The Crusades: Crescent & the Cross
The Crusades: Crescent & the Cross
| 06 November 2005 (USA)
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The Crusades: Crescent & the Cross presents the epic battle between two superpowers of the Middle Ages: the Christian Crusaders and the Muslims. Fought over two centuries, the conflict decided the fate of the Holy Land of the Middle East. Only a tiny strip of land, just a few hundred miles long, it contained the ultimate prize: the city of Jerusalem. The documentary is driven by the key personalities of the First, Second and Third Crusades, the popes, kings, sultans, and knights who, in the name of God, ruthlessly fought for land and power. Experience the murder, treachery, and bloodshed of this legendary chapter of history through the eyes of key historical figures such Richard the Lionheart and Saladin, King Louis VII and Nur al-Din. With breathtaking CGI-enhanced visuals, heart-pounding reenactments, and the stunning footage from rarely seen locations, The Crusades: Crescent & the Cross brings the first three Crusades alive for a new generation in conflict.

Reviews
Hellen

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Unlimitedia

Sick Product of a Sick System

Odelecol

Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.

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Fairaher

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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terrsgc

This was a very interesting show. It only covers the first three crusades, and the coverage of that is a bit superficial. Certainly, the causes and motivations for the Crusades could have been covered better. This might be explained by the slight bias towards the Muslim side. It is better balanced than some of the other reviewers indicate, however.Unfortunately, two scenes with one particular historian interview pretty much ruined it for me: First, after Saladin defeated one particular set of crusaders, he beheaded all the captured knights except the leader himself. Please note that the war was over, and Saladin had won. There was no real tactical advantage to executing the prisoners. Yet, one Middle Eastern historian describes this positively as some great display of power and prestige on the part of Saladin.Later, the same professor describes a different occasion, when Richard I was being besieged. In this case, Richard had a large number of Muslim prisoners. He firstly offered to do a prisoner exchange. Saladin refused for the obvious tactical reasoning. Richard could not feed them without reducing his own troops rations. So, Richard chose to execute them. The historian presents this as some sort of war crime!Why did History Channel let this pass? Saladin had no necessity to kill those knights, yet his murders were a great thing. Richard had sound tactical reasons for killing his prisoners, and even tried another alternative first. In addition, this was kind of bad history. The historian left out facts that actually support his position that Richard's act was a war crime - that Richard actually did what he did out of anger, that the prisoners weren't all soldiers, but included women and children.The crusades were a shameful enough episode in Christian history that we really don't need this sort of obvious propaganda being presented as history.

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LCShackley

This is an excellent introduction to the Crusades presented clearly and creatively. Many original period documents are used as the basis of the narrative, and the visuals in many cases are stunning. The filmmakers hit the high points of the 200-year struggle, re-enacting many of the main battles (some shot in Morocco rather than at the original sites). Not as whimsical as the Terry Jones series of the previous decade, but probably easier to follow and great to watch. The companion DVD in the History Channel set is a mixed bag. There's an hour-long program about the Templars which relies too much on speculation and tabloid-style rumors (including many presented by the author of the justly-maligned book which was the basis of the DA VINCI CODE). It was obviously filmed on a shoestring compared to the main feature. There's also an interesting behind-the-scenes intro to the series, interviewing several of the producers and actors...but strangely padded by interviews with contemporary men and women who are involved in various charitable ventures. The insights into how they used CGI for the crowd scenes are worth watching.

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wrlang

History Channel's the Crusades Crescent and Cross is about the 11th century Catholic crusades brought about by religions politicizing of beliefs based on bad intelligence and misinformation by Pope Urban. A gullible and zealot population of poor and rich alike get together to take over the holy land by force and war. As in every war, the atrocities committed remain the responsibility of those that do them and those that sent them. Since each religious group involved worships the same God, it is very strange that they would be fighting each other in the name of that same God. You get some pretty good accounts from both the Catholic side and the Muslim side, not much from the Jewish side. The take away is that religious wars are for the ignorant and the bloody thirsty.

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idleguy

Seldom does a documentary manage to captivate history as The Crusades: Crescent and the Cross does. With good CG (Computer Graphics), it looks almost like a movie though with a historically accurate depiction. though i did miss the exact dates being shown, the presenters however mention the years. It also shows how the crusades was being told by the Muslim perspective though on certain accounts, the Muslim version is either too brief or totally missing. Despite some flaws, it has to get full marks for the visually rich presentation - given that its a documentary - and the entertainment value. A must see for anyone remotely interested in history/Islamic conflict or just for the information this documentary has to show.

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