This landmark film from silent director D.W. Griffith was the first movie blockbuster. However, it also reveals a horribly racist version of American history. The first part of the film chronicles the Civil War as experienced through the eyes of two families; the Stonemans from the North, and the Camerons of the South. Lifelong .. Read more
| Starring | Lillian Gish, Walter Long, Erich Von Stroheim, Henry B. Walthall |
|---|---|
| Director | D.W. Griffith |
| Genres | Drama |
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This landmark film from silent director D.W. Griffith was the first movie blockbuster. However, it also reveals a horribly racist version of American history. The first part of the film chronicles the Civil War as experienced through the eyes of two families; the Stonemans from the North, and the Camerons of the South. Lifelong friends, they become divided by the Mason-Dixon line, with tragic results. Large-scale battle sequences and meticulous historical details culminate with a staged re-creation of Lincoln's assassination. The second half of the film chronicles the Reconstruction, as Congressman Austin Stoneman (Ralph Lewis) puts evil Silas Lynch (George Siegmann) in charge of the liberated slaves at the Cameron hometown of Piedmont. Armed with the right to vote, the freed slaves cause all sorts of trouble until Ben Cameron (Henry B. Walthall) founds the Ku Klux Klan and restores order and "decency" to the troubled land. While THE BIRTH OF A NATION was a major step forward in the history of filmmaking, it must be noted that the film supports a racist worldview. But there is no denying that it remains a groundbreaking achievement, setting a high watermark for film as an art form.
| Starring | Lillian Gish, Walter Long, Erich Von Stroheim, Henry B. Walthall, Mae Marsh, Wallace Reid, Miriam Cooper, Ralph Lewis, George Siegmann, Aitken Spottiswoode |
|---|---|
| Director | D.W. Griffith |
| Studio | EUREKA ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 3 hrs 9 mins Watch now: 2 hrs 4 mins |
| Certificate | DVD: |
| Genres | Drama |
| Released | DVD: 21 Aug 2000 Watch now: 28 May 2009 Production year: 1915 |
| Watch now | Subscribe and watch this as part of an unlimited package. |
| Format | DVD |
This colossal, majestic Civil War epic from pioneer director DW Griffith is one of the most successful films of all time, though it was released long before proper cinema book-keeping. In terms of film history, the film was ground-breaking: a long and epic narrative telling a complex tale interweaving two families' fortunes, with dramatic reconstructions of key events including the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, not to mention accurate (and costly) re-creations of Civil War battlefields. But — and it's a very big but — the source material (by southerner Thomas Dixon Jr) is fervently and distressingly racist, and Griffith remains true to his source. It's hard to applaud a film where the Ku Klux Klan rides triumphantly to the rescue, and this, alas, undoes all the sterling work put in earlier and the wonderful performances from Lillian Gish, Mae Marsh, Henry B Walthall and especially Robert Harron. Griffith tried to make amends with Intolerance, but the damage was done.
The cinema's first and still most famous epic, many sequences of which retain their mastery despite negro villains, Ku Klux Klan heroes, and white actors in blackface. Originally shown as The Clansman; a shorter version with orchestral track was re
This is an astonishing piece of cinematic art and undoubtedly a landmark film. Plotwise however, the last hour is a problem, depicting the Klan coming to rescue the ?downtrodden southern whites?, who are supposedly suffering at the hands of the northern carpetbaggers and ?lazy, stupid blacks?. Racist stereotype clich?s abound (the eating of a chicken leg in the legislature!!) to justify the plot?s political stance and it?s certainly understandable why many have no truck with this film because of its stance. However, there is no denying that it is a gripping film with astonishing scope and ambition. It?s female lead, Lillian Gish (much later to be seen in the classic ?Night of the Hunter?), just has to be one of Hollywood?s most beautiful leading ladies. Watch this movie despite the unsavoury politics ? acknowledging great art shouldn?t be dependent upon agreeing with the artist and his message. If that were the case, we can also dismiss the works of Wagner and The Ramones.
If you are shocked by the fact that people in the past believed different things than we do, avoid this film and lock yourself in a sterile bubble. If, on the ther hand, you want to see a true movie classic - rent it up.