Groggy, I've always thought Gettysburg was pretty historically accurate, although some things are condensed for time and whatnot. What things were you thinking of that were inaccurate? At this point, I've seen the movie a ton of times so I've probably just gotten to the point where I accept it as the truth.
As for Gods and Generals, I saw it in theaters and haven't seen it since so I won't comment. I know it was the point of the movie with the whole religious side, but I got really tired of hearing about god and religion in that long, long movie.
Following on from my point about my friend Sean(real name John),doesn't the fact that there being a Johnny & Johnny, as painted on the toy train at Mesa Verde,re-iterate the likelihood of two Seans in the movie?Juan is quite willing to call himself John,so why not Mallory "Sean" to his family and friends in Ireland?Men whose name are Patrick in Ireland are also likely to be affectionally called Pat,Paddy or Packie!
Hey, this thread is really getting good. It makes sense that John/Sean's friend might also be called Sean ("They Shared a Revolution, A Woman . . . And a Name!") for the reasons stated above. There is an obvious parallel between the two revolutions and the two friendships, and that parallel is reinforced if the first friendship is between Sean and Sean and the second between John and John. And since Sean and John are variants of the same name (as are Jean, Jan, Johan et. al.) the secret title of DYS could be "My Three Seans." That would mean that the "Sean, Sean, Sean" lyric is not referring to any one person: the repetition actually names each of three characters in turn. And Morricone's score supports this: after the Mesa Verde job, which ends with a complete presentation of "The March of the Beggars" theme, that theme almost disappears from the movie (it recurrs once after Juan has killed Huerta). Instead, Juan begins to be associated with the more melancholy passage from the main DYS theme. It is the main DYS theme that contains (elsewhere) the "Sean, Sean, Sean" motif, so John and Juan become musically connected.
On still a third salient the film has a very bleak ending. Not exactly a feel good fun to watch over and over.
not necessarily so for Mallory. The flashback intimates absolution, provides perhaps a foretaste of a blessed final state. Add Morricone's music, and you have something other than a downer ending
Joe, I can't understand how OUATIA is your least favorite of Leone's main films
Well, I sometimes just like to have a good laugh, DYS is more than laughs, I just have to be in the mood for more serious fair.
Fair enough. Life ain't easy without laughter