The Seven Years’ Movie (November/December 2005 | Volume: 56, Issue: 6)

The Seven Years’ Movie

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Authors: Allen Barra

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November/December 2005 | Volume 56, Issue 6

 

It’s a good thing for Ben Loeterman and Eric Stange that they didn’t have a passionate interest in the Thirty Years’ War. Loeterman and Stange are the co-writers and two of the six producers for the forthcoming PBS broadcast The War That Made America , and it took them as long to make it as it took the French, British, colonists, and Indians to fight the real thing.

An extra named Walter John, Jr., is himself a Seneca.
 
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It’s a good thing for Ben Loeterman and Eric Stange that they didn’t have a passionate interest in the Thirty Years’ War. Loeterman and Stange are the co-writers and two of the six producers for the forthcoming PBS broadcast The War That Made America , and it took them as long to make it as it took the French, British, colonists, and Indians to fight the real thing. “From pre-production to final cut,” says Loeterman, “the planning was as elaborate as that of an actual military campaign. There were times when I felt we were fighting a war.”

If so, the first enemy the filmmakers faced was ignorance. It’s doubtful that many educated Americans could guess what war the production depicts on the basis of the title. “The French and Indian War,” says the historian Fred Anderson, whose short history of the conflict, also titled The War That Made America , has just been published by Viking Books, “is the least known and least understood war in our country’s history. North Americans don’t even agree on the correct title for it; most Canadian historians call it the War of Conquest. Even those who know something about it usually know it through James Fenimore Cooper’s The Last of the Mohicans or the 1992 movie with Daniel Day-Lewis. In that movie you don’t know who’s fighting who or why. All you know is that the French wear blue, the English wear red, and the Indians wear paint.”

The four-hour production, one of the most elaborate dramatized documentaries of this type ever made, serves as a primer for history-minded viewers, one that will place the war in its proper international context. “The Seven Years’ War was part of the first genuine world war,” explains Anderson. “At the time, the struggle between the French and the British in North America seemed like a sideshow in a war that stretched from Europe to India.” No one could know at the time that the “sideshow” would decide the fate of the North American continent and its Indian natives, who collectively constituted the third major player in the struggle.

Anderson says, “A painstaking effort has been made to show the war from the point of view of the natives, who were often forced to play both ends against the middle, knowing in their hearts that ultimately they would probably lose no matter who won.” Numerous