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Intolerance
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Synopsis
Sometime during the shooting of the landmark The Birth of a Nation, filmmaker D.W. Griffith probably wondered how he could top himself. In 1916, he showed how, with the awesome Intolerance. The film began humbly enough as a medium-budget feature entitled The Mother and the Law, wherein the lives of a poor but happily married couple are disrupted by the misguided interference of a "social reform" group. A series of unfortunate circumstances culminates in the husband's being sentenced to the gallows, a fate averted by a nick-of-time rescue engineered by his wife. In the wake of the protests attending the racist content of The Birth of a Nation, Griffith wanted to demonstrate the dangers of intolerance. The Mother and the Law filled the bill to some extent, but it just wasn't "big" enough to suit his purposes. Thus, using The Mother and the Law as merely the base of the film, Griffith added three more plotlines and expanded his cinematic thesis to epic proportions. The four separate stories of Intolerance are symbolically linked by Lillian Gish as the Woman Who Rocks the Cradle ("uniter of the here and hereafter"). The "Modern Story" is essentially The Mother and the Law; the "French Story" details the persecution of the Huguenots by Catherine de Medici (Josephine Crowell); the "Biblical Story" relates the last days of Jesus Christ (Howard Gaye); and the "Babylonian Story" concerns the defeat of King Belshazzar (Alfred Paget) by the hordes of Cyrus the Persian (George Siegmann). Rather than being related chronologically, the four stories are told in parallel fashion, slowly at first, and then with increasing rapidity. The action in the film's final two reels leaps back and forth in time between Babylon, Calvary, 15th century France, and contemporary California. Described by one historian as "the only film fugue," Intolerance baffled many filmgoers of 1916 -- and, indeed, it is still an exhausting, overwhelming experience, even for audiences accustomed to the split-second cutting and multilayered montage sequences popularized by Sergei Eisenstein, Orson Welles, Jean-Luc Godard, Joel Schumacher, and MTV. On a pure entertainment level, the Babylonian sequences are the most effective, played out against one of the largest, most elaborate exterior sets ever built for a single film. The most memorable character in this sequence is "The Mountain Girl," played by star on the rise Constance Talmadge; when the Babylonian scenes were re-released as a separate feature in 1919, Talmadge's tragic death scene was altered to accommodate a happily-ever-after denouement. Other superb performances are delivered by Mae Marsh and Robert Harron in the Modern Story, and by Eugene Pallette and

Cast

Miriam Cooper The Friendless One
Lillian Gish The Woman Who Rocks the Cradle
Robert Harron The Boy
Walter Long The Musketeer of the Slums
Mae Marsh The Dear One
Tully Marshall High Priest of Bel
Alfred Paget Prince Belshazzar

Production Crew

Billy Bitzer Cinematographer
Karl Brown Cinematographer
Carl Davis Composer (Music Score)
D.W. Griffith Composer (Music Score)
D.W. Griffith Costume Designer
D.W. Griffith Director
D.W. Griffith Editor
James Smith Editor
Rose Smith Editor
Erich Von Stroheim First Assistant Director
Joseph Henaberry First Assistant Director
Tod Browning First Assistant Director
D.W. Griffith Producer
D.W. Griffith Production Designer
D.W. Griffith Screenwriter
Tod Browning Screenwriter
Year: 1916
Runtime: 175
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature


Produced by
Wark

Awards
1988 - U.S. National Film Registry - Library of Congress