CentennialBy Tom Keogh
A remarkably ambitious and engrossing project, this 1978 television miniseries
ran 26-and-a-half hours, cost a then-enormous $25 million, and involved 4
directors, 5 cinematographers, and somewhere in the neighborhood of 100
speaking parts.
Based on James
Michener's panoramic bestseller about the settling of the American
West--as reflected in the history of a fictional town called Centennial,
Colorado--the story begins in the late 18th century and ends with a
typical 20th century conflict over land usage. Centennial, however,
largely concentrates on various memorable frontiersmen, trappers, Indians,
ranchers, cowboys, and farmers from long ago.
Richard Chamberlain shines as the pioneer Alexander McKeag, Robert
Conrad does some of his best work as French-Canadian Pasquinel, and
performances by Alex Karras, Chad Everett, Sally Kellerman, Raymond Burr,
Richard Crenna, David Janssen, and Dennis Weaver effectively add to a
tapestry of adventure, tragedy, violence, and dubious Western progress.
Produced at a time when TV networks were in the throes of acknowledging
America's history of racial injustice (see especially Roots),
the program paints a starkly villainous portrait of opportunists
exploiting and destroying Indians in the name of manifest destiny. While
the project's great length might make one wary of diving in, Centennial
is the sort of carefully paced drama that makes one care about the
intertwined destinies of unique characters and how they illuminate
America's past.
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