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Punto de inflexión: La guerra de Vietnam

Título original: Turning Point: The Vietnam War
  • Miniserie de TV
  • 2025
  • 1h 15min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.8/10
2.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
3,226
520
Punto de inflexión: La guerra de Vietnam (2025)
The Vietnam War's profound effects on American identity, causing social division and eroding government trust. More than military defeat, it transformed US politics and culture.
Reproducir trailer2:36
2 videos
7 fotos
Documental de historiaDocumental militarDocumentalGuerraHistoria

Los profundos efectos de la guerra de Vietnam en la identidad estadounidense, que provocan divisiones sociales y erosionan la confianza del gobierno. Más que una derrota militar, transformó ... Leer todoLos profundos efectos de la guerra de Vietnam en la identidad estadounidense, que provocan divisiones sociales y erosionan la confianza del gobierno. Más que una derrota militar, transformó la política y la cultura estadounidenses.Los profundos efectos de la guerra de Vietnam en la identidad estadounidense, que provocan divisiones sociales y erosionan la confianza del gobierno. Más que una derrota militar, transformó la política y la cultura estadounidenses.

  • Elenco
    • Fredrik Logevall
    • George J. Veith
    • Marc J. Selverstone
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.8/10
    2.3 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    3,226
    520
    • Elenco
      • Fredrik Logevall
      • George J. Veith
      • Marc J. Selverstone
    • 33Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 5Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Episodios5

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    DestacadoLos mejor calificados1 temporada2025

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:36
    Official Trailer
    Turning Point: The Vietnam War
    Trailer 2:37
    Turning Point: The Vietnam War
    Turning Point: The Vietnam War
    Trailer 2:37
    Turning Point: The Vietnam War

    Fotos6

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    Elenco principal71

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    Fredrik Logevall
    Fredrik Logevall
    • Self - Author, Embers of War
    • 2025
    George J. Veith
    George J. Veith
    • Self - Author, Drawn Swords in a Distant Land
    • 2025
    Marc J. Selverstone
    Marc J. Selverstone
    • Self - Director of Presidential Studies, University of Virginia Miller Center
    • 2025
    Ken Hughes
    Ken Hughes
    • Self - Research Specialist, Presidential Recordings, University of Virginia Miller Center…
    • 2025
    Lien-Hang Nguyen
    Lien-Hang Nguyen
    • Self - Author, Hanoi's War
    • 2025
    Pham Ba Hoa
    Pham Ba Hoa
    • Self - ARVN…
    • 2025
    Tuong Vu
    Tuong Vu
    • Self - Director, US-Vietnam Research Center
    • 2025
    Nguyen Trong Nho
    Nguyen Trong Nho
    • Self - South Vietnamese Congressman…
    • 2025
    Viet Thanh Nguyen
    Viet Thanh Nguyen
    • Self - Author, The Sympathizer
    • 2025
    Dan Rather
    Dan Rather
    • Self - CBS News Correspondent
    • 2025
    Thomas A. Bass
    Thomas A. Bass
    • Self - Author, Vietnamerica: The War Comes Homes
    • 2025
    Gregory Daddis
    Gregory Daddis
    • Self - Military Historian
    • 2025
    Duc Nha Hoang
    Duc Nha Hoang
    • Self - Advisor to South Vietnamese President…
    • 2025
    Chic Canfora
    Chic Canfora
    • Self - Anti-War Activist
    • 2025
    C. Jack Ellis
    C. Jack Ellis
    • Self - U.S. Army…
    • 2025
    John Negroponte
    John Negroponte
    • Self - U.S. Foreign Service…
    • 2025
    Peter Osnos
    Peter Osnos
    • Self - Author, LBJ and McNamara…
    • 2025
    Scott Camil
    Scott Camil
    • Self - U.S. Marine Corps…
    • 2025
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios33

    7.82.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8davegras

    Better than I expected. Worth watching.

    I enjoy learning about 20th century American history, and the Vietnam War is one of my favorite documentary topics. I was initially concerned that this documentary would be filled with anti-American bias, however, it was much more balanced than I expected. The burning of villages by American/ARVN forces was discussed in one episode, for example, but it was also acknowledged that the North Vietnamese did a lot more of that kind of destruction. In one episode, a Viet Cong woman explains why she hated the Americans but also notes that many North Vietnamese didn't really understand what communism entailed. On the other hand, you had one million living in the North flee to the South when the civil war truce occurred, suggesting that many people did understand what life under communism meant (somewhat reminiscent of the East Germans escaping to West Germany, or maybe those Koreans living in the North who relocated to the South). To me this suggests the North Vietnamese victory was a pyrrhic one because while North Vietnam won, the people still didn't have most of the freedoms some people in the West take for granted nor the power. Of course, no more foreign control or interference. But I wonder if their lives changed for the better. We do know a million people from the South escaped (boat people) four years later.

    Some critics have said that this documentary is a little too biased for their tastes. But I, someone who gets annoyed when I hear bias, didn't think so. To be sure, there was one guy in Episode 5 who annoyed me because I think he was being dramatic for the camera. Nevertheless, everyone else spoke in a measured way with occasional sincere emotions. All facts to me, and interesting perspectives, too. Some critics also suggest some important details were left out. I think this is true to some extent. No mention of the death of Ho Chi Min in 1969, for instance. I don't think General Giap was mentioned either. Still, I think for a five episode series, and given it's aim, it was wonderfully edited and directed. I love learning new details about subjects I'm already familiar with and this documentary did not disappoint.

    I think the first 20-30 minutes of Episode 1 left me a little unclear how this documentary would play out. However, after that it started to grab my interest. As to be expected, there's a lot of sadness, grief, strife, and so on, on both sides. But don't take that as gratuitous anti-Americanism. Rather, I think the director was focused on telling a story from all points of view and how the Vietnam War permanently changed America and the relationship the American people has with their government because of it.
    10d-papadakis

    Top of the Pile

    I have been a Netflix subscriber for years and years and this has to be the best documentary I have ever seen. It is so thoughtful and through, and honest.

    I remember sitting in the high school auditorium with all the other male seniors to sign up for the Selective Service in 1972. The representative where really honest with us. It was during the time when the draft was based on the lottery system. They told us if your number was 100 or less, you would be drafted, if it was about 100, no worries. Mine was in 343.

    I had to possibility of participating in history, but too dimwitted to understand what it meant.

    Now I know, and the knowing makes me feel ashamed for our country.

    Best line in the documentary is "We are the United States of Amnesia". Ain't it so, all you can do is weep.

    This is a must watch, even for people that do not live in this country.
    8bertinabruintjes

    Detailed, balanced and comprehensive

    I really enjoy this kind of documentary, especially because its length - over five hours - allows it to take its time and properly explore a story from as many angles as possible.

    What struck me most, personally, was that I ended up feeling sympathy and even a kind of sorrow for both sides. The filmmaker makes a real effort to stay as neutral as possible, showing the motivations - and especially the suffering - on both sides of the conflict.

    One real eye-opener for me was what happened to the South Vietnamese who had worked with the Americans, after the US defeat and the communist takeover. It was shocking to see the consequences they faced. And what's more, the country is still divided in many ways because of this war - emotionally, politically, socially.

    Neither side is painted as the bad guy.
    9FONYMAHONEY

    Knappenberger is the Gen Z Ken Burns.

    Another exceptionally objective docuseries from the new master of historical shows.

    As a Brit, I can appreciate that my reaction and perspective to this series & the Vietnam war in general is wildly different from anyone in the US. Conversely, since my country opted not to engage in the conflict, we weren't really educated on it any real detail - so broadly speaking, even as a bit of a history dweeb, I'm pretty ignorant when it comes to any of the decades-long western battles against communism.

    That's why I'm especially grateful to the talents of Brian Knappenberg.

    Rather than portraying 9/11, the Cold War or in this latest fine entry into his canon as a 'rah! Rah! America!' Indulgence, he's proactively evenhanded, fair & draws remarkably detailed and articulate accounts from people who were really there. Yet despite the density of information & intelligence with which it's done, it's still accessible to even a Luddite like me.

    It's powerful, powerful stuff - and while I can absolutely 100% appreciate that this must be deeply grating for a lot of those in the states, as a fascinated outsider? It's quite an excellent entry into the mountains of existing work covering this engrossingly chaotic period in modern human history.

    Bravo.
    chaos-rampant

    Surveying from afar

    There is no new insight here, and if you're familiar with the Ken Burns series, this is the lackluster remake. It duly covers the various turning points, from French loss to Tet to scuttled peace talks and Nixon's genocidal campaigns to name a few. We get various asides along the way; the student anti-war movement, the elections of '68, the treatment of returning veterans.

    If it's your first comprehensive surveying of the Vietnam story, you will get the whole thing. It is, as usual, told from the American perspective; ill-advised entanglement in a faraway jungle, increasingly bitter and chaotic. There are also some Vietcong voices this time around.

    There's so much that went wrong in a decade that to survey as we do, with talking heads, and condensing to snippets, makes it seem self-evident. There's no way to tell what a world would look like in which the CIA didn't lose the plot probably starting with Cuba, for example, or 'domino effect' thinking didn't win over in policy circles. And it's important to note how badly Washington misunderstood context; the generals did really think in terms of fighting in the Pacific Theater, but there the troops had been propelled by Pearl Harbor and fighting the good fight.

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      Aired on the 50th anniversary of the Fall of Saigon.
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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 30 de abril de 2025 (México)
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      • Estados Unidos
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      • Luminant Media
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