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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/centennial_1976_miniseries.jpeg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Only the Rocks Live Forever.]]
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5Based on the acclaimed 1974 Creator/JamesMichener novel of the same name, ''Centennial'' aired on Creator/{{NBC}} in 1978–79, during the heyday of the TV {{miniseries}}.
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7As with most of Michener's historical fiction, the series follows events set in a particular region – in this case, northeastern UsefulNotes/{{Colorado}} – beginning with the formation of the land some million years ago. From there, it skips ahead to the beginning of Western expansion. Characters and their long lines of descendants then make up the cast, as the story unfolds with the frontier they've made as their home becomes a trading post, then a cattle ranch, until a Western town slowly forms into a modern one, all over the course of two centuries.
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9Even by the standards of the era, ''Centennial'' was among the longest and most ambitious of projects, with a budget of $25 million and a running time of more than 26 hours (with commercials) over its twelve episodes. And that's not to mention the impressive AllStarCast.
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11Now with a recap page.
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14!!Tropes:
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16* AdaptationDistillation: Whether it is for the sake of simplicity or because the miniseries is already large, the TV adaptation differs from the original book in a number of ways. In particular:
17** The second and third chapters of the book are condensed and given a passing mention in the prologue of the first episode of the miniseries, starting with the fourth chapter and Lame Beaver. The second chapter, focusing on the animals, also features the appearance of a Diplodicus, who is only given a passing mention in the final episode of the miniseries where its remains were unearthed.
18** The ninth chapter of the book showcases hunts and extinction of the Buffalo, which is only given a passing mention by Amos Calendar in Nate Person in the seventh episode of the miniseries.
19** The eleventh chapter of the book goes into detail the establishment of the Central Beet plant by Hans Brumbaugh's son Kurt, but in eleventh episode of the miniseries, it is glossed over.
20** The series leaves out an entire generation, making Paul Garett the grandson of Jim and Charlotte Lloyd instead of their great-grandson. This omits his also being descended from Levi Zendt and Max Mercy, which makes him a descendant of Pasquenel on both sides. The series doesn't edit the family tree from the book, however, which confuses the issue.
21* AdaptationExpansion: The book never covers Levi Zendt's death. It's just mentioned in passing by a third party that Lucinda is a widow. The series has him run over by a train after slipping in the snow, followed by his friends' reaction and a funeral.
22* ArtisticLicenseReligion: In the miniseries, Skimmerhorn justifies his slaughter of the Native Americans by claiming they are Lamanites who had their skin darkened for rejecting God. He claims this is from Literature/TheBible, but it is actually from Literature/TheBookOfMormon. [[AdaptationExplanationExtrication In the original novel, it's explained how Skimmerhorn acquired this Mormon belief without actually being a Mormon.]]
23* BigNo: NO! LEVI WON'T BE SHUNNED! NO!
24* BrickJoke:
25* CattleDrive
26* DawnOfTheWildWest: The first hours of the miniseries are set during the early 1800s. The TwilightOfTheOldWest is depicted towards the end of the series.
27* DeadHatShot [[spoiler:Levi's hat as he slips under the train]]
28* DeadlyDustStorm: Circa 1935, the older son of a poor family drove the local bus (school bus?) in a dust storm, got stuck and suffocated.
29* DuelToTheDeath: Frank Skimmerhorn and Maxwell Mercy
30* EvilColonialist: Nearly all the bad guys in the series are some version of this trope.
31* EndOfAnEra: Happens more than once given the time-span. The time of the native tribes give way to the white settlers of the Wild West which gives way to the modern world we know by TheSeventies.
32* FateWorseThanDeath Amish shunning
33* FreudianExcuse: Frank Skimmerhorn's genocidal hatred of Native Americans comes from a time when almost his whole family was killed by Sioux Indians.
34* GenerationalSaga
35* GoldFever: Lame Beaver discovers gold in a stream, but unaware of it's value he molds the rocks into gold bullets. The location of this hidden stream dies with him in battle, but Pasquinel and Mc Keag find the "yellow bullets" afterwards. Pasquinel spends the remainder of his life trying [[IncrediblyLamePun in vain]] to find the gold.
36* GoodScarsEvilScars: Sam Purchase and arguably Jaques Pasquinel
37* TheGreatDepression
38* GreenAesop: The final episode, "The Scream of Eagles", is set in the contemporary 1970s and is all about this trope.
39* TheGunslinger: averted as the hired killers prefer long range assassination
40* JerkassHasAPoint: Jake Pasquinel is a hate-filled murderer and bigot, not only against the whites but against Pawnee and other Indians not of his own tribe . . . and when he constantly predicts that the U.S. government's greed for Indian land will be insatiable and all negotiations useless, he's absolutely correct.
41* KnightTemplar: Frank Skimmerhorn believes [[TheFundamentalist God has spoken to him]], and tasked him with a "crusade" to eradiacte all Indians from Colorado.
42* MeaningfulName: Colorado is the Centennial State, having been granted statehood in 1876.
43* MountainMan. Pasquinel and Alexander [=McKeag=]. Sam Purchas is a less worthy example.
44* {{Narrator}}: Creator/DavidJanssen as Paul Jarrett, a modern-day descendant of the original settlers of Centennial.
45* NobleSavage: Played straight, lampshaded, averted... the Native Americans in the story are shown to be complex individuals
46* TheSheriff
47* ShownTheirWork: To the point that the book has an appendix at the end of each chapter just to show off the facts that wouldn't fit into the main body of the narrative.
48* TooHappyToLive: [[spoiler: Elly Zendt]]
49* UptownGirl: After her husband's death, Charlotte Seccombe (the now wealthy owner of the Vennford Ranch) falls in love with Jim Lloyd, the ranch foreman.
50* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Frank Skimmerhorn's vicious campaign against the defenseless Arapaho is initially celebrated until the grisly details come to light: Mervin Wendell gets rich by taking advantage of naive homesteaders and is regarded as a pillar of the community.
51* TheWestern: Especially the episode The Longhorns
52* YoureInsane: Colonel Skimmerhorn is told this. His reply is, "No, sir. I'm ''[[KnightTemplar right]]''."

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