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Movies, Documentaries and Museum Exhibits


This page features links to reviews of movies, documentaries and exhibits with a historical theme. Listings are in reverse chronological order. Descriptions are taken directly from the linked publication. If you have articles you think should be listed on the Pop Culture page, please send them to the editor editor@historynewsnetwork.org.

SOURCE: The Nation (12-25-12)

Jon Wiener teaches US history at UC Irvine.

Two films about American slavery in the Civil War era are currently playing in theaters.

Steven Spielberg’s film Lincoln begins with a black soldier reciting the Gettysburg Address.

Quentin Tarantino’s film Django Unchained begins with a black slave being recruited to kill two white murderers.

In Spielberg’s film, the leading black female character is a humble seamstress in the White House whose eyes fill with tears of gratitude when Congress votes to abolish slavery.

In Tarantino’s film, the leading black female character (Kerry Washington) is a defiant slave who has been branded on the face as a punishment for running away, and is forced—by Leonardo di Caprio—to work as a prostitute.

In Spielberg’s film, all the black people are good.

Tarantino’s film features “the biggest, nastiest ‘Uncle Tom’ ever”—played by Samuel Jackson—who is insanely loyal to his evil white...


Tuesday, December 25, 2012 - 22:03

SOURCE: The New Yorker (12-17-12)

Hendrik Hertzberg is a senior editor and staff writer for The New Yorker. His work is collected in two books, “Politics” and “Obámanos.”

...The great bulk of the movie industry’s evocations of the American past have been Westerns—that is, escapist adventure stories set in a vague time more or less identifiable as the eighteen-seventies or eighties, a vague semi-desert or mountainous region somewhere between the Mississippi and the Rockies, and a vague economy based on cattle-raising, saloon-keeping, and banditry. Nothing wrong with that, of course. But Westerns lack context—political, social, historical. There’s conflict aplenty, but it’s between cowboys and Indians, cattlemen and sheepherders, outlaws and sheriffs, not between armies or nations or ideas. Even when the conflict is a little broader—say, between doomed nomads on horseback on one side (be they aboriginal tribesmen or Eastwood-style individualist paladins) and, on the other side, agents of...


Thursday, December 20, 2012 - 10:45

SOURCE: AP (12-19-12)

The New York Public Library is moving forward with a $300 million renovation of its landmark Fifth Avenue building that will more than double its public space and fireproof the majestic main reading room, the library president said Wednesday.

But the plans he presented at a news conference have drawn withering criticism from some respected architecture experts, including Ada Louise Huxtable, who says the grand Beaux Art edifice is embarking on "its own destruction."

Library President Tony Marx has a different vision for the building completed in 1911.

"The driver of this project is to create the single greatest circulating and research library in the most beloved building here in the crossroads of New York," he said...


Wednesday, December 19, 2012 - 22:23

SOURCE: WaPo (12-17-12)

WASHINGTON — A witch hat, dress and broom from Broadway’s “Wicked” will join Dorothy’s ruby slippers from “The Wizard of Oz” in the collection at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History.

Tony Award-winning costume designer Susan Hilferty will sign over the costume of Elphaba from “Wicked” on Monday.

“Wicked” opened in 2003 and tells the story of the witches of Oz, based on the novel by Gregory Maguire. It follows two friends who grow to become the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good....


Monday, December 17, 2012 - 14:48

SOURCE: WSJ (12-14-12)

Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained," which opens Christmas Day, would make a terrific double feature with Steven Spielberg's latest, "Lincoln." Each movie burns down the old slave plantation in its own way.

"Lincoln" dramatizes the Civil War and the political maneuvering needed to pass the slavery-abolishing 13th Amendment, but it doesn't show the horrors of slavery those battles were waged over. "Django Unchained" is an explosive revenge fantasy that puts slavery's evils on gruesome display and turns freed slave Jamie Foxx into a western-style gunslinger seeking retribution. It skips the "malice toward none" part.

It's unusual for there to be two movies in theaters at once dealing with the American tragedy of slavery. It has been a subject of movies almost since there have been motion pictures; D.W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation" hit theaters in 1915, when Civil War veterans were still alive. But there haven't been a lot of films about American slavery, compared...


Friday, December 14, 2012 - 12:19

SOURCE: WaPo (12-11-12)

In Led Zeppelin’s heyday, the early 1970s, I noticed that certain women of my acquaintance seemed to shake with a near-visceral disgust when the band’s name was mentioned. Now I know why. At first, rock journalist Barney Hoskyn’s oral history of the band, “Led Zeppelin,” captivates, and then slowly it begins to horrify. Not everyone described in it is a villain, but enough of the main characters become so grotesque that it’s hard to avoid a sickly feeling that worsens as one turns the pages. As a group, the musicians and their entourage are like star athletes who turn up in the headlines as thugs; you can’t forget the...


Tuesday, December 11, 2012 - 18:35

SOURCE: NYT (12-5-12)

PHILADELPHIA — Visitors to the Penn Museum might never see the red clay tablet. Little bigger than the palm of a hand, it sits on a metal cart in a back room.

Covered with indented rows of tiny characters, the Sumerian tablet dates from about 2700 B.C., and it is the world’s first known written account of the biblical flood. When not on its cart for visitors to see and handle, it is stored, like many of the museum’s one million other objects, in stacks of metal drawers accessible only to academics and other researchers.

The museum, formally called the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, has over the years become an internationally renowned treasure trove for scholars researching ancient civilizations. Now to mark its 125th anniversary, and its founding on Dec. 6, 1887, the museum is undertaking an ambitious effort to become more...


Wednesday, December 5, 2012 - 11:31

SOURCE: NYT (12-5-12)

The divisions plaguing a strife-torn country are not the only ones depicted in “A Civil War Christmas,” a beautifully stitched tapestry of American lives in transition in the fraught winter of 1864. Although the holidays are traditionally a time for festive coming together, most of the characters depicted in Paula Vogel’s song-trimmed drama, which opened on Tuesday night at New York Theater Workshop, are in search of loved ones lost in the fog of war or separated from family by the cruel finality of death.

Written with an embracing expansiveness by Ms. Vogel (a Pulitzer Prize winner for “How I Learned to Drive”), and featuring handsomely sung hymns and carols of the period, this unusual holiday pageant represents an illuminating...


Wednesday, December 5, 2012 - 11:27