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Profile of the great film director D.W. Griffith. Ron Mottram, professor of cinema history and director of the Griffith retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City (1975) interviews silent film stars Blanche Sweet and Lillian Gish about their careers and working with Griffith. Illustrated with many film clips and photographs. Film excerpts include portions of “Way Down East” (1920), “Intolerance” (1916), “True Heart Susie” (1919) and “Birth of a Nation.” Ms. Gish reminisces about the long hours, dangerous situations, and the presentation of character without recourse to spoken dialogue. Film excerpts include portions of “Death’s Marathon”, “The Painted Lady”, “Feud in the Kentucky Hills”, “A Corner in Wheat”, “The Informer”, “Country Doctor”, all made in the early years when Griffith worked for the Biograph company, 1908-1913. Ms. Sweet starred in many of these films and reminisces about the method of shooting in those days. These films and dozens of others were often turned out two or three a week, shown briefly, and then never seen again. Some of these films include the first “pans”, “zooms” or “close ups” ever used. Griffith invented as he went along.

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Ratings: IMDB: 0.0/10
Released: February 2, 1975
Runtime: 55 min
Genres: Documentary Talk-Show
Cast: Blanche Sweet Lillian Gish Ron Mottram
Crew: Stephan Chodorov

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