Añade un argumento en tu idiomaAs America expands westward, intrepid explorers and rugged mountain men risk their lives to blaze new trails into the wild frontier.As America expands westward, intrepid explorers and rugged mountain men risk their lives to blaze new trails into the wild frontier.As America expands westward, intrepid explorers and rugged mountain men risk their lives to blaze new trails into the wild frontier.
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10dlracer2
Excellent watchable and educational.
Historians narrate events in American History as factually as you've ever thought you already knew.
Dramatizations are either SNL type parodies of an actual dramatization, or someone deliberately made them cheesy enough to see where the line is with subtle comedy.
Historians narrate events in American History as factually as you've ever thought you already knew.
Dramatizations are either SNL type parodies of an actual dramatization, or someone deliberately made them cheesy enough to see where the line is with subtle comedy.
Great story telling that really gives you a sense of what drove these men and women west.
To those who have been questioning how the American Indians had guns as early as Lewis and Clark, the answer is the Spanish and French were out there decades before Americans and traded and coexisted mostly peacefully with them. There were fights but nothing compared to what happened with Americans.
The series shows thatbtrade and commerce were important to the Indians and what they could not trade they took, and rightfully so.
My only complaint would be I wish they had told the stories chronologically. Bouncing from 1820 in season 1 to 1750s in season 2 took away from the feel of westward expansion.
To those who have been questioning how the American Indians had guns as early as Lewis and Clark, the answer is the Spanish and French were out there decades before Americans and traded and coexisted mostly peacefully with them. There were fights but nothing compared to what happened with Americans.
The series shows thatbtrade and commerce were important to the Indians and what they could not trade they took, and rightfully so.
My only complaint would be I wish they had told the stories chronologically. Bouncing from 1820 in season 1 to 1750s in season 2 took away from the feel of westward expansion.
I've only seen one episode, the one in which a Daniel Boone daughter was captured while canoeing. I thought it was excellent.
A mixed review a year ago included: "But I do wonder where the Indians, living in the middle of nowhere, with little or no contact with white men, get all those rifles, gun power, musket balls and saddles."
Uh, well, it's called the Fur Trade. By the early 1800s, the locals had been trading with Europeans for over 300 years. Muskets, rifles, lead, powder, silver ornaments, beads from Italy, vermilion from China, fabric from India, and blankets & Sheffield knives from England. I don't know what bits & saddles are right for Blackfeet & Shoshone, but know that Spanish bits were steel, as far back as Coronado.
A mixed review a year ago included: "But I do wonder where the Indians, living in the middle of nowhere, with little or no contact with white men, get all those rifles, gun power, musket balls and saddles."
Uh, well, it's called the Fur Trade. By the early 1800s, the locals had been trading with Europeans for over 300 years. Muskets, rifles, lead, powder, silver ornaments, beads from Italy, vermilion from China, fabric from India, and blankets & Sheffield knives from England. I don't know what bits & saddles are right for Blackfeet & Shoshone, but know that Spanish bits were steel, as far back as Coronado.
"Into The Wild Frontier" is a fantastic show. The cinematography is excellent with the beautiful wilderness background. Finally, a good series with historical accounts. Truth is better than fiction. I don't have faith of it continuing with such little information concerning it's future. It was on one minute and then GONE with no advertising for more episodes. Not good at all with the marketing.
All-in-all it was enjoyable, and got most of the main points it was trying to tell. The attention to detail was terrible as others have mentioned (fat Native Americans with saddled horses, Jemimah Boone having her hair combed with something you could buy at Walmart, Kit Carson fixing his fence with a claw hammer bought from Lowes/Home Depot, etc.) I did learn about some things I didn't know, but I was a little disappointed about it missing some things I did know. For example, Daniel Boone's escape from a British-backed Shawnee war party during the American Revolution in order to run 4 marathons in 4 days barefoot while avoiding being tracked so that he could warn Boonsborough of the pending attack wasn't even mentioned. Additionally, there was far more to Jim Bridger than just leaving Hugh Glass behind as a youngster (especially since it's uncertain that it was even him). Episode 2 should have been about Hugh Glass and another episode dedicated to Bridger (Hugh Glass was the real-life man upon whom The Revenant and Man in the Wilderness is based).
Its worth a watch, but it's also worth looking into the rest of the stories.
Its worth a watch, but it's also worth looking into the rest of the stories.
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