News

Getting a primped-up, digitally-restored one-night screening at Film Forum this Tuesday (May 13), D.W. Griffith’s Intolerance (1916) is all at once the Moloch of cineastical good intentions ...
Griffith’s disgustingly racist yet titanically ... and skewing them decisively with the equivalent of a first-person voice (as in the title cards, adorned with his signature, throughout).
Well, there are more — and nobler — reasons to watch D.W. Griffith's three-hour-plus, centuries-spanning 1916 epic "Intolerance." But the aforementioned accoutrements underscore just how ...
Brandeis University film professor and historian Tom Doherty revisits the release — and assesses the damage — of D.W. Griffith's landmark film. By Thomas Doherty The Birth of a Nation Still ...
Page writes for the Washington Post. The director D.W. Griffith (1875-1948) is probably best remembered for his 1915 epic, “The Birth of a Nation,” the most ambitious and commercially ...
you may have noticed that the hulking mall’s design has been lifted with mixed success from the Babylon set in DW Griffith’s 1916 epic Intolerance. (An influential and ruinously expensive feat ...