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      • Ultimately, ‘Centennial' is a curate's egg – good in parts, easy to enjoy but hard to love. The lengthy duration makes it a commitment to watch, but the long list of talented actors will broaden its appeal.
      entertainment-focus.com/2021/06/03/centennial-review/
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  2. Jun 3, 2021 · Ultimately, ‘Centennial' is a curate's egggood in parts, easy to enjoy but hard to love. The lengthy duration makes it a commitment to watch, but the long list of talented actors...

    • Greg Jameson
  3. Centennial is a 12-episode American television miniseries that aired on NBC from October 1978 to February 1979. The miniseries follows the fictional history of Centennial, Colorado, from 1795 to the 1970s. It was based on the 1974 novel of the same name by James A. Michener, was produced by John Wilder .

  4. Centennial: Created by John Wilder. With Raymond Burr, Barbara Carrera, Richard Chamberlain, Robert Conrad. The economic and cultural growth of Colorado spanning two centuries from the mid 1700s to the late 1970s.

    • (3.7K)
    • 1978-10-01
    • Action, Adventure, Drama
    • 105
  5. The best way that I can explain how good Centennial is to put it this way: if the first few hours were chopped out and released as a movie the same year as Dances With Wolves, Centennial would have easily won the Academy award for Best Picture.

  6. Full Review. Critic's Name Audience Member. The review. Loved watching this series. Very well developed characters (some a bit cartoonish, Such as Pasquinel brothers) but the extra length gives so...

    • (109)
    • Virgil W. Vogel
    • Zaki Hasan
  7. Centennial is a twelve-part mini-series - it's an impressive film adaptation of the history of America as described by James A. Michener in his novel of the same name about a fictional setting becoming a city - covering the first pioneers who dared to enter Indian territory to the America of the late 1970s.

  8. Centennial - a 12-episode television miniseries - is based on the best-selling historical novel by Pulitzer Prize-winning author James Michener. At the time, the Centennial production was the most ambitious miniseries project ever attempted: nearly 100 speaking parts, four directors and five cinematographers, and multiple shooting locations across