The Civil War: A Film By Ken Burns

Production year: 1990

TV/American TV-G   Running time: 11:00

IMDB rating:   9.2     Aspect: 4:3;  Languages: English;  Subtitles: None;  Audio: DD 5.1

The most successful public-television miniseries in American history, the 11-hour Civil War didn't just captivate a nation, reteaching to us our history in narrative terms; it actually also invented a new film language taken from its creator. When people describe documentaries using the "Ken Burns approach," its style is understood: voice-over narrators reading letters and documents dramatically and stating the writer's name at their conclusion, fresh live footage of places juxtaposed with still images (photographs, paintings, maps, prints), anecdotal interviews, and romantic musical scores taken from the era he depicts. The Civil War uses all of these devices to evoke atmosphere and resurrect an event that many knew only from stale history books. While Burns is a historian, a researcher, and a documentarian, he's above all a gifted storyteller, and it's his narrative powers that give this chronicle its beauty, overwhelming emotion, and devastating horror. Using the words of old letters, eloquently read by a variety of celebrities, the stories of historians like Shelby Foote and rare, stained photos, Burns allows us not only to relearn and finally understand our history, but also to feel and experience it.

Special features

Behind the Scenes: The Civil War Reconstruction
Commentary by Ken Burns
Additional Interviews with Ken Burns, Shelby Foote, George Will and Stanley Crouch
Biography Cards
Battlefield Maps
Civil War Challenge
Ken Burns: Making History, A Conversation with Ken Burns
The Civil War: A Film By Ken Burns