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Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war
Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war









cornel wilde movies revolutionary war
  1. #Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war movie
  2. #Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war series
  3. #Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war tv

I’m sure I read not too long ago that TURN has been given the go-ahead for a third season.

#Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war movie

Maybe it’s just that the right movie hasn’t been made yet that would appeal to me. Maybe it’s because we covered the period over and over again every year in grade school, but I just don’t find the era very interesting.

#Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war tv

I have to confess that I have seen very few of any of those movies or TV shows. Those are all that come to mind off hand.

#Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war series

Howard Fast’s revolutionary war novel was a well done TVM with Tommy Lee Jones, Shaw’s THE DEVILS DISCIPLE is fun, Maxwell Anderson’s VALLEY FORGE with Richard Basehart as George Washington was well recieved as was the Jeff Daniels Washington miniseries, then there was also the Franklin mini series with the Bridges family and Disney’s JOHNNY TREMAIN and THE SWAMP FOX. Most period fiction be it films or TV have a hard time unless the period is within the lifetime of the audience.ĪMC’s TURN features spying during the Revolutionary War has survived but basically ignored.Ĭan anyone think of a successful film or TV show that took place during the Revolutionary War that did not have John Adams in it?ġ776 did well as I recall and it is a delightful film and the one with Nick Nolte as Jefferson isn’t bad. Still, any film with Sanders and Douglas has at least that much going for it. The only commercially successful (if dramatically dubious) RW movie I can recall from recent years was THE PATRIOT. I haven’t seen THE SCARLET COAT, but Hugh Hudson’s REVOLUTION from several years ago, with Al Pacino miscast as a 1770s fur trapper, was a crashing bore. Was it Mayer who said he didn’t want to make films where people write with feathers? And it doesn’t help if the product itself lacks energy. Movies about the Revolutionary War seem to be a hard sell, but that says more about the paucity of producers’ and writers’ imaginations (and sadly, I guess, popular tastes) than the richness of the historical material. In a way, it still is, so long as you do so with tempered expectations.ġ2 Responses to “Reviewed by Jonathan Lewis: THE SCARLET COAT (1955).” That’s not to say that it’s not worth watching. The Scarlet Coat, which was not a commercial success, is not a bad film so much a as a movie which reached for a level of historical relevancy that, despite gallant effort, ultimately eluded its grasp. Likewise, the friendly rivalry between Bolton and Andre over the fictional Sally Cameron (Anne Francis) seems forced, as if the screenwriters decided upon introducing a romantic subplot just for the sake of having one in the movie.Īnd the character of Benedict Arnold, nominally the pivotal character, barely appears on screen, making the film more the story of British spy, John Andre than of the American spy, Arnold. Indeed, the film’s last thirty minutes or so have enough action and suspense to keep you engaged and anticipating what happens next.īut it’s simply not enough to make up for the fact that, for much of the movie, the actors seem to be going through the motions more than anything else. That’s not to say that the movie doesn’t have its moments.

cornel wilde movies revolutionary war cornel wilde movies revolutionary war

Yet, when all is said and done, it’s the alternatingly flaccid and meandering script that makes the movie an altogether humdrum affair.

cornel wilde movies revolutionary war

Jonathan Odell (George Sanders).įilmed in Cinemascope in Eastman Color on location in New York’s Hudson River Valley, The Scarlet Coat benefits from a stellar cast, and lavish, detailed costumes. To accomplish this task, Bolton goes undercover as a deserter in British-controlled New York City where he aims to deceive Major John Andre (Michael Wilding) and the loyalist Dr. His task: ferret out the traitor in the colonists’ midst, a trail that ultimately leads him to none other than the infamous historical traitor, Benedict Arnold (Robert Douglas). Directed by John Sturges, the movie stars Cornel Wilde as the fictional Major John Bolton of the Continental Army. The Scarlet Coat is at once a docudrama epic, a Revolutionary War era swashbuckler, and a war film. Cornel Wilde, Michael Wilding, George Sanders, Anne Francis, Robert Douglas, John McIntire, Rhys Williams, John Dehner, Bobby Driscoll.











Cornel wilde movies revolutionary war