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The Campaigns of Napoleon Boxed Set #1 Streaming.
Movie Title: The Campaigns of Napoleon Boxed Set #1 The Campaigns of Napoleon Boxed Set #1 is available for streaming or downloading. Click Here to Stream or Download The Campaigns of Napoleon Boxed Set #1 |
This DVD area, though not up to the standards of many modern documentaries, is well made and includes commentary from actors playing battle participants. The expend of sweeping scenes from several Russian Napoleonic films showed the tale scale of these events. Its presentation of the complete destruction of 650,000 men in Russia and what might have been at Waterloo were the dependable highlights. This was money well spent.
There’s no copyright year anywhere on the DVD case or box, but the kill of the documentaries I believe heed it as being from 1993 or so, and yet the video quality looks horrifying by today’s standards, and by the standards of 1993, it would be considered terrible itself. It looks something like the early to mid-70s on a VHS recorded off a TV.
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So contain no bias against poorly obsolete footage not anywhere come digitally enhanced or fixed.
The documentary features are very very interesting, even featuring some computer-generated procedure sequences that glimpse surprisingly 2000-ish despite being apparently made in 1993 (or if you assume like I had when first seeing it, 1971), which allow you to support track of what’s occurring across the battlefield, and inspect army columns bewitching about where they do and around the field.
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The narration is always perfect and loyal, even if the script tacks on some boring cliche’s, and there are some acting sequences where some actors dress up (and in one humorously awkward case, stand before a very poorly done background scenery fraction) and act out a historical person talking about the battle. The English captain Mercer in Waterloo is kind of awkward in his stupid droning, but somehow manages to rapture us with his charisma. Then there’s also a gritty-ass French general who looks kind of like Donnie Wahlberg and sounds like a brick grinding against a block of wood, and a Prussian captain with highly fluent, understandable German and a nice sort of ambivalent smugness to him that seems to judge Prussia’s whole “we don’t give a s***” attitude to the affairs before Austerlitz when they hadn’t joined Napoleon Bonaparte or the Alliance against him.
Then there are the battles, re-enacted on a massive scale with (1970s) style movie filming and directing, and it is very very racy.
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