Shenandoah
- ASIN: B00008CMT3
- List Price: $9.99
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Product Description:
A rich virginia farmer stays out of the civil war then joins it to protect his family. Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 03/28/2006 Starring: James Stewart Tom Simcox Run time: 105 minutes Rating: Nr Director: Andrew V. Mclaglen
Product Details
- AspectRatio: 1.85:1
- AudienceRating: NR (Not Rated)
- Binding: DVD
- Brand: Universal
- Director: Andrew V. McLaglen
- EAN: 9780783276793
- ISBN: 0783276796
- Label: Universal Studios
- Manufacturer: Universal Studios
- MPN: MCAD22620D
- NumberOfItems: 1
- OriginalReleaseDate: 1965-06-03
- ProductGroup: DVD
- ProductTypeName: ABIS_DVD
- Publisher: Universal Studios
- RegionCode: 1
- ReleaseDate: 2003-05-06
- Studio: Universal Studios
- TheatricalReleaseDate: 1965-06-03
- UPC: 025192262029
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Customer Reviews 

Shenandoah
2009-01-06I purchased this item for my husband at Christmas. He loves old classic movies.

disappointed
2008-12-22My tape is faulty and skips video and audio in the middle of the movie.

DVDs
2008-12-12Is there anyone out there who does not like James Stewart!!!! If you are a history buff and enjoy Stewart at his best - buy this DVD!

Jimmy Stewart gives a great performance
2008-09-16I have always been a fan of Jimmy Stewart and also enjoyed the history behind the story

A metaphor for the war which would divide 1960s America
2008-09-14I recall seeing this film as a child and then later on DVD while working at an Aid Station in Diyala Province (FOB Warhorse). I've always viewed this film as somewhat of a backdoor critique of Viet Nam. As others have noted, production on this film was completed in '65. This would have been well before a broad cross-section of America came to see the war in SE Asia as futile and unwinnable by the restrictions placed on our forces there. But I nonetheless believe that the film was Hollywood's metaphor about having to take sides even when you dont wish to in actual shooting wars or in no less fiery "culture wars". How did audiences in Selma or Montgomery or Atlanta react to the sight of the young freed slave in the heat of an assault pausing to recognize his old friend and NOT bayoneting him?
Historical inaccuracies in this film will be pointed out by gleeful "gotcha!" purists, as they've done above. Weapons are anachronistic, to say the least.
Stewart shines and saves what might have otherwise been a mediocre film