REEL AMERICAN HISTORY
home
film projects
for students
for teachers
resources
about RAH
note to students advice research questions strategies  project format
Choose a film from our list of Films about American History for which there is a specific historical record that you can study, assemble, investigate, learn from, immerse yourself in -- perhaps just as the producer, the director, and the writer of the screenplay might have done.
For example, a film on:
--  real people:  Kennedy, Wilson, Lincoln, Patton, Earp, Custer, Geronimo,
    Pocahontas

--  real events:  the race war in Rosewood, the Zoot-Suit riots, the killing of
    three civil rights workers in Mississippi, the Amistad incident, the battle at
    Iwo Jima

--  an era:  the Great Depression, the Sixties, the Counter-Culture, a hot
     war, the Cold War (but choosing an era has pitfalls because such
    subjects can easily be too big and too general for our purposes, and will
    only work if you can focus on a specific and narrow "real" and
    researchable element in the era, like the back-to-the-farm movement of
    Depression times or one battle in a war)

There must be an historical record to research and study.  You will not be working just with a film but a film and its historical basis.  There must be a reasonable amount of accessible material outside the film to research.  There must be documentable sources.  In fact, to show more clearly the film-maker's purpose, the ideal subject would have several and even conflicting historical records.
The film should deal with "American history," not just with any real person or event.  That ups the ante a bit.  The subject of the film should rise to a level of importance.  Look for a film about a subject that you think is or should be part of our cultural memory.  Look for a subject that is, would be, or should be touched on in school.  Try to find a subject that you think affects us or reflects us as a nation.
Look for a film in which the maker is consciously reflecting on, responding to, or, most especially, interpreting history.  A film that tells us about a specific historical subject or uses that historical subject to tell us about something in its own time.  A film in which the maker is consciously trying to "make history," to have us see our history in a certain way.  A film, for instance, by a socially/politically conscious film-maker with an agenda.  A film that constructs, creates, challenges, transforms, revises history.
Choose a film that you could reasonably argue should be seen by any person interested in American history.  A film that will enable you to learn more about American history through your research, and that will enable you to teach others about American history  through your project on the web.  A film that you can imagine being assigned in American History, American Literature, or American Studies courses.
The film should either be "serious," "important," "significant" -- one recognized to be of high quality, high impact, that was aimed at mass-market "popular" consumption, or has had a cult following -- or, if low quality or significance, it should illuminate the representation of the historical subject in interesting ways.
Perhaps look for a film that has been little worked on, on which you could do original research, or that provides the opportunity for you to visit a locale (like Wounded Knee) or a resource site (like a museum) where there is further information.
We will want our archive to span historical periods, to have variety, so don't just focus on recent history, recent films, or obvious choices.
Consider little known as well as better known subjects, consider older films, even silent ones.
To get a description of unfamiliar films and maybe some reviews, consult the Internet Movie Database.
Now, you may not be familiar with many films on our list, especially older ones, or you may have trouble thinking about films that deal with history that would work.  So, perhaps the thing to do is to work from the other direction.  What figure, era, or event in American history do you know a good bit about, so that you can bring that knowledge to bear on a film?  Or what figure, era, or event haven't you studied but would like to learn more about through a project on a film?  Identify subjects like this, and then use our Films about American History list to help specify some films that could fit.