| Index | 1 reviews in total |
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Interesting Six Part PBS Series On Maps and History, 14 December 2006
![]()
Author:
gerrythree (gerrytwo@hotmail.com) from New York
Shown over six weeks on PBS, from April 1, 1991 to May 6, 1991, The
Shape of the World uses the subject of mostly old maps to cover
history, from Erastothenes, the Egyptian Greek who figured out the
circumference of the Earth over 2,200 years ago to modern (in 1990)
satellite mapping using computers. The film crews go all over the
world, from Portugal to Mexico to the Palio in Siena to the Far East.
Patrick Stewart, the narrator, seems to pretty much stay in one place,
the map room of the New York Public Library, valuable maps and books
haphazardly tossed onto a large reading table as Stewart makes the
opening and closing video bumpers for each of the six one hour parts.
There are a lot of talking head experts who give their insights into
maps and history along the way. The experts are not the usual suspects,
professors from U.S. universities, but experts from foreign countries,
some of who speak in their language while there are English subtitles
underneath to translate. The series covers a lot of ground, some parts
more interesting than others. Part Five: Pictures of the Invisible and
Part Six: The Writing on the Screen cover more recent history and have
badly dated in sections, especially in the technology area.
This PBS series is not on DVD. The official VHS version is priced for
the education market from its single distributor, so unless you taped
the show 15 years ago and kept those tapes (like pack rat me) or want
to gamble on buying the series tapes on eBay, the series price of
$150.00 for the VHS tapes is too much to pay, even for fans of Patrick
Stewart. Too bad, there are a lot of interesting parts in this series
as it meanders though the history of maps and explorers.
| Ratings | External reviews | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |