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Alexander Hamilton | 
enlarge | Studio: PBS / Paramount Category: DVD
List Price: $24.99 Buy New: $12.87 You Save: $12.12 (48%)
New (18) Used (7) from $12.86
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 12325
Format: Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 120 Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 705210 UPC: 841887052108 EAN: 0841887052108 ASIN: B000NA21WM
Theatrical Release Date: May 15, 2007 Release Date: May 15, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: NEW IN THE SHRINK-WRAP. SMALL TEAR ON BACK OF BOX LABEL
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Product Description One of the most controversial men of his age Alexander Hamilton was a gifted statesman brought down by the fatal flaws of stubbornness extreme candor and arrogance. His life and career were marked by a stunning rise to power scandal and tragedy. He had one of the most notorious love affairs of any public figure in American history and met his death in a startling act of political violence the famous duel with Aaron Burr. But his contributions as a statesman survive. As first Secretary of the Treasury during the tumultuous early years of the republic Hamilton led the transformation of the young country into a commercial and industrial powerhouse. He was the one founder who had a vision not of what America was but of what it could become. This two-hour AMERICAN EXPERIENCE tells the story of the underappreciated genius who laid the groundwork for the nation s modern economy including the banking system Wall Street and an opportunity society in which talent and hard work not birth determined success.System Requirements:Running Time: 120 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DOCUMENTARIES/MISC. Rating: NR UPC: 841887052108 Manufacturer No: 705210
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Hamilton: Father of the American Dream March 11, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
After watching this PBS documentary, I am very much inclined to highly recommend it to anyone interested in learning about the Founding Fathers. Much has been said through the ages about Washington, Adams, and Jefferson, but there has been a serious neglect of Hamilton. This program goes a fair distance to help make up for the imbalance. Hamilton's pride, stubborn steak, adultery, and partisanship are all dealt with, but his genius in pulling the nation out of Revolutionary War debt, establishing the Bank of the United States (the initial concept of a Federal Reserve System), opposition to slavery, and belief in a strong national government were considered equally. The classically trained actors in this program are more concerned about bringing the written words of Hamilton and his contempories alive than giving any movie star-type performances. Still, their efforts succeed in entertaining and instructing quite effectively. The program makes a strong case that Hamilton's notion of America becoming a great industrial power rather than a Jeffersonian land of isolationist farmers is persuasive. It does not necessarily demonstrate that Hamilton was better than any of the other Founding Fathers, but that his ideas and convictions were just as valuable and prophetic. For example, it was Hamilton who strongly believed in protecting America from foreign enemies with a strong, standing national army rather than an often unreliable militia argued by the Republicans of the era. At one time he was the leader of the Federalists, a party that rapidly ebbed away following his tragic death. More important, he was one of the key figures that believed anyone, if he worked long enough, and hard enough, could accomplish great things in America. The DVD clearly, and effectively argues this is one of Mr. Hamilton's many contributions to the American Psyche. Please buy and watch this program if you want to learn more about an amazingly complex, and important American leader. In a final note, forget about the dirty politics of 2000-2008; between 1790 and 1804 things got much nastier.
E Pluribus Unum "Out of many, one" ..........thanks, in large measure, to Alexander Hamilton. July 3, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Marc Soloman, portraying Mr. Hamilton in short takes herein, does a great job conveying emotion as he speaks directly in the camera to us in this rather well-done PBS production probing the character of a hero of the American Revolution and architect of America's financial system.
The camera, in one particular take, while showing the room behind him too, draws in on a facial expression of Mr. Soloman that just beams with the self-confidence and insecurities of a self-made man. For a moment, it's almost as if Hamilton himself has been caught on film, as Soloman petitions us thusly: "Why has government been instituted at all?"......"Because the passions of men will not conform to the dictates of reason and justice without restraint."
Later Soloman continues to quote Hamilton that "order is the key to [personal] liberty."
Oh, so was a royalist, was he? Jefferson thought he was, or at least tried to tar him with that moniker because Jefferson continued to imbibe of the Spirit of 76 even after the 1787 'Miracle at Philadelphia,' at least in part, superseded it. Regarding "the dangers of maintaining a continuous revolutionary mentality in America, Hamilton believed that revolutions ended in tyranny because they glorified revolution as a permanent state of mind. The spirit of compromise and a concern with order were needed to balance the quest for liberty. That's why Hamilton penned the Federalist Papers (enlisting support from Madison and, to a lesser extent, John Jay) to champion the proposed American Constitution; a constitution designed to check unfettered passions from going the way that the French Revolution did just a few years hence. "More than anyone else Hamilton engineered the transition to a post-war political culture that valued sound and efficient government as the most reliable custodian of liberty, calling such an effort an object of all others the nearest and most dear to my own heart." Hamilton was the greatest policy maker of the day. "Alexander Hamilton belonged to the future." We still live in Hamilton's world, built on bonds and banks; on capitalism and the personal freedom that such a system engenders and protects.
Hamilton understood finance (unlike Jefferson the gentlemen farmer, who lived beyond his means and was less than successful in this endeavor and who desired America to be nation peopled primarily of citizen farmers). It also helped that Hamilton was a self made man who rose above his station and was the only founder without a serious attachment to a particular state who thus was predisposed to see the forest as well as the trees. In many respects Hamilton could be adjudged to be the first "American," an immigrant whose misfortunes instilled in him self-reliance, who came from afar for a better life; who laid the foundation for others who followed him to have a fair shot at the success that he himself achieved . And this program does a respectable job in conveying the above (while including some less than stellar behavior of Hamilton) in an interesting manner worth watching. (Consider Ron Chernow's Alexander Hamilton for a lot more depth, or if you're not looking to delve into that much detail consider Forrest McDonald's Alexander Hamilton: A Biography.) Cheers
One Possible Aspect Missing June 18, 2007 4 out of 10 found this review helpful
This documentary covers Alexander Hamilton's birth, death, and highlights. About a decade ago, a biography of President Adams was on the bestsellers list the whole summer. I can imagine patriots and history fanatics loving this work equally.
Many people, including myself, throw around the phrase "Founding Fathers" so easily that one would assume the men agreed with each other or peacefully agreed to disagree. This work shows that many of these leaders couldn't stand each other. (I was equally shocked in reading the biography of Alice Walker in which feminist authors backbit and maligned each other constantly too.) Whereas Clinton, Cisneros, and Hart tried to hide extramarital affairs, Hamilton put all his business out on front street, in a news publication.
This work is filled with monologues by actors channeling key American leaders. Yes, one learns how effective the Founding Fathers were with words, but this gag got tired after a while. The contrast between the interviewees being racially and sexually diverse compared to the actors who were all either white men or white women describing only amorous relations with the aforementioned group shows how much the States have progressed in identity matters.
The documentary does touch upon rumors that Hamilton may have had some African ancestry. Someone calls him a "creole," but one must remember that term can reference both a biracial person and a fully European person born in the colonies. The documentary pays much attention to Hamilton's relations with women. However, LBGTQ, the National Black Justice Coalition, and A.L. Rowse's text "Homosexuals in History" have all said Hamilton also wrote of his attractions to men. His potentially romantic dynamic with Joseph Laurens never comes up. This documentary may be heterosexist or it may have shied away from anything that couldn't be verified.
Even though Hamilton's ideas seem like they may have been at the root of the modern Republican Party, he also seemed to propose a "big government" that I imagine right-wing proponents would oppose. The documentary concludes by asking and answering why don't modern Americans venerate Hamilton in the way that they do Washington or Jefferson. Again, I think a targeted audience would really love this work.
It could be better May 31, 2007 9 out of 12 found this review helpful
Alexander Hamilton is one of the founding fathers of the United States. This film goes through his life, from childhood to death. The pace is gentle and vivid. It's pretty enjoyable to watch.
I, however, have to say this film is kind of scratching the skin. For example, as Secretary of the Treasury, his policies have enormous impacts on the whole country, from the Louisiana Purchase to NYSE. Unfortunately, you can't sense this in the film, even this part is complemented in the Special Features. In addition, you can't feel he is a man with the personality of controversy as told in the beginning of this film. You just feel he is a man with passion and idealism. The reason might be that this film stresses more on his bright sides rather than dark sides. Of course it's good to know his contributions and I admire that. But it is just not so realistic.
My favorite part of this film is the last chapter, Hamilton's Legacy. Even though the content of this film is not so convincing, I still feel moved when watching this chapter. The comments on him are also excellent. For example, "He doesn't need a monument (as Washington and Jefferson). We live in Hamilton's monument."
For me, it's good to know more about Alexander Hamilton. After all, he is the man on the 10 dollar bill and he must have something great. In a word, He is a visionary whom prople didn't appreciate at his times.
You will love him.You will hate him, BUT...you will understand him and appreciate him: ALEXANDER HAMILTON, THE PARADOX! May 15, 2007 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
PBS has assembled absolutely some of Broadway's most talented stage actors today to recreate, based upon the diaries and writings of the time, an intensely engaging and extremely informative look at arguably one of the most important and influential founding fathers, Alexander Hamilton.
Hamilton is studied and dissected from his most ignoble birth as an illegitimate from the West Indies to his rise to fame as leader pro-temp of the American Revolution and his ultimate death in a duel. There is nothing candy-coated about PBS's approach to Hamilton, superbly acted by Tony Award Winning stage actor Brian O' Byrne (DOUBT,FROZEN).Hamilton is presented in an extremely fair and unbiased way as the genius that he was, the braggart and irascible pain he could be,as a dutiful husband, as an adulterer, as an abolitionist,as a friend to Washington and as a foe to Jefferson.In other words, Hamilton will be seen with all of his bravado and all of his warts. Even the most amateur psychologist would have a field day with Hamilton!
The pace is brisk and lively and informative.There is nothing boring or overly documentarian about this PBS special.History becomes VERY ALIVE with this interpretation of Alexander Hamilton. The times, the people and the historical events are portrayed accurately and with real panache, perfect for teaching or simply informative viewing.You will learn about the struggle to bring the Constitution to law, the founders who opposed it and why, and that a lot DOES NOT change to the present!!! A MUST SEE AND HAVE FOR THE SERIOUS VIEWER!
A great companion film would be the Ric Burns' 5 or 7 set NEW YORK which contains a lot of info on Hamilton.
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