I've become a big fan of Jeff Shaara. That being said, I had a hard time getting through his first book which was Gods and Generals. I ultimately had to decide that I liked the overall story enough to keep going even if some of the ways he was telling it were driving me up a wall and wouldn't be changing for the rest of the book. Being a writer is not what he trained to be in school. One hears how hard it is to become a published author by a mainstream press and yet he did it with his first book. I've always wondered how that happened. On the other hand, Gods and Generals did win the first American Library Association's Boyd Award for Excellence in Military Fiction. I guess this is the long way of saying that the quality of the source material for the movie was not the same as the quality of the source material for Gettysburg. Michael Shaara's The Killer Angels won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1975. Add in a screenwriter messing with lower quality source material and it doesn't surprise me that Gods and Generals wasn't a great movie. It was my understanding that Antietam was supposed to figure prominently in the movie but something went wrong with getting access to the military park. If that was, indeed, the case, then perhaps another reason for the movie to be lackluster. I do watch it now and again, largely because I enjoy watching Stephen Lang. I will also say that I find the opening titles/credits sequence extremely moving (not that that's a reason to pay to see or buy a movie). The combination of Mary Fahl's song Going Home, which sounds like an Irish lament, and the background of various regimental flags really tears at my heart because I know what's coming. I even got so I like Bob Dylan's Cross the Green Mountain from the end credits. It helped to see the lyrics sheet so I could understand what he was saying, but again, not a reason to pay to see or buy the movie. I think Mr. Shaara's writing has improved over the years and if war movies were to come back into vogue again, then a number of his books could be made into good movies by the right people, and that includes The Last Full Measure.