Watch We Shall Remain Movie Online
Mardi, février 16th, 2010![]() |
Watch We Shall Remain Movie Online.
Movie Title: We Shall Remain We Shall Remain is available for streaming or downloading. |
It’s about time that something like this is produced, and what better director to exercise than Chris Eyre as director? He is at his finest in this work, capturing foggy rivers, haze-free sunsets, gargantuan forests filled with flora and pigs and actors dressed in appropriate era clothing. The quality of the film itself is great of awards. This is truly a gift from his heart.
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Benjamin Bratt’s gentle explain adds to the narration. He doesn’t secure overly emotinal when telling the sage, as the scenes you contemplate at the same time say it all. You are left to yourself to realize the brutality of that time.
This is a three-disc position totalling about 470 minutes. Produced in widescreen, even on my CRT dwelling I win a near-full camouflage.
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The first episode, “After the Mayflower” opens with 1621, the year the first settlers arrived off the shores of southeastern Massachusetts. The research that went into this work is fantastic, with many scenes spoken in the native language, in this case, Nipmuc. The first Thanksgiving is realistically portrayed: not with turkeys and cranberries, but with venison and wild berries.
The second episode, “Tecumseh’s Vision” demonstrates how the War of 1812 came to be: Natives, who had sided with the British during the American Revolution (can you blame them? ) now found themselves on foreign land. They were pushed westward, west of Appalachia, where more battles ensued with the settlers and frontiersmen and trappers from France along the Mammoth Lakes location.
The Wabash and Tippecanoe rivers fill mountainous history for both the Shawnee and the people who eventually settled along its banks. The “Vision” however, was the loss of the first peoples who had lived along its banks.
The “Pace of Tears” completes the second disc.
The most emotional episodes are on the third disc, “Geronimo” and especially “Wounded Knee,” the episode that explains in 1973 news footage and interviews with some of the participants the reasons for the “occupation” that resulted in one death. Wounded Knee encapsulates the forming of the Native activism, when all tribes united to support their languages and cultures and demanded equal rights before the law.
If there is one flaw in this production it is that it doesn’t include more episodes of the other tribes that suffered: the Nez Perce at Expansive Hole, for example, or the Battle of Litte Colossal Horn. Like one tribal member mentioned in the “Wounded Knee” episode: “Every tribe has its memory of violence (with the US government) ” and to document them all would catch up mighty more footage and disc status than is given here.
Still, it’s a radiant production that leaves any viewer sighing “Wow!” at the ruin.
This documentary is from the Native American’s point of plan, but the transcript does not fair weigh heavily with the Indians: facts are not zigzag or left out. When wrathful Wampanoag went from village to village to end settlers, we know that they had reached a boiling point with Customary World trespassers that would only gain worse as the years went on.
The reviewer before me gave an favorable blow-by-blow of the series…and I concur with that assessment. However, I want to add something more grand recount about what this series suggests.
This advantageous series about the Native American yarn will leave many surprised to the conclude of “Gee, I had no thought.”
As a white American with some experience in tribal matters; this review is not only a recommendation for this series, but a plea of sorts with the general public to learn and understand more about the culture and lives of our Native American sisters and brothers.
I say, with all due respect: “PLEASE wake up.”
Many of the stories in this series, which we hear from the Native American perspective, we learned in school through the Anglo lens with the following overtones: Indian savage… Indian terrible… Troublemaker… Nonconformist… Enemy of progress… these were the stories we read in school, along with watching the unpleasant guy “Injun Joe” on the movie shroud in that 1970s Disney version of Tom Sawyer.
Throw out all that garbage you have learned. Conclude. Rewind. Reboot your hard drive…now learn the truth through this unbelievable and educational series.
I gaze this series as merely an introduction to what should be a higher calling for us as Americans; Anglo, Native, Dismal, Asian, or Latino. For those of you who are inspired by the stories told in this DVD series, it’s your job to go out and see more of the truth that is hinted at in what are a collection of five main stories for each disk: Before the Mayflower, Tecumseh’s Vision, The Slump of Tears, Geronimo, and Wounded Knee.
At the very least ~ if you have a pulse ~ it should change your perspective on who we are as Americans. It seems to inaugurate mellow and level-headed with the first Thanksgiving, but the record sadly and quick turns sour.
Instead of upholding and learning something from Native Americans (gee, imagine that), religion (of course) misunderstandings (wow, imagine that again), and operating on weak idea systems come by in the arrangement of peace and trigger a cross domino enact. You’ll soon understand why we’re a spiritually and culturally poorer nation than we should have been after witnessing the accounts of leaders drunk with power, the U.S. Government’s land grabs, and a gross, detestable, systematic decimation of tribal America through bait & switch treaty tactics, blatantly illegal relocation of entire tribes, boarding school brainwashings, abandonment, genocide, and ethnic cleansing.
The accumulation of the stories will invent you want to vomit.
Simply attach, the series will leave you pondering how it’s a far bawl from the more culturally rich, comely, diverse, shared, and equitable society that we should have inherited.
It’s the stories and hardships that aren’t told - which enjoy more truths that substantiate those told in the series - that need to be discovered through more film, books, and perhaps some personal experience of your fill. Taking an active role in the preservation, enlightenment, and help of thriving Native American cultures and their future could be one of the most principal and personally rewarding decisions you ever invent.
Seek out a Native American cultural center in your fraction of the country; originate it a modest staycation of sorts in a lean economy. Assist a pow wow ceremony or the like that allows for outside visitors. Relieve local tribes. Give to their schools. If your a doctor or looking at being one, believe putting time in at an Indian health center - a state that could REALLY employ your support.
You might even behold something about yourself…and the road of discovery and reeducating yourself can initiate with this DVD series.
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