History vs. Hollywood (2001)
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Burt Reynolds
Narrator
Kevin Burns
Producer
Josh Binswanger
Self - Host
Geoff Wawro
Self - Host
Elmo Williams
Self
Buddy Elias
Self - Anne Frank's Cousin
Frankie Glass
Director / Writer
Kyung Moon Hwang
Self - Professor of Korean History, USC
Richard D. Zanuck
Self (as Richard Zanuck)
Robert Altman
Self
Kim Atwood
Self (archive footage)
Elliott Gould
Self (archive footage)
Donald Sutherland
Self
Tom Skerritt
Self
Otto Apel
Self - Surgeon, 8076 MASH
Harry S. Truman
Self - President of the United States (archive footage)
Eugene Hesse
Self - Surgical Technician, 8055 MASH
Mary Quinn
Self - Nurse, 8055 MASH
Young Oak Kim
Self - Col., Korean War Veteran (as Col. Young Oak Kim)
Paul Edwards
Self - Korean War Veteran
John Howard
Self - Surgeon, 8209 MASH
George S. Patton
Self (archive footage)
George C. Scott
Self (archive footage)
Paul Newman
Self (archive footage)
Details.
Release DateJanuary 22, 2001
StatusEnded
Seasons1
Episodes5
Running Time22m
Genres
Last updated:
This TV Show Is About.
Wiki.
History vs. Hollywood is an American television show on the History Channel. On the show, experts are interviewed on the historical accuracy of a film that is based on a historical event. For example, the movie The Last Samurai was featured in one episode in which military historian Geoffrey Wawro, professor of history at the University of North Texas, and director of the university's Barsanti Military History Center, compared the movie with the actual events (December 2003). On the show the expert guests discuss the factual accuracy of the film as well as the everyday objects that a person of the particular time period would have seen. In some episodes an expert or the host will go on a journey to the actual historical sites depicted in the film, or interview someone who witnessed the event firsthand. In each of the more than dozen episodes both expert guests and filmmakers will discuss the historical accuracy of the film dramatized.
The series was first released in 1999, and had been produced on a semi-regular basis continuing through at least 2005. The program was conceived, created and once directed by producer Steven Jack who also directed a majority of the episodes. Although the hour-long programs were made for television most episodes were shot on 35mm film.