The Screens Will See 'A People's History'
Filed under: Documentary, Casting, Politics
Project Greenlight producer Chris Moore is already busy with his directorial debut, Killers, but now The Hollywood Reporter posts that he's also executive producing a miniseries and feature-length documentary based on A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn. First published in 1980, the book follows the history of the United States from Columbus and Native Americans right through the twentieth century. However, instead of your ordinary historical book, Zinn critically looked at both the triumphs and tyranny of the country.The project is titled The People Speak, and it's looking like it could be a pretty successful documentary, if the collaborators are any indication. The history will be brought together by music and readings that focus on the country's war, class, race, and women's rights struggles. Actors like Matt Damon, Viggo Mortensen, Marisa Tomei, Danny Glover, David Strathairn, Kerry Washington, and Josh Brolin will perform, while the likes of Eddie Vedder and John Legend will add some music into the mix. This collaboration will be topped off by Zinn himself, who will give introductions and historical contest to the pieces of the film.
As Moore describes it: "It's going to be a great piece of entertainment, but more importantly, something people can watch and learn and remember how great this country has been and how individual people have changed the course of history. It's going to make them think, laugh, and cry and be proud to be American." Yet the cynic in me is waiting for those people who will say all of this is anti-American. Hopefully, it will just be a well-received, good, accurate film that teaches as well as entertains. But what do you think?










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
12-11-2007 @ 9:36PM
Corey Atad said...
That book sounds a lot like the documentary series produced by the CBC, Canada: A People's History. Great concept, telling the stories of the birth and struggles of a nation through the eyes of the people who lived through it using old documents and letters.
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12-12-2007 @ 5:58AM
mish said...
I think its a great idea - I've read the book a couple of times and it would make a brilliant long form documentary. Looking forward to it.
Corey - the title of the book is a slight misnomer, it doesnt necessarily purport to tell history from the stories of the ppl that lived it persay - its more provides a balance to the "official" history that we're taught in traditional classrooms.
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12-12-2007 @ 2:57PM
Gina said...
So you're cynical about the cynics? :-)
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12-13-2007 @ 1:14PM
Brant said...
Zinn's book has been labeled a "socialist revision of US history" since it first came out. I expect the Right to attack it with the same blind venom they spew at everything that comes out of Hollywood.
Kudos to Chris Moore for bringing this to the screen. But his comments seem a little too cheery for a book that is so critical of US history. It makes me question how accurate the adaptation will be, especially with the star power already attached to the production.
After all, the heroes of the book are not the powerful "individuals who changed the course of history", but rather the collective masses who banded together to stand up against social injustice.
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