D.W. Griffith Movies
David Wark Griffith was the most important and influential film director of the silent period, one of the greatest American filmmakers, and the man who developed the basic visual language of storytelling in cinema. Born in Kentucky to Confederate colonel "Roaring Jake" Griffith, D.W. Griffith grew up in poverty, particularly after his father died. He became a stage actor in the 1890s, touring with regional stock companies and writing unsuccessful plays. Griffith's luck changed when he took up a friend's suggestion to try out at the Biograph motion picture studio on Fourteenth Street in New York. Although he appeared in one film for Edison, Rescued from an Eagle's Nest (1908), all of his other early film work was at Biograph. In mid-1908, Biograph's main director, Wallace "Old Man" McCutcheon, took ill and his son, Wallace McCutcheon Jr., took over as director. The younger McCutcheon proved worthless at the job, and Biograph head office man Henry Marvin offered it to Griffith. His very first film, The Adventures of Dollie (1908), proved so popular that Griffith stayed on as director, helming practically all of the 450 odd films Biograph produced in the next five years. With Griffith at the helm, they quickly became the most popular motion-picture company in America. Despite the fact that Biograph did not permit onscreen credits for actors, Griffith practically invented the star system through his discovery of actress Florence Lawrence, who was billed as "The Biograph Girl." When she jumped ship to competitor Vitagraph, he moved a new "Biograph Girl" into place, who later became "Biograph Mary" and eventually known by her name, Mary Pickford. In his Biograph years, Griffith gathered around him a repertory company of actors and technical people, many of whom became important on their own: Mack Sennett, Mae Marsh, Blanche Sweet, Robert Harron, Donald Crisp, Henry B. Walthall, Christy Cabanne, Frank Powell, Henry Lehrman, and Dorothy and Lillian Gish, to name a few.Examination of films made by Griffith's principal photographer, Billy Bitzer, in the early 1900s reveals that many of the techniques once credited to Griffith alone were developed by Bitzer before Griffith came to Biograph -- close-ups, moving shots taken from trains or cars, expressive long and medium distance shots. Yet even Bitzer noted that Griffith was the first to assemble such shots into a coherent pattern that served a story. Griffith's contributions in editing have never been challenged -- he introduced crosscutting, parallel montage, rapid editing, still frames, and other techniques. He also introduced the practice of shooting out of sequence; at least one of his Biographs still exists in its unedited state, and it reveals that Griffith's actors were so well drilled that they could play several scenes in the same setup without stopping the camera, maintaining a shot-to-footage ratio of nearly 1:1! Griffith made so many important films at Biograph that to name them here is impossible, but noteworthy titles include the social drama A Corner in Wheat (1909), The Lonedale Operator (1911), The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1911; which introduced the gangster genre), The New York Hat (1912), and the three-reel The Battle at Elderbush Gulch (1913). Griffith broke with Biograph over the subject of multi-reel features, an area of the business already well established by 1913, but Biograph didn't see the need to follow the trend. Griffith took his entire repertory company with him when he left, and the talent drain was too much for his former employer to withstand; within two years Biograph folded. After making a few low-budget quickies, including the first psychological horror feature, The Avenging Conscience (1914), Griffith made his most famous film, The Birth of a Nation (1915), likely the most controversial American film of all time. It revolutionized the whole movie industry from top to bottom. The sprawling American Civil War epic lasted nearly three hours and employed the most advanced cinematic techniques seen to that time, including breathtaking battle scenes, poignant, well-paced acting, and rapid-fire editing. It also demonized Southern African-Americans -- portrayed in all cases by blacked-up white men -- as uncivilized savages, rapists, and murderers, with the Ku Klux Klan presented as saviors of the South. No distributor would handle it, so Griffith put it out on a roadshow basis, charging high ticket prices with a live orchestra playing an original score written for the film. The Birth of a Nation made millions in 1915 money, and though its total box office is not known, it was once unofficially recognized as the all-time box-office champ before Star Wars (1977). Its effect was so powerful that it moved President Woodrow Wilson to comment that it was "like history written by lightning," though when he realized the greater social implication of these words, he retracted them. Griffith sank every cent gained from The Birth of a Nation into the longest, most expensive experimental film ever made, Intolerance (1916), "the Sun Play of the Ages," which simultaneously weaves four tales of social injustice from Ancient Babylon, the story of Jesus, the massacre of the Huguenots, and a "modern" story called "The Mother and the Law," which he had made earlier and shelved. For the Babylonian story, he built one of the largest movie sets ever, so massive that Bitzer had to photograph it from a cable car. Dizzyingly complex and running four hours, no one went to see Intolerance, even as it remains one of the most impressive personal achievements of any film director. After World War I, Griffith compiled the Babylonian footage and The Mother and the Law into separate films and distributed them overseas, where they were hugely successful, and The Fall of Babylon (1919) was widely acknowledged by European filmmakers as inspiring the practice of "Russian montage" associated with Sergei Eisenstein and French filmmakers such as Abel Gance. During the First World War, Griffith directed Hearts of the World (1918) and several other war-themed films mostly lost to us, and for the Triangle firm produced a number of other pictures that proved important, mainly the first Douglas Fairbanks comedies. With Fairbanks, Pickford, and Charlie Chaplin, Griffith co-founded United Artists in 1919, and while it had no studio of its own, its very existence shook up the industry. In 1919-1920, Griffith was at his height creatively, making three of his greatest films, Broken Blossoms (1919), True Heart Susie (1919) and Way Down East (1920), all starring his personal muse, Lillian Gish. The last of these may be the most perfect "D.W. Griffith film," couched in Victorian drama, stated in matchless camerawork and cutting, and dazzling in its scale and scope. Although the venture was not commercially successful, Griffith teamed up with inventor O.T. Kellum in 1921 to produce the first American feature with a fully synchronized music and effects soundtrack, Dream Street; Griffith himself appeared in a spoken introduction to the film in direct sound. At this time, Griffith's status as the foremost American film director began to unravel and he was beset by a number of personal tragedies. Actress Clarine Seymour, whom he was grooming for stardom in films such as The Idol Dancer (1920) died suddenly during an operation at the age of 22, and in September of that year Robert Harron, the beloved "boy" actor of The Mother and the Law, with whom he'd worked since 1908, died of an accidental gunshot wound at age 27. Griffith's productions for United Artists, made at his own studio at Mamaroneck, NY, were a string of flops; Griffith's attempts to win sympathy for inflation-ridden post-war Germany in Isn't Life Wonderful (1924) was a critical and commercial disaster of the highest order; and while his Revolutionary War epic America (1924) was a hit, it didn't recoup enormous cost overruns on the film. During these years, Griffith made Orphans of the Storm (1922), his last film with the Gish Sisters, and it has become the most frequently shown of his films; while it has moments of charm, it doesn't really represent Griffith at his best. By 1924, Griffith had already sold his share in United Artists against the advice of his partners, and that year he sold the Mamaroneck studio as well and became a contract director for Paramount -- this would prove, in the end, his undoing. It started off well enough; for Paramount, Griffith made his last great film, the comedy Sally of the Sawdust (1925), which made an unlikely movie star out of veteran vaudevillian W.C. Fields. But soon Paramount was anxious to be rid of Griffith, and kept assigning him projects they believed incompatible with his talents so that when a film died at the box office, they could finally wash their hands of him. To Paramount's dismay, film after film he made for them were all commercial successes, even if critical notices were unkind. Back at United Artists in 1930, Griffith made Abraham Lincoln starring Walter Huston; easily one of the worst of his films, it nevertheless was a smash hit and made it look as though Griffith was finally back on track. However, his low-budget depression drama about alcoholism, The Struggle (1931), gave the studio heads what they wanted. In retrospect, The Struggle is Griffith's best talkie, but it was a resounding flop that finally ended Griffith's 25-year, 530-plus film run as a director. Although likely a third of the people working in Hollywood in 1931 felt that they owed their careers to D.W. Griffith, no one would hire him -- the age of the autocratic director who controlled every creative aspect of a film was truly finished. Griffith was still fairly well off, and spent the rest of his life on the family estate near Louisville, sharing his home with the families of the servants who had once worked for his father. The whole idea of film preservation grew up around the work of D.W. Griffith; the donation of his personal collection of films to the Museum of Modern Art film library in 1940 was the basic seed that jump-started the collection as a whole, and by 1980 they had located all but about 30 of his 530 films. Otherwise, D.W. Griffith hasn't been well treated by posterity -- although the controversy surrounding The Birth of a Nation seemed to have dissipated by the wide observances of his centennial in 1975, the rise of academic political correctness late in the century led to a backlash against the aging, nearly hundred-year-old film, with many insisting that it be banned. In 1999, the Director's Guild took Griffith's name off its DGA Award, and about that time a colorful Red Grooms sculpture representing Griffith directing a scene from Way Down East was quietly removed from the campus of Northern Kentucky University. While there are many who would like to see the name of D.W. Griffith expunged from the rolls of history forever, there is no question that without him the basic language of the movies would not have developed when it did, and that his work established for the first time the potential of motion pictures as an art form -- period. ~ Dave Lewis, All Movie Guide
A besieged blockhouse containing a frightened Lillian Gish, marauding Indians, and a Mexican who heroically brings the cavalry to the rescue, are the none-too-original components of D.W. Griffith's endurable 2-reeler The Battle at Elderbush Gulch, made during the director's final year with Biograph. Griffith called the film his finest up to that time, and he might very well have been correct. It was, one could say, all in the editing, which here builds to a crescendo of excitement as Gish is rescued in the nick of time. Timeworn, yes, but the master knew what he was doing and demanded longer pictures in which to do it. The old-fashioned Biograph refused, and Griffith walked, taking with him the stars of "Elderbush Gulch": Mae Marsh, Gish and Robert Harron. They all reunited the following year for the director's masterpiece, the 12-reel The Birth of a Nation. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
Cherubic character actor Otis Harlan stars as Goodrich Mudd, the "black sheep" of the film's title. The bane of his prominent family's existence, Goodrich brings even more embarrassment upon his loved ones when he gets mixed up with a seedy burlesque troupe. Before the inevitable "redemption" scene, there are several slapstick highlights, all of them played to the hilt by the star. The film takes particular advantage of Harlan's stage specialty, his "kidney feet," in one crucial scene, wherein Goodrich cavorts drunkenly onstage with a line of chorus girls (this sort of routine would later be de rigueur in the 2-reel comedies of Leon Errol. The Black Sheep was based on a stage farce by Charles Hoyt. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Old Stephen Rutherford (Gerald Griffin) is a wealthy curmudgeon who disowned his son when he married a poor girl. The son is now dead and he still refuses to acknowledge the wife, Prue (Mabel Taliaferro), or his grandson Bobby (Warner Anderson). Prue works at Rutherford's candy factory and is the one bright spot in the dreary place. She has become involved with former crook Danny O'Maddigan (Raymond McKee) and has encouraged him to follow the straight and narrow. One day Prue and little Bobby are out walking when Bobby is run over by one of the Rutherford factory vehicles. He is taken to Stephen Rutherford's home and the old man is enamored of the boy, even though he does not realize he is his grandson. When this fact is revealed, a reconciliation is effected between Rutherford and Prue. Meanwhile, Danny has "borrowed" ten dollars out of the Rutherford factory safe to finance a party for his granny's 75th birthday. He is scared away before he can close the safe, and his ex-associates come in and take the rest. Danny is jailed for the theft, but when Rutherford learns that the young man is in love with Prue, he gets him off, leading to a happy end for all concerned.
~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
Mary Pickford plays a fisherman's daughter who mends her father's fishing nets. A young man (Charles H. West) falls in love and proposes marriage to her. However, this man has done something to "dishonor" another woman (Mabel Normand). Mabel's brother finds out that the man will not marry his sister and attempts to kill him. Pickford begs for her fiance's life, and she convinces her fiance that he should marry the other woman instead. Wiping away her tears, she goes back to mending her father's nets. Director D.W. Griffith uses his famous cross-cutting technique here as the brother stalks the girls' lover, and the women try to save his life. This film is fast-paced and had skillful editing, as most of Griffith's later shorts do. ~ Bruce Calvert, All Movie Guide
A wagon train is attacked by marauding Indians in this typically grisly Biograph one-reel western melodrama preserved in the print collection of the Library of Congress. After the massacre of the title, a soldier searches for his wife and child. He finds them -- under a pile of dead soldiers. Griffith and his faithful players "took" this picture in California during the company's winter and spring sojourn of 1912. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide








