What I know about the Spanish American War can be rattled off in about a minute -- Remember the Maine! Rough Riders, Guam, Cuba, Puerto Rico and he Philippines. This marvelous PBS presentation begins to fill in the rest. Using interviews with historians (including Stephen Ambrose and Daniel Brinkley) from America, Cuba and the Philippines, interspersed with period sheet music ("We have remembered the Maine, The Admiral Dewey March) and archival footage, "Crucible of Empire" tells the tale of a young and brash post-Civil War America ready to flex its adolescent muscle against a weak opponent. The great characters are here -- Teddy Roosevelt, William McKinley, William Randolph Hearst, but also the ignored Cuban and Philipino insurgents, like General Maximo Gomez and Emilio Aguinaldo. The first half of the show seemed as though it would pooh-pooh the dark side of the war, but PBS chose to more or less follow the changing mood of America itself towards its conquests -- from war fever to disillusionment. By the end of the film, the viewer begins to see the war -- with its racism, paternalism, undemocratic underpinnings, one-sided atrocities and the betrayal of the nationalistic aspirations of native-born people -- as the ugly little affair that it was. An epilogue brings the story to the present day, through independence, world war and revolution.