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"You hear about the generals. You don't hear about the lesser officers very often," Scott said. "You certainly don't hear about the ranks. It's nice to hear about the guys who are right on the front and doing the work." The brothers, collectively working as Scott Free Productions, are English and sons of a military man, though Ridley Scott downplays that. "I'm an Englishman who did a film on Mogadishu, `Black Hawk Down,'" Scott said of the 2001 film based on Mark Bowden's book. As for his father, "Dad entered the second World War like any other man, trying to do the right thing." He rose to brigadier general because of his knowledge of shipping and transportation and was involved in the planning of D-Day, Ridley Scott said. Scott said his father, Francis Percy Scott, was an orderly man -- a quality that seems to have taken hold in his son. "His whole mindset on simplicity and order and reliability, I guess, kind of set into me. It's just part of my upbringing, part of my schooling," Scott said of his father. Scott said unknown actors were purposely cast for "Gettysburg" to reinforce the realism. He credited Moat, a fellow Briton, for directing the hellish battle scenes and not panicking "in the face of hundreds of people." Scott said the Civil War remains relevant and worth revisiting 150 years later. And one of its causes
-- to end slavery -- is a powerful call to arms, he said. "It's wrong to say that war doesn't settle anything, because in this instance it did," he said. "It's a bit like why do we keep doing movies about Nazi Germany. Because it should never be forgotten." ___ Online: History: http://www.history.com/
[Associated
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