the alamo: history vs. film
TRANSCRIPT
Settling Texas
Since the early 1800’s, Mexico had invited settlers from America and other parts of the world to come to Mexico
Land was cheap and settlers were given many acres
The Constitution of 1824, signed by the Mexican government, gave rights and freedom to these settlers
Most of these people settled in the province of Tejas, later changed to Texas
Trouble with Mexico
By the 1830’s, Mexico’s President, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna declared himself dictator of Mexico, and tried to cancel the constitution of 1824.
Slavery is an issue Texan settlers opposed this, and began to
fight the Mexican army in small battles The last battle of 1835, the Battle of
Bexar (San Antonio) led to Mexican General Cos surrendering to Texan militia forces
“The Key to Texas”
After the Texans captured the Alamo, their military commander ordered James Bowie to blow up the fort and retreat so that the Mexicans could not use it
Bowie refused, calling the Alamo “The Key to Texas” and recognizing how important the fort would be to their army
It was a big mistake
Siege of the Alamo
Embarrassed at Mexican defeat at the Battle of Bexar, Santa Anna swore he would invade Texas and re-capture the Alamo, an old Spanish church that the Texans had turned into a fort
He Marched nearly 300 miles in two months through the first snowstorm in Mexico in over a hundred years, and arrived in San Antonio on February 22, 1836
His army consisted of over 4,000 men
Defense of the Alamo
The Texans had only between 180-250 defenders, made up of settlers from America, Ireland, England, Scotland, and even some Mexicans who opposed their government
Their commander was William Barret Travis
Siege of the Alamo
On February 22, Santa Anna offered the Texans a chance to surrender. Colonel Travis responded with a cannon shot.
At about the 11th day of the siege, Santa Anna did allow several unarmed men, women and children to leave under a flag of truce
The siege lasted for 12 nights and 13 days. Every night, Mexican artillery pounded the crumbling adobe walls of the fort. Their intimidating battle march “El Deguello” would sound at sunset.
The Battle
On the night of March 5, the Mexican cannons fell silent, and the Texan defenders were finally able to get a night’s sleep
While they slept, though, Santa Anna met with his Generals and prepared the final attack
The Mexicans would silently march toward the Alamo’s walls in the early morning hours of March 6 while it was still dark. A surprise attack.
His Generals tried to persuade him NOT to attack
A Quick End
The battle lasted only 90 minutes. In that time, every single Alamo defender was killed (There is some debate over this, though, and
HOW some of them died, as I will explain) Still, the Texans managed to kill over 600
Mexicans (that number is still debated) Following the battle, Mexican morale
reached a new low Pyrrhic Victory
Deaths of Heroes
Travis: Shot through the forehead and died at his position at the north wall.
Bowie: Stabbed or shot to death while he laid in bed. The only question is whether or not he had the strength to fight back with pistols or his famous knife.
Crockett: Debate over whether he died fighting or was captured and then executed, but most historians lead toward the latter.
Civilian Survivors
Susannah Dickinson and Angelina Dickinson (Capt. Almeron Dickinson’s wife and infant child)
Mrs. Esparza and son (defender Gregorio Esparza’s wife and young son)
Joe, the slave of Col. Travis A handful of other civilians
Alamo Movies
Is it the most-filmed battle of all-time? The Immortal Alamo (1911)* Martyrs of the Alamo (1915) Davy Crockett at the Fall of the Alamo (1926)** Heroes of the Alamo (1937) The Alamo: Shrine of Texas Liberty (1938) The Last Command (1955) The Alamo (1960) The Alamo: Thirteen Days to Glory (1987) Alamo: The Price of Freedom (1988) The Alamo (2004)
Battle also featured in Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier (1955), Houston: The Legend of Texas (1986), Texas (1994), Texas Rising (2015)
American History Textbook Syndrome
The blind portrayal of American characters as heroes, and everyone else as exaggerated villains
Popular themes: British soldiers are evil and malicious Confederate soldiers are all slave owners Indians are unintelligent savages and bloodthirsty
Surprising NON-EXAMPLE: “The Alamo” (1960)
John Wayne’s Film Goes Against the Usual Grain
For 1960, at a time when minorities and “enemies” were portrayed viciously on-screen, Wayne’s portrayal of the Mexican Army is surprisingly ahead of its time
He goes out of his way to show them as brave, and although they do not get much screen time, their opinions and reasons for fighting are duly noted
Comparison
The 1960 and 2004 versions of the Alamo story are a great example of how one battle can be viewed by many different angles
1960: a grand spectacle; historical epic; showing the Alamo defenders as heroes; little regard for accuracy; Cold War Era-feel; nominated for 7 Academy Awards
2004: a push for accuracy; humanistic view of the Alamo defenders; brutally honest; eliminated many elements of the story
The one thing they have in common? Both films BOMBED at the box office
Side by Side
1960 Film Accurate, scale set Depicts Juan Seguin as
fighting and dying in battle; correctly shows James Bonham returning to fort but information is totally wrong
Incorrect, over-dramatic battle; deaths of Big 3 are over-the-top and inaccurate
Heroes are HEROES Shows civilian survivors
2004 Film Accurate except for one
glaring detail Correctly depicts Juan
Seguin as being sent away to Houston; story almost entirely ignored Bonham’s character
Accurate battle; deaths of the Big 3 are as accurate as can be
Heroes are human Completely ignores
survivors
Why did they fail?
1960 version: too long, too much dialogue, very political
2004 version: bloodless fighting; doomed for failure because of PG-13 rating (Thanks Disney!), an almost antagonistic approach toward portraying famous heroes Eviscerated by reviewers before the film even
opened in theaters, much like Gods and Generals. They posed questions like, “Why should the masses care about Texas?” and “How can we be expected to sympathize with slave-owners?”
Which is better?
Both films feature incredible battle scenes, film scores, costuming, and sets
Wayne’s, overall, is more entertaining and feel-good
Hancock’s is more accurate, but sometimes goes too far out of its way to demystify the heroic aspects of the Alamo defenders
“The 2004 version is by far and away a better film than the 1960 one, but that does not mean it is my favorite of the pair.”- Ned Huthmacher