I did see an episode of “Night Gallery” where they had some guy survive the Titanic…then his lifeboat is picked up by the Lusitania-then THAT lifeboat is picked up by another ship at the end. One of the sailors turns to face the camera, and you see the name on his cap ribbon: Andrea Doria.
But seriously, a good Lusitania movie would be the best!
I think also they did a movie about Ghengis Khan staring Omar Sharif.
Has there ever been a movie based on Xenophon’s account of the march of the Ten Thousand?
D’artagnan (of The Three Musketeers) was based on a real soldier, whose memoirs inspired Dumas’ imagination. It would be interesting to do a movie about the real person. Also, a factual movie about the real Cyrano de Bergerac – soldier, swordsman and science fiction writer – rather than one based on the famous play.
The Albigensian Crusade would make for an intense, albeit very sad, movie. Also, speaking of crusades, there was an incident when the Teutonic Knights were attacking the Lithuanians (the last major pagan people in Europe), when the entire population of a fort committed suicide rather than surrender; an old woman chopped off the heads of all the men, then brained herself with the axe. Tough people.
Charles VI of France, who was unfortunately insane, could be an interesting subject.
(Curious: what the hell would Ptolemy be doing in a movie about Alexander the Great? A movie about Ptolemy and Caesar would be great.)
Mark Twain, as mentioned above, would be interesting. I’d like to see a movie about the Marx Brothers, especially Groucho - not a documentary with clips, I mean a real story.
I always thought the StraightDope column about Lizzie Borden would make a fascinating movie - kind of a dark comic whodunnit with all these competing possibilities. Movies being what they are, perhaps the result would be quite inaccurate, but still… and after all, how many historical crime dramas feature lesbians?
Because the Lusitania had a huge impact on history-more so than the Empress. It was during the war, and was a contributing factor towards the US later entering WWI.
Well, I’d love to see a good film about Dunkirk and/or the Battle of Britain (I’m not counting John Boorman’s “Hope and Glory,” interesting though it was).
Only problem is, if Hollywood made such a film, they’d probably find a way to make all the RAF pilots American!
There was a very good article in today’s newspaper (Cleveland Plain Dealer, 5/18/03) suggesting that a good movie could be made about the life of Col. Charles Young, the highest ranking black US Army officer in the World War I era, and how he was denied promotion to general because of prejudice in that time.
There has been a movie made about him. Unfortunately I can’t give any specifics, since when I watched it I was a young teen, and I forgot everything, title included.
I think the Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten, the first major monotheist in world history, would make a great character for a movie. That story has it all: religion, perverse sex (he married his mother and his daughters, allegedly), power struggles (when he sought to make the Aten the only god, he attempted to end all other worship, which of course angered the powerful priestly class). His doomed son Tutankhamen restored polytheism, but was himself possibly murdered shortly thereafter, his throne taken by one of his generals. Quite a story there.
I remember a tv-movie back in the 1970’s about Lizzie Borden, starring Elizabeth Montgomery. It left open the question of actual guilt.
I’d like to see a historical movie about the infamous Elizabeth Bathory of Hungary, who literally bathed in the blood of young girls. (There was a horror movie loosely based on her, but the truth is horrible enough.)
Speaking of horror, the Sawney Beane family would make an interesting, appalling movie. (Though I guess that’s more legend than history.)
John Hawkwood, the famous mercenary, would make a fascinating subject. And how about Niccolo Machiavelli?
Only problem with Machiavelli is that he was actually a rather nice guy. He didn’t do much to deserve his horrible reputation. A better subject would be Cesare Borgia, who was the inspiration for Machiavelli’s Il Principe.
Great story there. Cesare was one of Pope Alexander VI’s (many) illegitimate children, and a fierce and ruthless opponent. The Borgias were really the first Mafia family. Cesare murdered his sister Lucrezia’s husband and one of her boyfriends, probably murdered his younger brother Juan, and had an affair with his youngest brother Jofre’s wife – not to mention the alleged incestuous affair with Lucrezia. Throw in Machiavelli, Da Vinci, Caterina Sforza, and some pitched battles and poisoning, and you’d have a movie worth watching!
As for wild women, Lola Montez would make a good movie. A dancer more famous for her escapades than her dancing, she practically ruled Bavaria in the name of her boyfriend, King Ludwig, had a romance with Franz Liszt, threw her second husband out a second-story window, and had a penchant for horse-whipping people who pissed her off. Whatever Lola wants, Lola gets!