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There is no shortage of Hollywood films about historical events,
but what do the movies actually get right, and why do they get so
much wrong? Hollywood loves a story: good guys versus bad guys,
heroes winning the day, and the guy gets the girl. But we all know
real life isn't exactly like that, and this is even more true when
we look at history. Rarely do the just prevail and the three-act
story cannot exist over continents and decades of human
interaction. So, when Hollywood decides to exploit history for
profit, we end up with a wide array of films. Some are comedies
like Monty Python and the Holy Grail, others are little more than
action films playing dress up like Gladiator, and many are Oscar
contenders burdened with an enormous sense of self-importance. But
very few are historically accurate. From Cleopatra to Da 5 Bloods,
the reality is no matter what Hollywood's intentions are, almost
all historical films are an exaggeration or distortion of what
really happened. Sometimes the alterations are for the sake of
brevity, as watching a movie in real time about the Hundred Years
War would literally kill you. Other additions may be out of
necessity, since nobody thought to write down the everyday
conversations between King Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne
Boleyn, for The Other Boleyn Girl. And some projects twist the
facts to suit a more sinister purpose. In Hollywood and History,
Jem Duducu takes readers through thousands of years of global
history as immortalized and ultimately fictionalized by Hollywood,
exploring many facets of the representation of history in movies
from the medieval times to the wild west and both World Wars. Along
the way, readers will also better understand Hollywood's own
history, as it evolved from black and white silent shorts to the
multiplex CGI epics of today. As studios and audiences have matured
through the years, so too have their representations of history.
Armies will clash, leaders will be slain, empires will fall, and a
few historical inaccuracies will be pointed out along the way. A
must-read for film and history fans alike.
Not all history is recorded in school textbooks or cast into
towering monuments that shape city skylines. Quite often the most
intriguing (and most bizarre) bits are forgotten and fall away into
obscurity. In this fascinating book, Jem Duducu shines light on the
almost forgotten, wonderfully strange, and often hilarious moments
of history that would otherwise be lost forever. Forgotten History
tells in delightful detail the stories of hard-to-believe events,
people and inventions. Spanning the breadth of human history, this
light-hearted and easy-to-read book is full to bursting with the
bits from history that even a history enthusiast may otherwise have
never known. Covering a wide variety of topics, from the time a
Pope put his dead predecessor on trial to the awkward moment when
the US Air Force accidentally dropped nuclear bombs on Spain,
Forgotten History provides a journey through time to discover the
weird and wonderful history that you didn't learn about in school.
Discover the history behind the facts. The British Empire had a
rich, varied and controversial history, commonly perceived to have
spanned 500 years from the era of Columbus and his voyages of
discovery to the aftermath of the Second World War. Many statements
are made about this era that shaped our nation, but what are the
stories behind these facts? Which are true and which are merely
beliefs that have grown into fact? Jem Duducu takes us on a
whirlwind tour of the Empire and its history, condensing the
gigantic story into easy-to-read, bitesize sections. He examines
some of the most important aspects of the Empire, from exploration
and discovery in the era of Elizabeth I, to the Slave Trade, to the
eventual decline after the Second World War.
"The Busy Person's Guide to British History" is the perfect light
history read. In less than 350 pages you are whisked from the
distant stone age all the way up to 1945. It is serious but tinted
with a sense of humour with each chapter opening with a great
illustration. It also dwells on the eras that don't get a lot of
love. Everyone knows who Henry VIII is but how much do you know
about King Stephen? This is a chance to highlight the importance of
Henry I or Henry III and point out the Vikings had a longer and
greater impact on the country than the Restoration. This book fills
in the gaps, enhancing your understanding rather than just going
for the easy targets of the Romans, the Tudors and the Victorians.
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