Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Ronald Emmerich\'s The Patriot
The Patriot, directed by Roland Emmerich, starring Mel Gibson and Heath Ledger, came step up in 2000. This film displayed a historically accurate colonial America during the American variety. I chose to watch this film because I have been always raise in contend and since the American Revolution was the birth of our nation, I chose to l spindlen more somewhat colonial life by watching The Patriot.\nThe American Revolution (1754- 1781) was the conflict between the colonists in the 13th colonies with their mother uncouth England. This conflict was started from parliament leaving a serial publication of taxations on the colonists to pay for the 7 age War against the French and ingrained Americans. The war was brutal for the colonists since roughly of them are just farmers with no experience on military combat. However, some British generals and soldiers who fought in the 7 Years War, sponsored take away the colonists and help them win the war. With the series of raids on t he British and the help from the French, allowed them to defeat the British and ear their independence as a new nation.\nThe film, I believe, is a magnificent display of the caseful of life the colonists had since a farmer, Mel Gibson, dealt with his first son in the war and his other son be killed by a British officer. After the death of his son, his nursing home was burned, since he was ho development patriots who were wounded. Because of the acts from the soldiers, his offense killed several British military personnel using his skills from fighting in the 7 Years War. He later leads the colonial reserves into many victories against the British using military tactics the British considered cowardly since they hid and shot from the wood behind cover. With the type of cloths and lifestyles explicit in the film gave me the coating that productions for the exposure did an excellent occupation making the movie historically accurate even though Hollywood altered the storylin e to have a romance and humor to make the movie enjoyable, but did...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.