Saw this a long time ago in grade school and remembered it being fairly patriotic (at least as a kid in the 80s could think about it). Found a copy at a used book store and watched this last night (it's available on YouTube for free supposedly but won't show on my Brave browser).
Basically it's a musical about the events of the second continental congress debating about declaring independence from Britain and ultimately culminating with the signing of the declaration.
As a whole, the movie is still pretty decent if not overly long at nearly 3 hours (the restored song doesn't help) and I think does a good job at trying to ground the first continental congress to show what kind of wheeling and dealing probably went on.
While watching it, I did a little web searching on some of the actors of the film and the film itself which was supposedly a "restored" version. Restored version?!
What I hadn't realized was that there a massive and, mostly hidden, controversy about the film at the time.
This was based on the stage play of the same name that came out in the late 60s and while re-watching the film I realized that this was actually a film of its time, replete with songs about the dead soldiers giving their lives for the rich (aka Vietnam War themes), and an all too long and histrionic song about excluding the slaves from the Declaration of Independence to get buy in from the southern colonies. While the latter is a historical fact, the song is riddled with contemporary themes, specifically calling out "black" slavery (as if there wasn't any white slavery happening at the time) and recasting the argument in contemporary civil rights terms that were common in the late 60s.
But the clencher is a song in the play called "Cool, Cool, Considerate Men" - This is a song led by the southern colonies (the slave holding ones, naturally) who sing about "moving to the right, never to the left" to insure that the "property holders" stay rich and powerful. Nevermind the fact that political lines of "right and left" weren't established at the time, the playwrights put into the play a song about the conservatives du jour keeping da poor man down!
In fact, when they performed the play for Nixon at the White House, he specifically asked for the song to be removed as it was an obvious sleight on half the country. They refused. (Shades of Hamilton, y'all?)
So when the movie was made in 1972, Nixon was a huge friend of Jack Warner of Warner Bros. Studios who had made the movie. Nixon asked for the song to be cut again and, over the complaints of the playwrights and director, Warner did just that and as wikipedia points out - " Warner also wanted the original negative of the song shredded, but the film's editor kept it in storage unaltered.[10] "
That negative was restored and added back to the film for the blu-ray release.
Showing that, once again, the leftists have been injecting their messaging into media for a long, long time and/or capturing events in history they like and recasting them as their ideas exclusively. Note they did a musical revival of 1776 in 2022 with, naturally, the entire cast being female, non-binary or trans.
Links: Youtube of the movie - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7x9cv1FsyA wikipedia of the movie https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1776_(film) wikipedia of the musical https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1776_(musical)
"Hollywood was always Red"
I generally agree - But Walt Disney wasn't and Jack Warner was obviously a Nixon supporter here. Plus you had movies from Clint Eastwood and John Milius that were definitely anti-leftist.
But that's a far cry from the USAID funded media we have today!
He actually goes over that. Specifically pointing out that there were "two hollywoods", and that the right-wing one fell away.
I saw 1776 for the first time last and I was wasn't aware it was a "restored" version. Very interesting, OP.
The only part of this movie I really enjoyed was Gigachad Richard Lee's song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5p5PvYGB4w
My favorite is the "But Mr. Adams" musical # which breaks the 4th wall - but then I've always been a sucker for that kinda stuff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AK1hX_j0-E4
Anti-Southern/Confederacy sentiment is as old as the Confederacy itself and its only by the restraint of a few men that the North didn't just outright genocide the entire half the country for daring to not fall in line with whatever they wanted.
Literal "American War Hero" Sherman was one of them, and you can see the devastation he wrought on his march to this day in many areas. That was a popular sentiment among the North as a valid tactic, to literally conquer and vassalize if not completely empty half our nation just for the sake of niggers.
So it would be foolish to think that sentiment ever went away, especially in the north/west states that would later become the hotbeds of the MSM, the media in general, all journalism, and on and on.
Regardless on your feelings about the Civil War, the handling of its aftermath was literally made to keep that hate alive forever, much like the Treaty of Versailles did for Germany. And its only by them literally flooding the South with niggers (who'd murder regular amounts while dealing drugs to many more) that kept any true ability to rise up dead.
And those wounds are the foundation of likely a majority of problems in America today, still festering. So of course the Elite/Woke wants to keep dabbing on them, as they still believe as they did then in completely genociding the area and stealing it.
The northeast New England states have always thought they were better than everyone else.
🎵 Mr. Skywise, dear Mr. Skywise, you're obnoxious and disliked that cannot be denied. Your post is long and novel length. Try shortening it with a too long I didn't read 🎵
“Which few did you have in mind, Majesty?”