The American Revolution
- Mini-série télévisée
- 2025
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueChronicles how 13 British colonies fought for independence and formed a new nation, through the experiences of soldiers, leaders, Loyalists, Native Americans, and African Americans.Chronicles how 13 British colonies fought for independence and formed a new nation, through the experiences of soldiers, leaders, Loyalists, Native Americans, and African Americans.Chronicles how 13 British colonies fought for independence and formed a new nation, through the experiences of soldiers, leaders, Loyalists, Native Americans, and African Americans.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total
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No one tells a story like Burns
I binged all six episodes, 12 hours folks - with sleep as the only interruption - and it reminded me why I'm such a fan of Ken Burns. He has a gift for finding wonder in the minutiae, and this series never disappoints. The settings and events come alive through his signature blend of oil-colored imagery, natural landscapes, and actors used sparingly and tastefully-nothing like the cheesy reenactments and wardrobe issues you see on the History Channel. Some of the most powerful moments are the tight, muted shots: hands washing, muskets firing, bodies intertwined after battle, faces intentionally hidden. The overhead drone footage paired with simple diagrams to explain battles was especially effective.
I've already seen complaints about pacing, but for me the pacing was classic Burns-measured, immersive, and just right. My quibbles are minor: I wish there had been more on Washington's rough treatment under the British during the French and Indian War, a bit more exposition to set up some battles, and much more time spent on Nathanael Greene's brilliant counter to Cornwallis in the South. Yorktown went by far too quickly, and since Burns always plays with differing perspectives, several fascinating perspectives appeared and vanished before fully developing.
Still, as a lifelong student and teacher of history who tends to think I already know everything, Burns always manages to teach me something new - especially about how truly violent the Revolution was, and how impossible it was for anyone to avoid being touched by it. From the British point of view after 1780 the series makes it clear how lost the cause had become even as the British couldn't quite yet see it.
In the end, any expansion on my quibbles would have doubled the runtime. What we have is Burns at his best: encompassing, visually cogent, humane, and thoroughly enjoyable.
Edit: Seeing all of these posts here crtical of the series as liberal revisionism because it somehow muted or ignored your beliefs on who, how and what principles this nation was founded. The idea that the Founders were all Bible-thumping theocrats just doesn't match the record. Jefferson rewrote the Bible to remove miracles, Franklin was a lifelong Deist, Madison distrusted organized religion, Adams was a Unitarian, and Washington almost never mentioned Jesus at all. The intellectual core of the founding generation was shaped far more by Enlightenment RATIONALISM than evangelical Christianity. There really were no atheists (as we know them today) at this time, but Thomas Paine barely ticked the box on agnosticism. I'm sure you all would have hated him. Hopefully Burns will do The Constitution next because this is what this nation really needs in these times.
I've already seen complaints about pacing, but for me the pacing was classic Burns-measured, immersive, and just right. My quibbles are minor: I wish there had been more on Washington's rough treatment under the British during the French and Indian War, a bit more exposition to set up some battles, and much more time spent on Nathanael Greene's brilliant counter to Cornwallis in the South. Yorktown went by far too quickly, and since Burns always plays with differing perspectives, several fascinating perspectives appeared and vanished before fully developing.
Still, as a lifelong student and teacher of history who tends to think I already know everything, Burns always manages to teach me something new - especially about how truly violent the Revolution was, and how impossible it was for anyone to avoid being touched by it. From the British point of view after 1780 the series makes it clear how lost the cause had become even as the British couldn't quite yet see it.
In the end, any expansion on my quibbles would have doubled the runtime. What we have is Burns at his best: encompassing, visually cogent, humane, and thoroughly enjoyable.
Edit: Seeing all of these posts here crtical of the series as liberal revisionism because it somehow muted or ignored your beliefs on who, how and what principles this nation was founded. The idea that the Founders were all Bible-thumping theocrats just doesn't match the record. Jefferson rewrote the Bible to remove miracles, Franklin was a lifelong Deist, Madison distrusted organized religion, Adams was a Unitarian, and Washington almost never mentioned Jesus at all. The intellectual core of the founding generation was shaped far more by Enlightenment RATIONALISM than evangelical Christianity. There really were no atheists (as we know them today) at this time, but Thomas Paine barely ticked the box on agnosticism. I'm sure you all would have hated him. Hopefully Burns will do The Constitution next because this is what this nation really needs in these times.
So good
Amazing details. Storytelling telling is great. Narrators are perfect.apparently I need 230 more words... I'm not long-winded. This is really good. Should be watched by all to know how this thing called the United States came to be. 70 more letters. George Washington was the man. 21 more words. Now seven.
Overall quite good..some glaring historical inaccuracies
I've been enjoying the series. Last evening (episode 3) it was represented that General Howe, during the Battle of Long Island, had left his campfires lit to deceive Washington as to his army's intentions to fall on the Patriots by surprise. I said to my wife " I didn't know that" and went onto tell her that Washington had used the same ploy to deceive Howe when he subsequently withdrew from Long Island to Manhattan. "Did Washington learn a trick from Howe I speculated". The fact that Washington's campfire deception was never mentioned in the episode left me surprised. Following the show I went to my large history library and found numerous references of Washington's campfire deception, but none of Howe's. I also noted several other inaccuracies ( mostly omissions and slants). But, this is only my editorial opinion.
I am not an amateur historian and hold several degrees in history, taught history and was a Fellow at Yale University where I developed and published curriculum for public schools under Yale's auspice. I should add that this period of history is not my specialty and in the early 80's went on to pursue a new career in vertical flight where i was named an Honorary Fellow of the Vertical Flight Society(a distinctive honor awarded to only two persons worldwide annually). I'm retired now for many years and continue to pursue my many and varied interests.
Gary P. Smith.
I am not an amateur historian and hold several degrees in history, taught history and was a Fellow at Yale University where I developed and published curriculum for public schools under Yale's auspice. I should add that this period of history is not my specialty and in the early 80's went on to pursue a new career in vertical flight where i was named an Honorary Fellow of the Vertical Flight Society(a distinctive honor awarded to only two persons worldwide annually). I'm retired now for many years and continue to pursue my many and varied interests.
Gary P. Smith.
Brilliant!
I love documentaries by Ken Burns. This latest work - with directors Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt - does not disappoint.
There were so many things that I didn't know about the American Revolutionary War. I was fascinated by everything in the series: the personalities, the politics, the battles.
What I especially liked was that the documentary did not shy away from telling the story from all sides - both good and bad things that people did.
And why they did it.
A most excellent history lesson.
There were so many things that I didn't know about the American Revolutionary War. I was fascinated by everything in the series: the personalities, the politics, the battles.
What I especially liked was that the documentary did not shy away from telling the story from all sides - both good and bad things that people did.
And why they did it.
A most excellent history lesson.
10winkpc
Everyone should watch this
After watching the first installment of this series I wanted to recommend it to everyone I know. The series is very thorough, but at the same time it maintains your interest. Anyone who learned about early American history in school
will find that this series provides a wealth of additional information that they didn't know about.
Thank you Ken Burns for an outstanding piece of work!
Thank you Ken Burns for an outstanding piece of work!
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Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn this documentary, Paul Giamatti plays the voice of John Adams seventeen years after he portrayed John Adams in the 2008 HBO miniseries "John Adams" (and three years after playing the voice of John Adams in Ken Burns's documentary "Benjamin Franklin"). Interestingly, though Laura Linney (who played John's wife, Abigail, in that series) also lends her voice to "The American Revolution," it is not as Abigail Adams; that voice is played by Claire Danes.
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