"This beautiful movie and accurate movie in history is a war story that is painful to women's eyes." Chicago Sun Times
In Mary 's Connecticut town, the war became a neighbor' s neighbor. People who are faithful to the revolution still violently oppose those who are faithful to the British. Mary's husband, a state lawyer complained about his neighbor's son, Mary suspected of repelling hatred and ripping her town. But when her husband is kidnapped by the Conservative Party and sentenced to hang, she must examine her morality in another way.
Pleasure and Richard Buel: MARY Siriman 'S WAR is a true story based on the award-winning biography, obligation way, author
"This movie (3 stars) effectively solved the problem of female character and ambiguity of war."
"(Mostly the most attractive movie in the history of the American Revolution." JOHN MURRIN of PRINCETON UNIV
Mary Sillman's war began in 1779 during the Fairwar at Connecticut's Connecticut Fairfield, Connecticut. As she was involved in an alarming event of the Revolutionary War, the movie is focused on Mary's experience. Mary's husband, Selex Siliman, is an outstanding patriot and a domestic lawyer, suffering from Fairfield citizens who have fallen to Selek and remain loyal to the UK. The arrest, conviction and impending enforcement of the two local conservatives (or loyalists) angered other faithfuls who used Celek as a target of retaliation. He was kidnapped and taken to New York where he was locked in a British prison. Mary decided to stop his release. When dealing with everyday domestic problems and trying to cope with the catastrophe of war, her behavior is rare for women in her social position. She asked the Connecticut Legislature for advice from the Governor and Council, and eventually made a bold plan to secure Selec's freedom.
Mary Fish Noyes Silliman (1736 - 1818) is a female chief of the Connecticut Revolution and a post-colonial community, her moral authority and firm spirit help her family survive war, illness and debt It was. The war of the 1993 film Marie Silman talks about Mary's experience during the American Revolutionary War. On November 16, 1758, Mary and John Noise married the son of Joseph Neuss, the first church in New Haven. Her new husband is the principal of the New Haven Hopkins grammar school and occasionally talked about making a gentle deal in the shipping industry and suffering from epilepsy. In 1759 he lived with James in Rebecca (dead in 4 weeks after birth), Joseph (1762) in 1761, John (1762) in 1762, and 1764 in 1764. And in 1766 Mary died in 1770. Their mother, dear sister Beka died of smallpox in the winter of 1766, and their father died shortly after the fall of 1767.