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The Birth
of a Nation (1915)
In director D.W. Griffith's landmark,
historical blockbuster epic film (America's first) - it was based
on former North Carolina Baptist minister Rev. Thomas Dixon Jr.'s
anti-black, 1905 bigoted melodramatic staged play, The
Clansman. The controversial but landmark film, known for its
racist attitudes, and also for advancement of the art of film-making,
featured new techniques of cross-cutting and editing, including the
closing down of the iris of the camera and the use of cameos.
It provided incredible Civil War battle scenes resembling historic
Matthew Brady photographs.
It had a major formative influence on future films
and has had a recognized impact on film history and the development
of film as art. Its pioneering technical work, often the work of
Griffith's under-rated cameraman Billy Bitzer, included many techniques
that are now standard features of films, but first used in this film.
The film remained controversial for many reasons,
one of which was its racist and "vicious" portrayal of
blacks and its proclamation of miscegenation (racial mixing), according
to the NAACP. For that reason, it was the subject of bans for inciting "race
hatred and race riots."
It told the story of the intersecting lives and continuing
friendship between a Northern family (the Stonemans in Pennsylvania)
and a Southern slave and land-owning family (the Camerons in Piedmont,
South Carolina) during the Civil War and post-Civil War Reconstruction period.
- each of the Northern and Southern families (Stonemans
and Camerons) was headed by a powerful patriarch - abolitionist
and Hon. US Congressman Austin Stoneman (Ralph Lewis), and Dr.
Cameron (Spottiswoode Aitken)
- in 1860, Phil Stoneman (Elmer Clifton) and his younger
brother Tod Stoneman (Robert Harron) paid a visit to Phil's best
boarding-school friend Ben Cameron (Henry B. Walthall) living in
the South; during the trip, Phil Stoneman fell in love with Ben's
eldest sister Margaret Cameron (Miriam Cooper), while Ben - after
seeing a photograph of the sole Stoneman daughter, Elsie Stoneman
(Lillian Gish) - became infatuated and idolized her
- once the Civil War began, the two families were
caught up in the struggle, and young men from both families enlisted
in the Union and Confederate armies; the separation of the domestic
families and the couples by war and disunion served as a symbol
of the political divisions between North and South
- the Cameron women were rescued by Confederate state
troops who routed a black Northern militia guerrilla force attacking
the Cameron home
- the younger Stoneman son Tod and two Cameron sons,
Duke (Maxfield Stanley) and Wade (George Beranger) were killed
in action; Wade was killed during Sherman's march and bombardment of Atlanta
- Elsie volunteered as a nurse in the Union military
hospitals in the North, in Washington, DC.
- fighting with the Confederate
forces of General Lee, Ben Cameron led a desperate and heroic final
charge (filmed at a high angle with a moving-camera shot) at the
Siege of Petersburg against the Union command of Capt. Phil Stoneman,
he led the assault and stuffed a Confederate
flag down the barrel of a Union cannon, earning the nickname of "The
Little Colonel"; Ben was seriously wounded in action
- Ben was transported to a military hospital
set up in the Patents Office where Elsie Stoneman was a nurse;
Ben finally met Elsie, the girl of his dreams; he showed her the
picture of her that he had carried around for a long, long time
- during a visit to see her son, Mother Cameron (Josephine
Crowell) met with President Lincoln (Joseph Henabery) and received
a pardon for her condemned son
- Gen. Lee surrendered to Gen. Grant at Appomattox
Courthouse in April of 1865. The same day, Ben ("The Little
Colonel") was discharged and returned to his ruined Southern
home in the film's most touching and poignant sequence;
the house itself seemed to beckon him back home
as hands and arms of his unseen mother held
him lovingly and pulled him inside
- meanwhile, Congressman Austin Stoneman, father of
Phil and Elsie, agitated for the punishment of the South, but President
Lincoln refused to take revenge
- shortly later, in a recreated, skillfully-executed
assassination scene, Lincoln was gunned down at Ford's Theatre,
marking the rapid descent of the South into disorder and chaos
- during the harsh Reconstruction Era, Congressman
Austin Stoneman, champion of black equality, advanced the power
of blacks by appointing his protege and mulatto (half African-American)
aide Silas Lynch (George Siegmann, a white actor dressed as black
and acting monstrously) to lead the blacks and rally
the black vote in the South; in his headquarters set up in Piedmont,
SC, Silas Lynch also enforced the rule of blacks and carpetbaggers,
leading to the exploitation and corruption of the former slaves;
he encouraged Southern blacks to rise up and oppress the traitorous
Southern whites; he also led black militia in their efforts to
take over the South; the Stoneman
family also moved to Piedmont, due to Austin's ailing health
- during the next election,
Negroes and carpetbaggers swept the state in the election, and
were elected to a largely-black legislature. Silas Lynch was elected
Lieutenant Governor and became a fierce zealot for "black
supremacy"
- upset by the recent developments, Ben organized
together with other southerners to form a secret vigilante group,
the Ku Klux Klan, known for their white garb and night-riding activities;
because of wartime divisions and hostilities, Ben became estranged
from Elsie who remained loyal to her father's efforts
- a troubling and tense incident
occurred when emancipated former house servant/slave - the inflamed,
lusty Negro "renegade" Gus pursued 'Little Sister' Flora (Mae Marsh) into the
woods; although he reassured her: "Wait, missie, I won't hurt yeh," she
fell from a cliff after repeatedly threatening him -- "Stay away or I'll jump"
- the KKK sought retaliation - they apprehended Gus, ruled him guilty, and lynched
him. Silas Lynch ordered negro militia reinforcements to fill the
streets, and declared the penalty for being a Klan member was death by execution
- the Camerons, servants and Phil Stoneman fled from
town and took refuge in a little isolated cabin
- to intercede for her father, Elsie - representing
innocence, purity and virtue - proceeded to
the mulatto leader Silas Lynch for help, where he lustfully advanced
upon her and attempted to force her into marriage; Elsie was saved
by her repulsed father who confronted Lynch
- simultaneously, Klansmen were
summoned on horseback (first a few upright white male riders, then
a group, then a horde of white-sheeted figures) as Lynch cornered
the horrified, frightened and screaming Elsie; the zealous and
heroic Klan gathered in full strength riding on horseback, for rescue
in a "head-on" tracking shot
- the film concluded with an intense, action-packed,
stupendous, last-minute rescue finale, a thrilling climax - interweaving
the siege on the cabin, the chaos in Piedmont, Elsie's fate at
the hands of Silas Lynch, and the onrushing rescue by the Klan.
The KKK drove back Lynch's black militia from Piedmont after a
bloody gun battle, rescued Elsie from Lynch's clutches before she
or Austin Stoneman were hurt, captured Lynch, and saved the besieged
cabin from a rabble of blacks and carpetbaggers
- the blacks were crushed and disenfranchised in future
politics
- the two couples (in the Cameron
and Stoneman families) were brought together by marriage and a "double
honeymoon" - Phil and Margaret were reconciled, and Ben and Elsie sat by the
sea's edge, symbolic of the peaceful rejoining of North and South
after many battles and the painful Reconstruction period
- a tableau with a benevolent Christ-like figure emerged
from the background, signifying the vanquishing of the God of war,
and the reign of everlasting peace, unity, harmony and brotherhood
throughout the world
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Confederate Soldier Ben Cameron (Henry B. Walthall) Leading
a Military Assault and
Stuffing a Flag in Cannon
Ben Cameron Hospitalized in DC Hospital
The Poignant Return to Ben's ("The Little Colonel") Southern
Home
Lincoln's Assassination Reenactment
"Stay away or I'll jump."
Flora's (Mae Marsh) Death Jump From a Cliff When Chased
by 'Renegade' Gus (Walter Long)
Assembly of the KKK
Silas Lynch with Elsie Stoneman
The KKK's Ride to Save the Town of Piedmont, SC
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