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David
Wark Griffith was born in La Grange, Kentucky on January 22,
1875, to Jacob "Roaring Jake" Griffith, a Confederate
Army colonel and Civil War hero. After stints as both writer and
actor of poetry and plays, Griffith first entered the motion
picture industry as an actor for Edison Studios in 1907.He moved
over to Biograph in 1908 for the salary of $5 a day. Griffith's
work at Biograph would forever change the way movies were made.
Biograph
was one of the first motion picture studios in America, when
films were sold outright by the foot, and not rented as they are
today. Films were silent and no more than one reel in length (a
running time of about 12 minutes). At a price of 10-cents a
foot, the cost of a reel of film was about $100. When Griffith
first came to Biograph, the studio was only selling about 20
copies of each new film and was in poor financial condition.
Biograph
was in pressing need of a director. The job was offered to
Griffith at an increase in salary, but he was reluctant to take
it. He was working steadily and was afraid that if he failed he
would lose his job as an actor. Henry Marvin, founder of
Biograph, assured Griffith that if he did fail as a director,
his acting chores would continue. Griffith reluctantly accepted.
Griffith
had only a rudimentary understanding of film making. He knew
that film directors were no more than sheepherders, moving the
actors from one place to another on the screen. The cameraman
was king. Biograph had two: Arthur Marvin, brother of
Griffith’s boss, and a German immigrant named G.W. “Billy”
Bitzer. When Griffith selected The Adventures of Dollie
for his initial plunge, Marvin was assigned to be his
cinematographer. Bitzer, in the meantime, offered the novice
director all the help that he could.
Both
cameramen wanted Griffith to succeed. If he didn’t, chances
were that they would be pressed into directing, a move that both
considered a demotion.
The
Adventures of Dollie
was typical of the films of the day. A little girl is kidnapped
by a band of roving gypsies and sealed in a water cask. The cask
falls off the wagon when crossing a river and the cask, with the
little girl inside, is swept down the stream toward a waterfall.
In the nick of time the girl is rescued by two boys.
The
simple story was filmed by Griffith and Marvin in two days at
Sound Beach, Connecticut, in 700 feet (or just under nine
minutes of running time). On the surface, the picture looked no
better nor no worse than any other Biograph film. But there was
something special about it. The Adventures of Dollie sold
almost 100 prints -- something almost unheard of for a Biograph
film.
Griffith’s
second film, The Redman and Child did nearly as well and
Biograph had found not only a new director, but its salvation as
well.
Between
1908 and 1913, Griffith directed hundreds of films for Biograph,
yet in the entire time his name never appeared on the credits –
nor did those of his actors. The greatest of all the early film
actors worked for Biograph: Mary Pickford, Lillian and Dorothy
Gish, Mae Marsh, Harry Carey, Henry B. Walthall, Mack Sennett,
Fred Mace, Florence Turner, Constance Talmadge, Donald Crisp,
Robert Harron, and others – all got their start with Griffith.
But
Griffith was not happy. In his Biograph years he had perfected
all the elements of so-called film grammar – cross-cutting,
tracking shots, the running insert, flashbacks, and more. He
wanted to make longer films, but Biograph fought him all the
way.
Biograph
was a member of the Motion Picture Patents Company, a trust
organized by Thomas Edison and his associates to restrict
production of motion pictures to ten companies, to eliminate
further competition. Theaters paid a two-dollar weekly fee and
and could only exhibit Trust-produced films. Independents who
tried to produce their own films were often met with violence.
The
Trust had a policy when it came to filmmaking – keep it simple
and keep it profitable. One-reel films were profitable and there
was no reason to make them longer or more expensive. Griffith
did manage to make a number of two-reelers, but it was always
under protest from the company.
By
1913, the grip of the Trust was weakening, but not their
resistance to change. Griffith decided to leave Biograph and,
when he did, he took his stock company of actors with him.
Biograph’s decline began the moment Griffith walked out the
door. In five years, it was gone.
Griffith,
on the other hand, continued to prosper and in 1915 he put forth
his most ambitious effort, the twelve-reel destined to be
classic The Birth of a Nation, based on Thomas
Dixon's southern tilted Civil War era drama. The film was
an instant sensation, Griffith was hailed as a genius. Griffith
and his personal cinematographer G.W. Bitzer collaborated to
create and perfect such cinematic devices as the flashback, the
iris shot, the mask, and crosscutting. For this reason Griffith
has been called "the father of film technique",
"the man who invented Hollywood" and "the
Shakespeare of the screen".
He
followed this up with another controversial film titled Intolerance
in 1916. Although applauded by the critics, this movie met
some box office resistance and lost money. The picture followed
the action of three modern tales of city life, inter-cut
throughout the film. It was perhaps a little too real for
audiences of the time.
Griffith
from this time on would alternate between more sure fire money
makers such as One Exciting Night (1922), and more
personally satisfying efforts such as Orphans of the Storm
(1922). He was one of the founders of United Artists in 1919.But
toward the end of the 1920s, Griffith's movies was slowly
sinking into oblivion. In the glitter of the Jazz Age, his
filmmaking was considered hopelessly old-fashioned.
He
moved to New York and his movies lost even more appeal for
mainstream audiences. His last picture, “The Struggle”, was
made in 1931 and played in theaters only a week before being
withdrawn. Griffith returned to Kentucky and his family. Then,
in 1940, comedy producer Hal Roach summoned Griffith back to
Hollywood to “supervise” the making of “One Million
B.C.”, a remake of one of his old Biograph films about
primitive man. Although he was to act as only a consultant, the
autocratic Griffith tried to take over the whole production and
was dismissed.
He
died July 22, 1948.
Among the mourners at his funeral were friends and colleagues
from the days when the movies were young and Griffith was the
undisputed king of the cinema. One of these, actor Donald Crisp,
delivered a fitting eulogy: “I cannot help feeling that there
should always have been a place for him and his talent in the
motion picture field. It is hard to believe that the industry
could not have found a use for his great gift."
Virtually
forgotten by the industry he helped build, it was Griffith who
had saved the ailing Biograph Studios from bankruptcy and,
through his incredible talent, had made it a leader in the
fledgling movie industry. And it was Griffith who turned
filmmaking into an art.
"I'm
not bitter about Hollywood's treatment of me, but over its
treatment of Griffith" (Orson Welles)
Links
about David W. Griffith
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000428/
(English)
http://www.portalmundos.com/mundocine/directores/griffith.htm
(Spanish)
El
Nacimiento de una Nación (Spanish)
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