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D.W. Griffith - Years of Discovery 1909-1913 (1912)
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| Starring: | Elmer Booth, Lillian Gish, Clara T. Bracy, Walter Miller, Alfred Paget, 'Harlem Tom' Evans, Adolph Lestina, Christy Cabanne, Dorothy Gish, Gertrude Bambrick, Harry Carey, J. Waltham, Jack Pickford, John T. Dillon, Kid Broad, Lionel Barrymore, Madge Kirby, Marie Newton, Robert Harron, W.C. Robinson |
| Director: | D.W. Griffith |
| Genre: | Silent, Drama, Short Subject |
| Year: | 1912 |
| Studio: | Image Entertainment |
| Length: | 219 minutes |
| Released: | September 10, 2002 |
| Rating: | NR (Not Rated) |
| Format: | DVD |
| Misc: | NTSC, Full Screen, Black & White, Silent |
| Language: | English(Original Language) |
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SYNOPSIS:For the five years between 1908 and 1913, D.W. Griffith directed some 450 films for the Biography Company, delivering at a rate of two or three films per week. These films, one and two reels in length, are sometimes regarded as apprentice works, films in which Griffith borrowed, invented, and perfected the forms and techniques that he later used to such memorable effect in The Birth of a Nation (1915), Intolerance (1916), Way Down East (1920), Orphans of the Storm (1921), and Isn't Life Wonderful? (1924). But the Biographies were more than that.
The twenty two films presented in this collector's version of D.W. Griffith: Years of Discovery: 1909-1913 are the centerpieces of that extraordinary group of films. Selections include such widely recognized masterworks as The Musketeers of Pig Alley, The Battle at Elderbush Gulch, The New York Hat, and Corner in Wheat. But lesser known social dramas like What Shall We Do With Our Old?, The House of Darkness, and a comic gem called The Sunbeam are also included. They rank among the best in a collection of short films that helped shape cinematic narrative for two generations.
Plots are simple and direct, and if the films are saturated with quassi-comic clichés and old fashioned insensitivities, they also reveal an extraordinary dramatic talent of brilliant force. It is easy to see why the Griffith Biographies were so popular at the time. With an uncanny instinct for acting talent, Griffith assembled the foremost film ensemble of his day, including Lillian and Dorothy Gish, Mary Pickford, Mack Sennett, Lionel Barrymore, Henry Walthall, and Mae Marsh. Beyond that, the requirements of plot detail, the tight physical locale of interior sets (we never see more than three sides of any room), and the need to establish character immediately resulted in a kind of cinematic shorthand which gave these shorts terrific compression. The limitations of time and space also meant that people, places, and objects frequently took on extraordinary metaphoric power they gradually lost as movies got longer. Many of the Griffith Biographies rank with the finest movies he ever made; collectively, they provide an unparalleled record of American life at the turn of the 20th century.
TITLES:
Disc 1
- Those Awful Hats
- The Sealed Room
- The Redman's View
- Corner in Wheat
- The Unchanging Sea
- In the Border States
- His Trust
- What Shall We Do with Our Old?
- For His Son
- The Sunbeam
- The Girl and Her Trust
- The Female of the Species
- One is Business, The Other Crime
- An Unseen Enemy
- The Painted Lady
- The Musketeers of Pig Alley
Disc 2
- The New York Hat
- The Burglar's Dilemma
- The House of Darkness
- Death's Marathon
- The Mothering Heart
- The Battle at Elderbush Gulch
BONUS FEATURE:
- Optional Audio Commentary by Film Historian Russell Merritt
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