a review of some of the most important historical moments of the United States is a valuable tool for not only the history buff, but the average citizen too. It is only by studying (or remembering) the past that we can learn to make the future better.
American History Collector’s DVD set is really three different DVD box sets: The American Revolution, The Last Days of the Civil War, and The Presidents. I watched them with an eye towards revisiting what I had studied back in school so long ago, but with my mind focused on the importance of understanding our history as context for 21st century America. Although not necessarily as engaging as a “made-for-television” docu-drama, these sets, created by the History Channel in cooperation with Arts and Entertainment Network and the Biography® Channel, comprise an interesting and worthwhile collection from its vast archive of award-winning historical programming.
The American Revolution is a five-DVD set narrated by long-time broadcast journalist Bill Kurtis. Intercut with re-enacted scenes of battles, skirmishes, and meetings are the very words of the revolution’s movers and shakers: revolutionaries, thinkers, radicals, agitators, and money men. They are brought to life by well known actors like William Daniels.
The series does a good job of separating mythology from fact without diminishing the profound impact the American Revolution had, not only on the people who colonized this country, but on the entire world. The final two DVDs of the set are Biography® Channel portraits of four key players in the founding of the country: George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Paul Revere, and Benedict Arnold. Whereas most of us know Benedict Arnold as the very definition of the word “traitor,” this portrait gives the layperson a deeper understanding of the motivations and circumstances that caused Arnold, a hero of the war and Washington’s favorite general, to betray the new nation to the British.
- DVD Review: American History Collector's DVD set
- Published: December 19, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Culture: History, Review, Video: Documentary, Video: Historical, Video: Military
- Writer: Barbara Barnett
- Barbara Barnett's BC Writer page
- Barbara Barnett's personal site
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