US Civil War movie

US Civil War movie

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  • #72982
    Bob Wilson
    Participant
      @bobwilson59101

      For those of you interested in such things, I can recommend this Utube movie, "Ironclads" It is an extremly good movie concerning the building and subsequently battle between the US Civil War ironclads Merrimac and Monitor in Hampton Roads. Very realistic, and tends to send shivers up the spine when the Confederate ironclad is seen approaching the anchored Union frigates.

      Bob

      **LINK**

      #4424
      Bob Wilson
      Participant
        @bobwilson59101
        #72985
        ashley needham
        Participant
          @ashleyneedham69188

          Will watch that later Bob, looks good.

          One film I have seen (and I cant remember which) starts off with some chaps escaping on a confederate ironclad, and the sound of the cannon balls bouncing off the hull was very spine tingling. The scene inside was also very good, as you heard the clanging of said balls on the inside….and it was all dark and gloomy. Must have been frightening stuff.

          Ashley

          #72987
          Bob Wilson
          Participant
            @bobwilson59101

            Ashley

            It was a very impressive film, probably because it would not have cost them much to build the authentic replica ironclads, especially the Monitor that just appeared as a gun turret flat on the sea with the decks awash. The other was like a house roof with a tall funnel belching black smoke. The inside shots were excellent as well, especially in the engine-room of Merrimac when they ran aground, and had to increase steam pressure well beyond danger level to get off! The story that they wove into the film was also very good. The film you mention may well have been Sahara, by Clive Cussler where they found the ironclad Texas in the Sahara desert 100 years after it escaped from Richmond . Very far-fetched, but still excellent entertainment.

            Bob

            #72994
            Colin Bishop
            Moderator
              @colinbishop34627

              Good film with some authentic looking technical detail of the inner workings of both vessels. All that crude machinery by our standards.

              Colin

              #72995
              Bob Wilson
              Participant
                @bobwilson59101

                Have you just watched it, or did you see it some time ago? We just stumbled on it when browsing Utube, and thought it looked interesting. Found it very gripping.

                Bob

                #72996
                Colin Bishop
                Moderator
                  @colinbishop34627

                  Just watched it this afternoon. Hadn't heard of it previously.

                  Colin

                  #72997
                  Ian Jopson
                  Participant
                    @ianjopson21383

                    Ashley, that sounds like 'Sahara', a realy dire take on the Clive Cussler book. A long time since I read it, and can't remember why the ship ended up in the Sahara dessert so far from home.

                    I used to have the VHS of 'Ironclads' and found it a great film, apart from the strange introduction of a female spy and subsequent romantic interest. The scenes of building and battle made up for it.

                     

                    Beaten to it by Bob Wilson. Posted as I typed.

                    Edited By Ian Jopson on 03/09/2017 19:23:09

                    #73000
                    Bob Wilson
                    Participant
                      @bobwilson59101

                      The Texas was supposed to have sailed up an African river with the kidnapped Abraham Lincoln aboard, and then the river dried up and disappeared in the intervening 100 years – very far fetched, but quite entertaining. Don't know why I never heard of the Ironclads movie though. I did build one once, the Tuscaloosa, to illustrate an article where it attacked the American clipper Snowsquall, but after I built it, I found it was a different Tuscaloosa, so I never put it in sea or case, and it is still lying around. I climbed aboard the last mortal remains of the Snowsqulal in Port Stanley, Falklands, in 1982! Here is my Tuscaloosa model. It took all of an hour to build!surprise

                      Bob

                      tuscaloosa 1 (large).jpg

                      Edited By Bob Wilson on 03/09/2017 21:43:38

                      #73001
                      Bob Wilson
                      Participant
                        @bobwilson59101

                        And here is the Snowsquall in 1982.. Since then, the Americans have taken the remains back to the US, and re-assembled them on shore

                        Bob

                        snowsquall (large).jpg

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