Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 - Dolby
 
  
 Description:
  Great period pictures make you feel as if you've stepped into another  era, heard its language, breathed its spirit, and come away with a fresh  perspective on that time as well as your own. Ride with the Devil is one  of those special films--why wasn't it more widely embraced by reviewers and  filmgoers? Did it rely too much on our patience for slow accumulation of  unforced rhythms and meanings (as opposed to The Patriot, which "moved"  audiences with cattle-prod simplicity and manipulation)? Ride with the  Devil--smart, handsome, tenderly awed by how individual lives get ambushed  by history--is ripe for rediscovery.  The Civil War of battlefields and plantation houses is nowhere to be seen  here. Instead we see the war as an improvised and largely blundering but very  bloody feud among neighbors in the border state of Missouri. In this bucolic war  zone--more than a little reminiscent of the Balkans in the late 1990s--the  Taiwanese-born director Ang Lee (Sense and Sensibility) traces the  destinies of several young Southern bushwhackers (guerrilla fighters) as they  experience violence, the seasons, and different kinds of love. Skeet Ulrich  draws the aristocratic glamour role (and top billing), but he's overshadowed by  Tobey Maguire as a first-generation American, the magnificent Jeffrey Wright (a  shameful oversight at Oscar time) as a freed slave fighting beside his former  master, and singer Jewel in a very natural acting debut as the young widow who  graces all their lives. The title The Birth of a Nation was already  taken, but by the end of this movie you feel it would have applied here. -- Richard T. Jameson
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