Steven Spielberg’s ‘Gettysburg Address’

Director Steven Spielberg will deliver the keynote address at an observance commemorating the 149th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s "Gettysburg Address."

Park officials in central Pennsylvania noted Tuesday that Spielberg’s remarks will come days after the release of his film "Lincoln," which stars Daniel Day-Lewis in the title role.

My first reaction to this news was a cynical eye roll, knowing Spielberg has a movie to promote. My second was to remember that many people greeted Lincoln’s speech the same way. As Sarah Vowell reminds us in Assassination Vacation, the now-revered words were conceived as a stump speech on the eve of a tough election year.

via Steven Spielberg’s ’Gettysburg Address’? Director To Speak At Commemorative Event.

The Atlantic on Gettysburg’s Cyclorama

As I mentioned yesterday, The Atlantic Monthly is knocking the sesquicentennial celebrations out of the park. This piece on the Gettysburg Cyclorama is fantastic, and is making me greatly regret declining a ticket on both my trips to the park.

Four hundred feet long. Fifty feet high. It was art on an astonishing scale. All four versions were housed in massive, purpose-built rotundas. In Boston, for example, visitors walked through a grand crenelated archway, paid for their tickets, and proceeded along a dark winding passage toward the viewing platform. They ascended a winding staircase to another time and place. “The impression upon the beholder as he steps upon this platform,” one reviewer wrote, “is one of mingled astonishment and awe.”

July 3, 1863. The Battle of Gettysburg rages on for a third day. From just behind Cemetery Ridge, visitors watched Pickett’s Charge crash against the Union lines. There, in the distance! General Lee and his staff. Much closer, an artillery caisson explodes. All around, soldiers crouch, charge, level rifles, bare bayonets, fight, die.

A dozen different twists heightened the illusion. Drapes hung over the platform from the ceiling, limiting and directing the view and leaving the viewers shrouded in shadows. The indirect lighting shone most brightly on the top of the canvas, illuminating the sky in brilliant blue. The canvas bowed outward by a foot in the middle, receding as it approached the ground and horizon. Tinsel lent a convincing gleam to the bayonets and buckles in the painting.

What most astonished observers, though, was the diorama, which began near the edge of the platform and ended at the painting, 45 feet away. Hundreds of cartloads of earth were covered in sod and studded with vegetation, then topped with the detritus of the battlefield. Shoes, canteens, fences, walls, corpses: near the canvas, these props were cunningly arranged to blend seamlessly into the painting. Two wooden poles, painted on the canvas, met a third leaned against it to form a tripod. A dirt road ran out into the diorama. A stretcher borne by two men, one painted and the other formed of boards, had its poles inserted through holes in the painting. “So perfect is the illusion,” as the Boston Advertiser voiced the common sentiment, “that it is impossible to tell where reality ends and the painting begins.”

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/05/the-great-illusion-of-gettysburg/238870/

Gettysburg Reunions

Those of us who have seen the Ken Burns series (and I presume that’s all of us) know about these videos, but that doesn’t make them any less of a treat to watch: The 1938 reunion of Civil War veterans at Gettysburg.

I’d love to see all the original film from this event. The clips provided here hint at a wealth of interviews and anecdotes from the old vets. It would be a real treat to watch.

The largest of all the veterans reunions, a gathering that drew more than 50,000 Union and Confederate veterans, took place in 1913 on the 50th anniversary of the battle. The passage of half a century had tempered regional animosities a good deal and the surviving veterans on both sides felt a sense of kinship – the Brotherhood of Battle, as it were. There were still plenty of veterans around, too. Though getting on in years, some Civil War veterans were still in their early sixties and the youngest was said to be 61.

The reunion gave the veterans a chance to visit the battlefield hotspots of their memories, swap stories and souvenirs, and do the myriad little things that make battlefield reunions so special to the surviving veterans. There were plenty of programmed activities, of course, including speeches, reenactments, ritual expressions of friendship between Union and Confederate veterans, and ceremonies at battlefield monuments and markers.

Perhaps the most memorable aspect of the huge 50th anniversary reunion was the “Great Camp,” the 280-acre encampment that was set up to accommodate the hordes of veterans on hand. Each veteran was assigned a cot in a tent sleeping eight men. The thousands of tents set up for the Great Camp created nearly 48 miles of avenues and company streets.

http://www.nationalparkstraveler.com/2009/02/rare-motion-pictures-show-civil-war-veterans-75th-gettysburg-battle-anniversary-reunion

Ridley Scott’s “Gettysburg”: Edutainment

A documentary from the History Channel that I overlooked this year: A fancified take on the battle of Gettysburg, with bloody cinematic illustration and some pretty appalling acting. It had some promise, but tended to concentrate and linger upon some moments (Amos Humiston, for one, is a long time dying) while entirely ignoring others. If you can believe it, there was not a single mention of John Buford, James Longstreet, Little Round Top, or Winfield Hancock, and even Lee gets short shrift. While there is a brief recreation of the fight at The Angle that is pretty impressive, the rest of the film is all flash, little substance. Sadly, I can’t recommend this one.

(I also watched the PBS documentary on Napoleon today, and while it’s far less Civil War based – unless you count an ovrview of the tactics that so influenced the American generals and David McCullough’s warm and familiar narrative style – it is a fantastically entertaining survey of the Emperor’s life and deeds.)