Shenandoah (1965) Original Trailer [FHD]
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- Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
- Directed by Andrew V. McLaglen. With James Stewart, Doug McClure and Glenn Corbett.
Shenandoah Blu-ray (Amazon) amzn.to/3OH9hwj
Shenandoah Blu-ray (Kino Lorber) www.kinolorber...
AKA:
7 tappra män
Der Mann vom großen Fluß
El valle de la violencia
Fields of Honor
Flammer over Virginia
Gululeh marzi nemishenasad
Kai oi 8 isan iroes
Kunnian laakso
Les prairies de l'honneur
O Vale da Honra
Paraiso perdido
Paraíso perdido
Prerija casti
Shenandoah Crossing
Shenandoah, la valle dell'onore
Shenandô kawa
Şerefli kahramanlar
Šenandoa
Шенандоа
Шинэндоа
シェナンドー河
Grateful that my grandparents introduced me to these classics.
i remember my dad letting me watch this with him when I was young and how the west was won
A great movie.james Stewart is brilliant in it.
My sisters and I were all crying our eyes out at the end.
Same!
Possibly the best anti-war motion picture ever made.
saw when i was a boy and loved it,shane and beguiled are also great and the kentuckian
Patrick Wayne is John Wayne's son I saw this movie when I was 9 or 10 years old back early 1970s
Most compelling scene---where Patrick Wayne gets stabbed at the well by Kevin Hagin, and Rayford Barnes compliments him on the killing.
That scene was just brutal with a capital B.
Battle scenes lifted from Raintree County (also used in How the West Was Won) and possibly from a little known clunker called Tap Roots. Yes, some of the Rebs are using the wrong kind of rifles, but they did have Henry repeaters, not Winchesters. Also, the Shenandoah Mts. aren't even in the movie! Plus, in 1863 there was little going on the Shenandoah Valley; there was Chancellorsville in May of 1863 and Gettysburg in July. If they wanted real, historical accuracy, they should have set the movie in 1862 or 1864. This movie was made by Universal, known for cutting corners. Kudos to the viewer who named Kevin Hagen & Rayford Barnes as the baddies that knife Patrick Wayne.
The first truly Libertarians movie
good point
The best Movie for the interested for me.
Great flick!
1:50 is it just me or do those guns look like Trapdoor rifles
They are. There wasn't a surplus of Civil War era Springfield's and Enfields available to movie production companies during the 20th century. So they improvised with the Trapdoor, as it looks pretty similar to M1861 and M1863 rifles save for the obvious breech mechanism.
In the Red Badge of Courage from 1951, you can see extras loading their Trapdoors as if they're muzzleloaders for the camera.
01:40
Please, somebody tell me those aren't Winchester 94 lever-action rifles... invented several decades after these supposed events!
They're not Winchester 94 lever-action rifles
Those are Henry 1860 rifles, the predecessor to the Winchester rifles. However, you may be right. Both Henry's in 1:40 and the Henry on the left at 1:41 have a steel receiver (present in the later Winchester models, though that may just be a lighting error) and the Henry on the right appears to have a side loading gate on the receiver, present only in later Winchester models. It could be Winchester rifles with the forend removed
Interesting that such an old school Civil War film forgoes the Lost Cause nonsense. This seemed to be more of an anti war film instead, showcasing the suffering of both sides and a family that refused to allow secession or a sense of national pride dictate their lives. They just wanted to farm and live in peace as if there was no war.
the movie shane and beguiled were similar to that and gone with the wind?
Does anyone not realize that some of the footage is from How The West Was Won?.
Doug Maclure= Troy Maclure
Mariette Hartley's in it too.
If she is she's not credited. I've watched it many times and haven't seen her.
Character?
James Stewart brilliant and in how the west was won
Only fifteen percent of Southerners owned any slaves, but this movie is not about slavery. It is about the civil war, which was started over States rights and tariffs that the North wanted to put on the South. Before the war started, Abraham Lincoln told the South that you could keep their slaves, but you would have to start paying higher tariffs and taxes. When abraham lincoln signed the emancipation proclamation, That only freed the slaves in the south, you Could still own slaves in the north both black and white slaves. It wasn't until the civil war had ended and the thirteenth And fourteenth amendment was ratified all all of the slaves were free in America, Indian, White, Black, and any other color of slaves were not fully freed in America until the civil war had ended. This is a historical fact comment and is within UA-cam's comment guidelines.
The beginning of this movie looks almost exactly like "The Birth Of A Nation". Which is also a great Civil War movie.That is based on facts. It is an old silent film, If you have not seen it I suggest you watch it.