BlurayPowershop.com
 Location:  Home» Blu-ray Movies » All A&E Titles » The History Channel Presents The Crusades - Crescent & the Cross [Blu-ray]  
Cheap Blu-ray Movies
Blu-ray Movies
Blu-ray Disc Players
Blu-ray Games
Blu-ray Accessories
PlayStation 3
LCD TVs
Home Theater
Blu-ray Release Dates
CES 2009: Pioneer Booth Tour
Fri, 09 Jan 2009 15:30:24 -0500
CES 2009: ARCAM Blu-ray Player
Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:41:56 -0500
CES 2009: Sony Booth Tour
Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:17:01 -0500
Blu-ray Movies News
Blu-ray Movies Reviews
Blu-ray Review: Disaster Movie
Fri, 09 Jan 2009 05:00:00 GMT
Blu-ray Review: Swing Vote
Thu, 08 Jan 2009 17:00:00 GMT
BlurayPowershop.com
What is Blu-ray Disc ?
Blu-ray Movies Reviews
About Us

The History Channel Presents The Crusades - Crescent & the Cross [Blu-ray]

The History Channel Presents The Crusades - Crescent & the Cross [Blu-ray]

enlarge enlarge 
Studio: A&E HOME VIDEO
Category: DVD

List Price: $29.95
Buy New: $22.49
You Save: $7.46 (25%)



Sales Rank: 67039

Media: Blu-ray

UPC: 733961149678
EAN: 0733961149678
ASIN: B001KBZ38W

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Not yet released

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
The Christian invaders were regarded as infidels. The Arabs were scorned as lawless pagans. The Westerners saw their quest as literally a sanctified crusade, while the Muslims launched their own holy war, called a jihad, in retaliation. Sound familiar? It should, because although the events depicted in the History Channel's The Crusades - Crescent & The Cross took place nearly a thousand years ago, they are but a distant mirror to what's going on in the Middle East right now. This two-part, three-hour program impressively details all three Crusades, starting in the late 11th Century, when Pope Urban II dispatched a huge force to reclaim Jerusalem, which had been under Muslim control for some 400 years. For the knights and others who made the journey, it was a noble spiritual quest, not to mention an escape from Europe's petty wars and famines; in the end, the fact that many of them were greedy butchers who murdered Muslims, Jews, and even other Christians indiscriminately (sometimes even eating the flesh of the vanquished) detracted not at all from their conviction that they were acting in the name of God. Of course, so were the Muslims, who, after the bloody first crusade succeeded in seizing the holy city, mounted a massive counterattack under leaders like Nur al-din and his son Saladin, who managed to take back Jerusalem (from whence Mohammed was said to have ascended to heaven) and hold on to it through the failed second and third crusades, the latter led by England's Richard the Lionheart.

All of this is presented by way of techniques that will be recognizable to History Channel buffs. They include modern-day historians, who re-trace the routes of the crusaders and examine the ancient sites where the action took place, as well as actors who portray characters of the time (chroniclers, knights, and others); numerous re-enactments, aided by excellent cinematography and skillful use of CGI (whereby a few dozen extras could be made to look like many thousands), vividly illustrate the battles and other events that took place during this roughly 200-year period. It's an absorbing, enlightening look at events that prove one thing above all: the more things change, the more they stay the same. --Sam Graham





eXTReMe Tracker