logo Sign In

Watching The Birth of a Nation — Page 2

Author
Time

I saw Nosferatu available at the same Blockbuster.  I passed on it this time, but I'm certainly planning to check it out eventually.

There is no lingerie in space…

C3PX said: Gaffer is like that hot girl in high school that you think you have a chance with even though she is way out of your league because she is sweet and not a stuck up bitch who pretends you don’t exist… then one day you spot her making out with some skinny twerp, only on second glance you realize it is the goth girl who always sits in the back of class; at that moment it dawns on you why she is never seen hanging off the arm of any of the jocks… and you realize, damn, she really is unobtainable after all. Not that that is going to stop you from dreaming… Only in this case, Gaffer is actually a guy.

Author
Time
 (Edited)

I've been meaning to watch Lon Chaney's Phantom of the Opera. 

Author
Time

Warbler said:

I've been meaning to watch Lon Chaney's Phantom of the Opera. 

 Brilliant beyond measure.

Needs a fan-edit though. At the last second the studio was too afraid of presenting a sympathetic monster, so they had The Arab say "Oh, by the way, the Phantom is an evil homicidal maniac escaped from Devil's Island, not a tortured genius shunned by humanity and pushed into evil"  That moment seriously dampens the pathos Chaney's brialliance had built up for the Phantom.

 

Author
Time
 (Edited)

First of all - hats off to Gaffer for starting this interesting and thought-provoking discussion. Well done, sir.

There isn't much I can add to Gaffer's thoughts, his observations mirror my own. Birth of a Nation is a fascinating time capsule. A recorded look at the turn of the last century. Not necessarily the story within the film, but the fact that a major film was made depicting a common belief at the time, as well as how the film was made. Looking at it through today's intelligence and society, it's a shocker. Some parts are hard to watch because they're so wrong. Again, not so much for the story within the film, but that a film about it was OK. In fact, not just OK, but completely acceptable and lauded. To me, with those thoughts in mind, it's worth its weight in gold where preserving history - actual, perceived, or desired - is concerned.

For anyone who hasn't seen it, it's available for download here;

http://www.archive.org/details/dw_griffith_birth_of_a_nation

Forum Moderator
Author
Time

TheBoost said:

Warbler said:

I've been meaning to watch Lon Chaney's Phantom of the Opera. 

 Brilliant beyond measure.

Needs a fan-edit though. At the last second the studio was too afraid of presenting a sympathetic monster, so they had The Arab say "Oh, by the way, the Phantom is an evil homicidal maniac escaped from Devil's Island, not a tortured genius shunned by humanity and pushed into evil"  That moment seriously dampens the pathos Chaney's brialliance had built up for the Phantom.

 

Been meaning to see this too, but didn't know which version of it is better.

VADER!? WHERE THE HELL IS MY MOCHA LATTE? -Palpy on a very bad day.
“George didn’t think there was any future in dead Han toys.”-Harrison Ford
YT channel:
https://www.youtube.com/c/DamnFoolIdealisticCrusader

Author
Time

there are different versions of Lon Chaney's Phantom of The Opera?

Author
Time

One film I've been dying to see again is :http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madam_Satan

It's utter bonkers!

No other film like it and it's not available on DVD (it was only briefly released on VHS).

If only someone could track down the technicolor reels.