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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dw_griffith.jpg]]
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3-> ''"What modern movies seem to be lacking is the sense of the wind in the trees."''
4-->-- '''Griffith''', in one of his final interviews.
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6David Wark "D. W." Griffith (January 22, 1875 – July 23, 1948) was one of the greatest filmmakers of the silent era and a pioneer in developing motion pictures as an art form. He was, arguably, the first person to become famous as a movie director.
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8He was also ThePioneer of several common features of American cinema; his short films for the Biograph Company like ''A Corner in Wheat'' introduced radical editing techniques and sophisticated storytelling that few had seen before. He also directed the early appearances of major movie stars like Creator/MaryPickford (''The New York Hat'') and longtime collaborator, Creator/LillianGish (''The Mothering Heart'') and created movie genres. His 1912 short film, ''The Musketeers of Pig Alley'', endures as the [[TropeMaker "world's first gangster film"]] and was shot on location in New York's mean streets and would later inspire Creator/MartinScorsese's ''Film/GoodFellas''. He also directed the first major adaptation of Creator/EdgarAllanPoe, with ''The Avenging Conscience'' (an adaptation of ''The Telltale Heart'') which while primitive by today's standards, is fairly advanced for its use of multiple exposures and special effects. Griffith was also the first major film-maker to shift from New York to the fertile climate of Hollywood in Los Angeles, thereby becoming the "father of Hollywood" though, ironically, he operated and functioned as an independent film-maker for all his life, very particular in maintaining copyrights and inscribing his initials in all his intertitles.
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10His first feature (after directing hundreds of short films since 1908) was a Bible story, ''Judith of Bethulia'', released in 1914. The next year he hit it big with ''Film/{{The Birth of a Nation|1915}}'', which was a massive critical and commercial success. ''The Birth of a Nation'' was wildly innovative, both in its running time (193 minutes, far longer than even the few feature films made prior to that date), and in Griffith's use of night photography, continuity editing, cross-cutting, staging of battle scenes, and use of motion pictures to tell a story of epic scope. It was a huge financial success, becoming the highest-grossing film at the time. It was also horrifically racist, showing the UsefulNotes/KuKluxKlan as ''the good guys'', so racist that even in 1915 it stirred up widespread protest.
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12Stung by the charges of racism, Griffith followed up ''The Birth of a Nation'' with ''Film/{{Intolerance}}'', a film showing the effects of intolerance on human society over different periods in history while simultaneously comparing Griffith's critics to the intolerant. ''Intolerance'' was an even bigger spectacle than ''The Birth of a Nation'', running over three hours and requiring some [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Griffith-intolerance.jpg massive sets]]. It was a commercial failure due to both the high production cost ($2.5 million in 1916 money) and the fact that it was released during the middle of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, which caused people to mistake it for an anti-war film just months before the US had entered the fray, but is remembered as a classic. Griffith followed up ''Intolerance'' with hits such as ''Broken Blossoms'' (1919) and ''Way Down East'' (1920) but his career went into decline in TheRoaringTwenties and his last film was released in 1931. He got a special UsefulNotes/AcademyAward in 1935. Griffith died in 1948. Six of his films are preserved in the UsefulNotes/NationalFilmRegistry: ''Lady Helen's Escapade'', ''A Corner in Wheat'', ''The Musketeers of Pig Alley'', ''The Birth of a Nation'', ''Intolerance'', and ''Broken Blossoms''.
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14Griffith served as TheMentor to several young film-makers. Creator/ErichVonStroheim appeared as an actor in his films, while Creator/RaoulWalsh, the future director of ''Film/HighSierra'' and ''Film/TheRoaringTwenties1939'' appeared as John Wilkes Booth in ''Birth of a Nation''. The young Creator/JohnFord played an extra in that same film. Despite the reputation of ''The Birth of a Nation'', he remained highly respected as OurFounder for directors around the world.
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16Griffith was also of one of the co-founders of Creator/UnitedArtists.
17----
18!! Partial filmography:
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20* ''Film/TheCountryDoctor'' (1909)
21* ''Film/TheCurtainPole'' (1909)
22* ''Film/TheLonelyVilla'' (1909)
23* ''Lady Helen's Escapade'' (1909)
24* ''Film/ACornerInWheat'' (1909)
25* ''In Old California'' (1910) (first film shot in Hollywood, CA)
26* ''Film/TheNewYorkHat'' (1912)
27* ''Film/TheMusketeersOfPigAlley'' (1912) (regarded as the first gangster film)
28* ''Judith of Bethulia'' (1914)
29* ''Brute Force'' (aka ''Primitive Man''; also the first known dinosaur movie)
30* ''Film/{{The Birth of a Nation|1915}}'' (1915)
31* ''Film/{{Intolerance}}'' (1916)
32* ''Film/HeartsOfTheWorld'' (1918)
33* ''Film/BrokenBlossoms'' (1919)
34* ''Film/WayDownEast'' (1920)
35* ''Film/OrphansOfTheStorm'' (1921)
36* ''Dream Street'' (1921) (featured experimental sound sequences)
37* ''{{Film/America}}'' (1924)
38* ''Film/SallyOfTheSawdust'' (1925) (film debut of Creator/WCFields)
39* ''Film/{{Abraham Lincoln|1930}}'' (1930)

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