Experts reconstruct and test China's first super-weapon, the chariot, which dominated the battlefields for more than 1000 years.Experts reconstruct and test China's first super-weapon, the chariot, which dominated the battlefields for more than 1000 years.Experts reconstruct and test China's first super-weapon, the chariot, which dominated the battlefields for more than 1000 years.
Eric Meyers
- Self - Narrator
- (voice)
Robin Yates
- Self - McGill University
- (as Robin D.S. Yates)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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I'm not a fan of historical re-enactments, as they introduce to the viewer inaccuracies through sloppy "filmmaking". This show doesn't rely on too much of that, but still they keep showing very Northern Chinese looking Zhou warriors on a chariot in a group of three, looking like awkward bumbling re-enactors, almost immediately rendering their portrayal detrimental to perceptions of any accuracy. This quibbling aside, the show goes about trying to convince the viewer that Zhou chariots were superior to the chariots of the Eastern Mediterranean and Egypt. While such techniques as placing the axle under the center of the platform may distinguish it from Hittite or Mycenaean or Egyptian war chariots, they don't necessarily represent a surpassing of the much, much older and lighter war chariots of the Mid East. The chariots of the show were "invented" fully half a millennium AFTER the battle of Kadesh, which to many historians represents the end of the age of bronze age charioteering, and the start of iron age warfare. That battle saw three-man crews, AND right-handed and left-handed battle platforms. The Egyptians hired "Greek" warriors to join the driver and archer on-board. This third would jump off the moving chariot behind enemy lines. So, the show says the Chinese invented using a third. Wrong. They also suggest there was no real purpose to the third. Stupid. Finally, the "historian" who is the arms re-creationist in every one of these shows is a pain in the neck: he's often WRONG, very image-obsessed, and always striving to show his virility and superiority to whomever he's with, when actually he just sounds like an aging British twit who loves to add his two pence. I feel this show makes too much out of China's late-to-the-picnic chariot methods. More of a History channel sort of waste of time.
I feel that this presentation is geared more towards teenagers. If you like being told THE SAME THING by three or more "experts"; one right after the other; watch this. And, because all the "experts" can offer is guesswork that leaves more unanswered questions, they decide to build a mock-up chariot so they can pose those same questions anew. Along the way they make building it sound like rocket science when clearly the tech has been around nearly 3,000 years. Oh, by the way, I must have been a tactician in an earlier life because it seems to me that if you kill one of the horses the chariot can't move so it becomes useless.
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