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| DVD - Black & White | $6.99 |
| DVD | $29.99 |
24-minute documentary, rare behind the scenes footage,
Full Product DetailsChapter Scene Index
0. Chapter Scene Index
1. Main title [4:29]
2. In the southland [6:28]
3. To the cotton fields [3:51]
4. The gathering storm [6:23]
5. 75,000 Volunteers [2:53]
6. The Battle of Bull Run [8:47]
7. News from the front [1:02]
8. Piedmont scarred by the war [5:26]
9. On the battlefields [6:54]
10. The last grey days of the Confederacy [12:15]
11. The north is victorious [6:52]
12. The mother's appeal [4:32]
13. The Appomattox Courthouse [2:27]
14. A feast for the returning brother [1:26]
15. The homecoming [5:32]
16. A gala performance [7:09]
17. Second part - Reconstruction [5:53]
18. Sowing the wind [2:12]
19. The Freedman's Bureau [5:24]
20. The Southern Union League rally [5:03]
21. Still a north and a south [2:58]
22. The little colone [2:29]
23. Riot in the master's hall [3:15]
24. The grim reaping begins [3:07]
25. Degradation and ruin [3:44]
26. The new rebellion of the south [2:45]
27. The tryst [1:19]
28. A son's plea [14:46]
29. An answer to the blacks and the carpetbaggers [6:04]
30. The bitterness of ideals crushed [5:59]
31. Elsie goes for help [9:03]
32. The Clan's mission [8:54]
33. Ku Klux sympathizers [4:37]
34. Parade of the clansman [9:29]
35. The aftermath [1:18]
36. The Making of "The Birth of a Nation" [1:55]
37. Literary sources [5:16]
38. Production and rehearsal [:58]
39. Visual sources [8:14]
40. Exhibition [2:38]
41. As a landmark [4:06]
President Wilson praised it as "history writ in lightning," audiences flocked to see it at record-high ticket prices, and critics lauded its undeniable technical brilliance. But this landmark epic's sympathetic treatment of the Ku Klux Klan sparked protests by African Americans and fierce controversy that continues to this day. To watch D. W. Griffith's The Birth Of A Nation is to shift between delight at the subtle and brilliant acting of such Griffith regulars as Henry B. Walthall and Lillian Gish; amazement at the power of its innovative cinematography (by the renowned Billy Bitzer); and dismay at its unashamed racism, its dependence on "blackface" stereotypes, and its hysteria about the idea of miscegenation. Nonetheless, this Civil War tale, which follows two families -- one Southern, the other Northern -- through the bloody conflict and the bitterness of Reconstruction, is a must-see. Small and sensitively staged scenes, particularly the "Homecoming," still pack an emotional wallop, and the film's richly detailed storytelling, large scope, and visual energy helped change the course of cinema forever. Karen Backstein, Barnes & Noble
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