2756-Article Text-3086-1-10-20090220 PDF
2756-Article Text-3086-1-10-20090220 PDF
2756-Article Text-3086-1-10-20090220 PDF
Bryan F. Le Beau
The essays in these three volumes reflect the two ways by which historians
have approached motion pictures that are historical in their subject matter
(historical films). The first, and most common, has been to measure the accuracy
of historical films by the standards which professional historians use to measure
their work. The second, and still largely a new field of endeavor, has been to
investigate how film, as a visual medium subject to the conventions of drama and
fiction, has been (or might be) employed as a vehicle for thinking about our
relationship to the past. Past Imperfect: History According to the Movies
represents the first approach, Visions of the Past: The Challenge of Film to our
Idea ofHistory and Revisioning History: Film and the Constraints ofa New Past,
the second.
In Past Imperfect, for which historian Mark C. Carnes served as general
editor, some sixty highly regarded historians examine the relationship between
nearly 100 often classic films and the historical "reality" they portray. Alan
Segal, Michael Grant, Gerda Lerner, James Axtell, Richard Slotkin, James
McPherson, Leon Litwack, Alan Brinkley, Akira Iriye, Stephen Ambrose, and
William Leuchtenburg critique The Ten Commandments (1956), Julius Caesar
(1953), Joan of Arc (1928, 1948, 1957), Black Robe (1991), The Charge of the
Light Brigade (1936, 1968), Glory (1989), The Birth of a Nation (1915), The
Grapes of Wrath (1940), Toral Toral Toral (1970), The Longest Day (1962), and
All the President's Men (1972), to name just a few.
Past Imperfect is attractive and informative, including hundreds of sidebars
on related historical topics and more than 400 photographs, film stills, maps, and
historical illustrations. Moreover, the essayists review films produced in many
different times and places. Most were made in Hollywood, but Australian,
Japanese, German, French, Canadian, and British productions are included as
well. Some were not regarded as historical when they were released, but, like Dr.
Stangelove ( 1964), explore social or cultural themes of the times. Similarly, films
like The Ten Commandments (1956), although explicitly historical, are included
less for their historical content than for what they say about the era in which they
were made.
Perhaps the most interesting essay in Past Imperfect is not a review at all, but
an interview with director John Sayles by historian Eric Foner, which encom-
passes a number of points related to the nature and production of historical films.
Sayles explains, for example, that producers make historical films, rather than
limiting themselves to pure fiction, because "the audience appreciates that
something really happened" (17). Further, they are easier to use because the story
already exists. "Somebody ' s already done the living and the plot" and, if the story
is old enough, it may have already become legend (11).
Sayles admits that often, when he has had the chance to see historical films
as well as to read the related history, he has found the history a better, or more
interesting, story. History, he suggests, has been more complex than films and
therefore more satisfying. But, he continues, much as that kind of complexity has
Historiography Meets Historiophoty 153
only recently been incorporated into historical accounts, it has taken time to
appear in historical films. Sayles explains:
Do filmmakers care what historians think of their films? Not much, Sayles
reports. "Every filmmaker, like every historian, has an agenda. The difference
is that historians read one another, and because of the academic world in which
they live, there's a little more . . . documentation" (23). For filmmakers history
is "a story bin to be plundered, and depending on who you are and what your
agenda is, it's either useful or not" (16). Accuracy is important, he allows, but
only insofar as the film remains true to the spirit of the story. Filmmakers use
historians as consultants for details of the setting, props, and costumes, he allows,
but not for "the big picture." That is left to the filmmaker.
The most successful films, Sayles ventures, tend to be smaller, simpler
stories. The filmmakers biggest difficulties include presenting more than one
version of events and convincing the viewer that people's thought processes were
different at times in the past. "When you see a historical movie and it doesn' t quite
jibe, it's usually because the mindset is wrong." The audience had not gotten "into
the heads of the people living at the time" (26). Nevertheless, Sayles concludes,
that is no reason to condescend to the people or to spoon-feed them. "Then you're
saying the people aren't capable of complexity, [that] they're not capable of
reading two versions and making up their own minds about which one to believe.
That can be a very dangerous point of view" (28).
Quite different are the two books by Robert A. Rosenstone, historian and past
film review editor for The American Historical Review. In Visions of the Past,
Rosenstone presents his own essays, most of which have already appeared in the
The American Historical Review, Cinéaste, Comparative Studies in Society and
History, and elsewhere. In Revisioning History he has gathered the work of
thirteen others—Geoff Eley, Nicholas Dirks, Thomas Keirstead, Deidre Lynch,
Pierre Sorlin, Michael Roth, John Mraz, Min Soo Kang, Clayton Koppes, Denise
Youngblood, Rudy Koshar, Dan Sipe, and Sumiko Higashi—on the same
subject. Rosenstone's essays are more theoretical, however, each of the essayists
in Revisioning History critiques a specific film from what Rosenstone labels the
New History Films—mostly dramatic, historical films of recent vintage from
around the world, which have been "more serious about extracting meaning from
the encounter with the past than with entertaining audiences or making a profit for
investors" {Revisioning, 7). The essayists' intent, Rosenstone explains, is not to
consider how the popular media handle history, but to investigate the possibilities
of creating history on film.
154 Bryan F. Le Beau
Two elements set Rosenstones's books apart from Carnes': (1) the assump-
tion (never really made clear in Carnes' volume) that film can be a legitimate way
of representing, interpretating, and thinking about the past; and (2) the insistence
that historical film should not be judged in its recounting of the past by the rules
of written history. In both books, instead of simply comparing the content of
historical films to "the facts," what might be considered the specifics of historical
episodes, Rosenstone and the other writers examine the relationship between the
moving image and the written word in such manner as to consider what can be
learned from watching history on the screen. By-and-large, they engage in what
Hay den White has called historiophoty,1 from which Rosenstone extracts and
poses for his readers the following questions:
Notes
1. Hayden White, "Historiography and Historiophoty," The American Historical Review 93
(October 1988): 1193.
2. Pierre Sorlin, The Film In History: Restaging the Past (Totowas, NY: Barnes and Noble
Imprints, 1980).
3. R. J. Raack, "Historiography as Cinematography: A Prolegomenon to Film Work for
Historians," Journal of Contemporary History 18 (July 1983): 416, 418.