Technomancer wrote:Part of my problem is that often historical films don't really follow history too well.
Then you might be pleasantly surprised with this one. I'm not sure about the actual events, but Master and Commander did nothing to romanticize that time of history. You got a real glimpse of how claustrophobic, dirty, and dangerous one of those ships could really be.
In too many period novels, history is a veneer masking some up-to-date monkeyshines. In rarer instances, history permeates the very substance of the book. Patrick O'Brian's sophisticated sea story belongs to the blue-ribbon category. It re-creates with delightful subtlety, the flavor of life aboard a midget British man-of-war plying the western Mediterranean in the year 1800, a year of indecisive naval skirmishes with France and Spain. Even for a reader not especially interested in matters nautical, the author's easy command of the philosophical, political, sensual and social temper of the times flavors a rich entertainment. For the deep-water buff, there is enough incidental information here to enable him to fit out, commission and sail a 140-ton square rigger, should the occasion ever arise.
Shatterheart wrote:....to call it an intellegent film would kind of imply that those who do not like it...are slow or somthing...
ShiroiHikari wrote:I wanna see this movie. I'm not a history buff, but it looked interesting.
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