The birth of a nation /

The epic story of two families, one Northern and one Southern, during and after the Civil War. D.W. Griffith's masterful direction combines brilliant battle scenes and tender romance with a vicious portrayal of African-Americans.

Bibliographic Details
Uniform Title:Birth of a nation (Motion picture : 1915)
Main Author: Breil, Joseph Carl, 1870-1926 (Composer)
Other Authors: Griffith, D. W. (David Wark), 1875-1948 (Producer, Director, Screenwriter), Woods, Frank E. (Screenwriter), Bitzer, G. W., 1872-1944 (director of photography.), Lanchbery, John (composer (expression)), Gish, Lillian, 1893-1993 (Actor), Marsh, Mae, 1895-1968 (Actor), Walthall, Henry B. (Henry Brazeale), 1878-1936 (Actor), Cooper, Miriam, 1891-1976 (Actor), Alden, Mary, 1883-1946 (Actor), Lewis, Ralph, 1872-1937 (Actor), Reid, Wallace, 1891-1923 (Actor), Dixon, Thomas, Jr., 1864-1946
Format: Video Blu-ray Disc
Language:No linguistic content
Language Notes:Silent film with music score and English intertitles.
Published: [Glendale, Calif.] : Twilight Time, [2018]
Edition:Limited edition of 3000 units.
Series:Limited edition series (Twilight Time (Firm))
Subjects:
Description
Summary:The epic story of two families, one Northern and one Southern, during and after the Civil War. D.W. Griffith's masterful direction combines brilliant battle scenes and tender romance with a vicious portrayal of African-Americans.
Item Description:Based on the novel The Clansman by Thomas Dixon.
Originally released as a motion picture in 1915.
1.33:1 aspect ratio.
Restoration by Patrick Stanbury and the Photoplay Productions, taken from a tinted original print of the 1921 reissue of the 1915 The birth of a nation.
Special features: Disc 1. 1930 sound reissue prologue (D.W. Griffith in conversation with Walter Huston, star of his 1930 sound film Abraham Lincoln); 1930 sound reissue intermission and introduction to act 2 (Huston recites sections from Woodrow Wilson's A history of the American people) -- Disc 2. Outtakes and original camera tests; Stills and collections gallery; Silent feature: The coward (1915 ; produced by Thomas H. Ince, directed by Reginald Barker ; released nine months after The Birth of a Nation premiered, this Civil War drama concerns the weak-willed son (Charles Ray) of a Southern officer (Frank Keenan), forced to enlist at gunpoint, and coming to terms with cowardice); Silent short: The rose of Kentucky (1911 ; directed by D.W. Griffith ; three years before shooting on Birth began, Griffith made his only other film featuring the Klan, in this case labeled the Night Riders, and cast as the villains); Silent short: Stolen glory (1912 ; directed by Mack Sennett ; Sennett, who had worked under Griffith at Biograph, had a great fondness for improvising comedy shorts around actual events, in this case a parade of the Grand Army of the Republic, the principal veterans organization for those who served in the Union Army during the Civil War); Silent short: The drummer of the 8th - original edit [and] Silent short: The drummer of the 8th - 2015 re-edit (1913 ; produced by Thomas H. Ince, directed by Jay Hunt ; presented in two versions. The re-edit shifts the position of later, seemingly out-of-order sequences encountered in the Library of Congress original negative holdings. Both cuts use all existing footage); The Birth of a nation score recording sessions in 5.1 audio; D.W. Griffith on Lux Radio Theater with Cecil B. DeMille; The birth of a nation: the legacy (directed, written and edited by John McCarty); The clansman: from stage to screen (directed and edited by Daniel Griffith); Text essay: We can never censor the past (by Kevin Brownlow); Text essay: The birth of a nation: the 2015 restoration (by Patrick Stanbury); Text essay: Fighting back: responding to The birth of a nation (by Ashley Clark).
Physical Description:2 videodiscs (191 min.) : sound, tinted and black and white ; 4 3/4 in. + 1 booklet (7 unnumbered pages : illustrations ; 15 cm)
Format:Blu-ray; all regions; 1080p high definition; 5.1 and 2.0 DTS-HD MA.
Production Credits:Director of photography, G.W. Bitzer ; music by John Lanchbery, based on the original Joseph Carl Briel score.