Galileo (1974) by Bertolt Brecht, starring Topol
Of course I didn't mind the first dramatic license one bit, as the film opens with the delivery of an Armillary Sphere to Galileo's household and proceeds to give us the only explanation of these device I have ever seen in a dramatic film:
It is free for streaming if you have Amazon Prime.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009UGN1CE
I'm about halfway through this 2-hour production. So far, the amount of detail it goes into about the handful of observations from those first nights in 1609 can only be due to the writer expecting an astronomically literate audience (Brecht was German).
Font is the same as other 1970s television programs dealing with science:
I'm about halfway through this 2-hour production. So far, the amount of detail it goes into about the handful of observations from those first nights in 1609 can only be due to the writer expecting an astronomically literate audience (Brecht was German).
Font is the same as other 1970s television programs dealing with science:
Inevitably, even Brecht cannot resist overplaying the "stodgy old teachers who are afraid of new truths" angle. Yet interspersed is faithfulness to the real history:
The Papal Astronomer confirms Galileo's discoveries. |
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