Lincoln and Lee at Antietam: The Cost of Freedom
starring: Ronald F. Maxwell, Dennis E. Frye, Mike Brown (XVIII), Ed Mantell, Cindy Brinkerhof
directed by: Robert Child
directed by: Robert Child
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Product Description:
The Single Bloodiest Day in American HistoryTold by Ronald F. Maxwell director of Gettysburg and Gods and Generals Written directed and produced by Robert ChildIt s September 17 1862 and President Abraham Lincoln needs a victory in order to issue the Emancipation Proclamation and end slavery in the South. But Robert E. Lee has other plans invade the North. When Lee s strategy falls into the hands of the Union Army the result is the single bloodiest day in American history at the Battle of Antietam in Sharpsburg Maryland. Includes scarce footage from the 125th 135th and 140th Antietam Reenactments.Historical insight provided by:-James M. McPherson Princeton University Pulitzer Prize winning author of Battle Cry of Freedom and Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam-Allen C. Guelzo Gettysburg College America's only repeat winner of the Lincoln Prize; Nominated by President George W. Bush to the National Council of the Humanities-Dennis E. Frye National Park Service (NPS) Historian at Harpers Ferry author of Antietam Revealed and the Associate producer of Gods and Generals-Patrick Falci actor/performing historian portrays General Ambrose Hill at Antietam-Paul V. Chiles National Parks Service (NPS) Historian at Antietam National Battlefield Park-Features Stanley Wernz President of the Association of Lincoln Presenters as Abraham Lincoln and Benjamin Black as General Robert E. LeeFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/MILITARY & WAR UPC: 806213157520 Manufacturer No: 15752
Amazon.com:
The bloodiest battle ever fought on American soil is thoroughly examined in Lincoln & Lee at Antietam: The Cost of Freedom, a worthy addition to anyone's Civil War video collection. Directed and written by Robert Child and narrated by Ronald F. Maxwell (the director of the definitive Civil War epics Gettysburg and Gods and Generals), this straightforward, no-nonsense documentary emphasizes the tactics, strategies, and historical context of the battle at Antietam, in Sharpsburg, Maryland, on September 17, 1862. Further emphasis is placed on the wartime conditions (political agendas, ready status of armies, etc.) that led to President Abraham Lincoln's orders to defeat Gen. Robert E. Lee's exhausted army at Antietam. Lee and other Confederate strategists had hoped to stage a surprise invasion, but Lee's battle plans fell into the hands of the Union army, and Lincoln's victory--which was essential to his issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation to end slavery--turned Antietam into the pivotal battle of the war. Although Child (who also directed Gettysburg: Three Days of Destiny) uses dramatic readings, maps, and photographs (especially the legendary battleground photos of Matthew Brady) in a manner similar to Ken Burns' epic-length documentary The Civil War, the look and presentation of Lincoln & Lee at Antietam is entirely different, with many sequences involving contemporary Antietam reenactments. Many of the Civil War's most colorful and important figures factor into this detailed 90-minute account, which clearly benefits from impeccable in-depth research. A 25-minute interview with Maxwell reveals the filmmaker's massive 15-year commitment to bringing his epics to the screen, and his feature-length commentary with Child lends another layer of detailed information to this authoritative DVD. --Jeff Shannon
The Single Bloodiest Day in American HistoryTold by Ronald F. Maxwell director of Gettysburg and Gods and Generals Written directed and produced by Robert ChildIt s September 17 1862 and President Abraham Lincoln needs a victory in order to issue the Emancipation Proclamation and end slavery in the South. But Robert E. Lee has other plans invade the North. When Lee s strategy falls into the hands of the Union Army the result is the single bloodiest day in American history at the Battle of Antietam in Sharpsburg Maryland. Includes scarce footage from the 125th 135th and 140th Antietam Reenactments.Historical insight provided by:-James M. McPherson Princeton University Pulitzer Prize winning author of Battle Cry of Freedom and Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam-Allen C. Guelzo Gettysburg College America's only repeat winner of the Lincoln Prize; Nominated by President George W. Bush to the National Council of the Humanities-Dennis E. Frye National Park Service (NPS) Historian at Harpers Ferry author of Antietam Revealed and the Associate producer of Gods and Generals-Patrick Falci actor/performing historian portrays General Ambrose Hill at Antietam-Paul V. Chiles National Parks Service (NPS) Historian at Antietam National Battlefield Park-Features Stanley Wernz President of the Association of Lincoln Presenters as Abraham Lincoln and Benjamin Black as General Robert E. LeeFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/MILITARY & WAR UPC: 806213157520 Manufacturer No: 15752
Amazon.com:
The bloodiest battle ever fought on American soil is thoroughly examined in Lincoln & Lee at Antietam: The Cost of Freedom, a worthy addition to anyone's Civil War video collection. Directed and written by Robert Child and narrated by Ronald F. Maxwell (the director of the definitive Civil War epics Gettysburg and Gods and Generals), this straightforward, no-nonsense documentary emphasizes the tactics, strategies, and historical context of the battle at Antietam, in Sharpsburg, Maryland, on September 17, 1862. Further emphasis is placed on the wartime conditions (political agendas, ready status of armies, etc.) that led to President Abraham Lincoln's orders to defeat Gen. Robert E. Lee's exhausted army at Antietam. Lee and other Confederate strategists had hoped to stage a surprise invasion, but Lee's battle plans fell into the hands of the Union army, and Lincoln's victory--which was essential to his issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation to end slavery--turned Antietam into the pivotal battle of the war. Although Child (who also directed Gettysburg: Three Days of Destiny) uses dramatic readings, maps, and photographs (especially the legendary battleground photos of Matthew Brady) in a manner similar to Ken Burns' epic-length documentary The Civil War, the look and presentation of Lincoln & Lee at Antietam is entirely different, with many sequences involving contemporary Antietam reenactments. Many of the Civil War's most colorful and important figures factor into this detailed 90-minute account, which clearly benefits from impeccable in-depth research. A 25-minute interview with Maxwell reveals the filmmaker's massive 15-year commitment to bringing his epics to the screen, and his feature-length commentary with Child lends another layer of detailed information to this authoritative DVD. --Jeff Shannon
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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:

Rating:
- Good Basic History; Not for Veteran Civil War History Afficianados
Simply stated this is an acceptable documentary review of the Battle that gave Federal Troops what the Union "spun" as a victory by the North, endinga line of spectacular defeats that it had suffered while Lincoln labored to build an Army and looked for a General that would fight and pursue defeated CSA troops, unlike Gen. George McClellan,. McClellan, who was content to entrench and drill the much larger Army of the Potomac, which was 2-3 times larger than the Confederate Army at Antietam . The ... Read More
Rating:
- Not Quite Realistic
This is a documentary, not a drama. But the many scenes of reenactments of Antietam by local Civil War buffs drags this down a bit. They don't look realistic. If men were being shot at, they wouldn't look so casual or silly as do the amateurs seen throughout this film. Still, you get a decent recounting of the Civil War's bloodiest battle. The real thing was most surely vastly worse than what you see here.
Rating:
- Get this now
This is one of the best movie / documentaries i have ever seen on the battle of Sharpsburg. mostly historians are telling the story, But tell it in a very detailed very informative and compelling way. This is a winner.
Rating:
- Excellent!
I bought this for my husband who loves anything Civil War related.I read the reviews and seemed to be well received.It was excellent.We both thought it was very well done.I highly reccomend it!
Rating:
- The Antietam reason:
Lincoln and Lee at Antietam covers the entire struggle of the Antietam Campaign.The political concept about why Lincoln needed a Union victory and Lee's need to take the war north were covered as well as the battle.With various interviews featuring historians such as James McPherson, this documentary is very well done.The battle coverage is brief and not entirely descriptive although it includes reenactment scenes from the 125th, 135th and 140th Antietam Reenactments.A majority of the footage ... Read More
- Good Basic History; Not for Veteran Civil War History AfficianadosSimply stated this is an acceptable documentary review of the Battle that gave Federal Troops what the Union "spun" as a victory by the North, endinga line of spectacular defeats that it had suffered while Lincoln labored to build an Army and looked for a General that would fight and pursue defeated CSA troops, unlike Gen. George McClellan,. McClellan, who was content to entrench and drill the much larger Army of the Potomac, which was 2-3 times larger than the Confederate Army at Antietam . The ... Read More
- Not Quite RealisticThis is a documentary, not a drama. But the many scenes of reenactments of Antietam by local Civil War buffs drags this down a bit. They don't look realistic. If men were being shot at, they wouldn't look so casual or silly as do the amateurs seen throughout this film. Still, you get a decent recounting of the Civil War's bloodiest battle. The real thing was most surely vastly worse than what you see here.
- Get this nowThis is one of the best movie / documentaries i have ever seen on the battle of Sharpsburg. mostly historians are telling the story, But tell it in a very detailed very informative and compelling way. This is a winner.
- Excellent!I bought this for my husband who loves anything Civil War related.I read the reviews and seemed to be well received.It was excellent.We both thought it was very well done.I highly reccomend it!
- The Antietam reason:Lincoln and Lee at Antietam covers the entire struggle of the Antietam Campaign.The political concept about why Lincoln needed a Union victory and Lee's need to take the war north were covered as well as the battle.With various interviews featuring historians such as James McPherson, this documentary is very well done.The battle coverage is brief and not entirely descriptive although it includes reenactment scenes from the 125th, 135th and 140th Antietam Reenactments.A majority of the footage ... Read More
