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Anyone else watch the Ken Burns Hemingway doc?

1,199 Views | 5 Replies | Last: 4 yr ago by OldArmy71
oragator
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So well done.
Burns has this amazing gift of providing remarkably detailed and colorful info on his subjects without making it seem dry or nerdy.
It's three two hour episodes, and the third one is basically one long Greek tragedy.
I went back and read some of the short stories from the doc, really enjoyed them.
TresPuertas
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AG
I missed it but really wanted to see it. Is it streaming anywhere?
oragator
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It's here.

https://www.pbs.org/show/hemingway/

I looked and on Fios it's on demand under PBS. My local PBS is also re-running it next weekend but don't know about other markets (I am in VA).
St Hedwig Aggie
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AG
Thanks for the reminder.

His series on the national parks is still one of my favorite documentaries of all time...he's story-telling at a decidedly elevated level.
Make Mental Asylums Great Again!
HerschelwoodHardhead
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AG
Thanks for the heads up, just turned it on. All Ken Burns documentaries should be a required viewing for American high schoolers.
aggiebird02
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I'm in the middle of rewatching Ken Burns Baseball...
OldArmy71
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AG
I'm a retired English teacher, so I had an interest in watching this.

I thought it was well done. It's hard to believe Hemingway has been dead for 60 years.

Fifteen years ago I went back and read all his major novels (I have never read Across the River or the novels published after he died) and most of the short stories. Then I did it again five years ago. All of them hold up exceptionally well.

The two that were problematic for me were To Have and Have Not, which is just not especially good, and The Sun Also Rises. The latter is astonishingly "modern" in its style. (My specialty is 19th century American lit and I love Melville and Henry James; Hemingway's style is so different.) My complaint about it is that none of the characters are likeable. They live frivolous lives and I don't care about any of them.

I suppose For Whom the Bell Tolls is my favorite.

The Burns documentary did a good job of including people who defended Hemingway against charges of misogyny, which I appreciated. One of the commentators, Tobias Wolff (he wrote This Boy's Life and In Pharaoh's Army in addition to numerous excellent short stories), is a fine writer and I recommend him if you like Hemingway.

Though the film was short on textual analysis and long on explorations of Hemingway's life, I did appreciate the honesty with which the writers approached Hemingway's leftist sympathies at the time of the Spanish Civil War. As the film says, he wrote straight propaganda in his journalistic depictions of the Loyalists. By contrast, his account of the Civil War in the actual novel (For Whom the Bell Tolls) is quite balanced. It is clear in the novel that the Spanish people have been betrayed by BOTH sides; the Loyalist side has been subverted by ruthless Stalinists just as much as the rebels are controlled by Hitler.

The last two hours were very hard to watch if you know anyone struggling with alcoholism and/or mental illness.

I enjoyed the film and recommend it.

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