Während des Amerikanischen Bürgerkriegs führt ein Hauptmann der Unionsarmee seine zusammengewürfelte Kavallerietruppe über einen nebligen Bach zu einer abgelegenen Farm, um sich das feindlic... Alles lesenWährend des Amerikanischen Bürgerkriegs führt ein Hauptmann der Unionsarmee seine zusammengewürfelte Kavallerietruppe über einen nebligen Bach zu einer abgelegenen Farm, um sich das feindliche Vieh anzueignen.Während des Amerikanischen Bürgerkriegs führt ein Hauptmann der Unionsarmee seine zusammengewürfelte Kavallerietruppe über einen nebligen Bach zu einer abgelegenen Farm, um sich das feindliche Vieh anzueignen.
- Narrator
- (as Robert E. Sampson)
- Mourner
- (as Rebecca Ryland)
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I appreciate the historical treatment of the war in Kentucky, a slave state that tried to stay neutral but eventually opted to remain in the Union under mysterious political circumstances involving the detention of certain legislators. Roughly half the soldiers from Kentucky fought for each side, but there's never been much treatment of what it was like to have lived there through those times. This film makes a great contribution simply in the "look and feel" of the time and place.
The director's gift for understatement and getting complex emotions across without phoney speeches give it almost a documentary feel, as does his willingness to let the late autumn Appalachians have their own beauty, without staging or drawing attention to it.
His most courageous choice was making the characters normal people: neither evil nor noble, just people, in a hopeless, hurtful time. The actors are incredibly powerful, all of them, down to the dog and the mule.
People who know little about the American Civil War, and the scar it left on American society -- still deep in the national psyche, even today -- may find the movie thin; the director assumes viewers are well-informed on these points, and doesn't do any "teaching" on them. But Pharoah's Army is one of the best of its genre, and a badly needed perspective that few other directors have explored. It certainly commanded my attention, from start to finish.
This is a war film, and it gives us the best of all worlds in film making.
However, I don't want to build it up too much. It's best to be somewhat pleasantly surprised, like I was.
It gives us the old fashioned war film, with a focus on an isolated group of soldiers. Here, it is the Civil War, and the soldiers are on a patrol to confiscate food for their army from Confederate sympathizers.
My initial feeling is that the characters are too three dimensional for most of IMDb's bubble boy posters. For the rest of the world, I dare say this story would envelop them in a world they could believe existed.
The cinematography is outstanding. The scenery is powerful. Everything about this film is amazing. I'd nominate everyone from cue card holder up for an Academy Award.
I'll echo what others have said. The characters look true to the times. Not like 20th or 21st century actors in uniform between video games. This is the real deal. I also like the way the accents were moderate, more Kentucky than the recent push to turn Kentucky into Mississippi. This was the "neutral" state of the Civil War. Historically, and geographically, it has never been the South, but more of the meeting of North and South.
I won't tell more of the plot, because I think you should take the ride. Trust these reviews. I don't think this film can possibly get a bad review, unless it's from a jealous competitor.
Top class acting by Chris Cooper and Patricia Clarkson. Also very great performances by Kris Kristofferson and Richard Tyson. A film worth seeing and perhaps even, learning from.
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- WissenswertesOriginal story took place at Meshack's Creek, Kentucky, in 1862; the town no longer exists. Tompkinsville is the nearest town officially recognized by the US Postal Service, roughly 6 miles to the west of the creek. The general area (Cumberland Gap), during the Civil War, experienced some of the most brutal clashes of the war; not only battles, but brother against brother and neighbor against neighbor.
- PatzerIf the dead chickens had already begun to smell then it's likely that eating them would not have been a good idea.
- Zitate
Chicago: [returning] Captain, there was a barn burnt down. Some old man and his wife were killed.
Captain John Hull Abston: Where?
Chicago: There.
[pointing]
Rodie: No more than five miles up the creek.
Captain John Hull Abston: [to Sarah] You know who's place it is?
Sarah Anders: Yankees.
Rodie: Ma'am they weren't Yankees. Just some old farmer and his wife.
Sarah Anders: They sent two boys into the Union Army.
[splits hatefully and goes into house]
Rodie: [splits back] They were just farmers...
Narrator: Like I said, the war was rough through here.
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Details
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 50.652 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 30 Minuten
- Farbe