I'm way guilty of not being observant enough, especially if my emotions get involved in these type of programs so I really appreciate the objective viewpoint you bring to this! |
I think I said above, and don't mean to be guilty of what I pick at Ken Burns for in my replies here (as in repeating myself), but I think a lot of why his productions do tend to have segments with repeats in them is because each segment is meant to standalone so he's assuming to some extent that you might not have caught the comment or information that he was conveying in say the 3rd segment that is partially (or completely) repeated in the 4th or 5th segment of the total work.
It isn't that bad, but if you pick up on it easily then it may nag at you a bit (as it seems to do with me).
In the case of The War, I'd have to say that I really wish he had taken up the project about 20 years ago, back before so many of 'the greatest generation' had passed on which would have given him a lot larger pool of people to talk to and include in the story. As time has moved on, and many of the veterans and their relatives have passed away we are losing a lot of the knowledge we had of events of that time. The same has been happening with Korean War veterans.
It's hard to think that many of the Vietnam era veterans are also passing away at fairly alarming rates. Those folks were at war about 40 years ago, though for people of my age, it seems in some ways to be much more recently. Assuming that the people that were fighting there were 18 to 21 years of age when they were fighting, they are now hitting their 60s age wise. Add in health problems that some came back with, or that many carried from exposure to pollutants, to things like asbestos, or Agent Orange, or a host of other causes and you figure out quickly that we'll soon be losing many more of those vets and the knowledge of events that they carry inside.
To follow-up a little more on the Band of Brothers series, it was a Tom Hanks/Steven Spielberg collaboration if memory serves. Hanks didn't star in it, but he worked with HBO to produce it (again, if memory serves). I do know he had earlier worked with HBO on the also quite excellent manned space flight related series From the Earth to the Moon. That too gets high marks from me. If you've not seen it, again it's 12 hours. Each piece stands alone, but the whole collection makes an even greater package.
If you have Netflix or Blockbuster.com service, definitely worth the rental to sit and watch.
Band of Brothers follows one particular outfit from induction all the way through the war, with lots of interview segments with the real people involved. It is not an easy series to watch all of, but it is very good. Warning that the images that are shown of the death camps that were seen as the war in Germany was coming to an end are pretty shocking and quite realistic.