Sunday, June 22, 2008
D.W. Griffith at Biograph
The first of my Deep Discount orders arrived the other day-the Griffith
Biograph set from the "Masterworks" collection. Needless to say, I've been
spending every free minute I have going through the films.
I realize that this collection represents a kind of "best of" Griffith's
work, but I still can't get past how inventively he was staging his shots
even at this early point. I actually started with "The Adventures of Dollie"
(presented as a bonus film as the quality of the short, mastered from the
paper print, is evidently below Kino's usual standards). The depth and space
that Griffith brings to the shots is really astounding to me. I know other
filmmakers were doing similar things at the time, but I've simply not seen
anything quite like it in other films of 1908. The framing allows for so
much information within the shot, but not by lining the actors up in front
of the camera, but rather by placing them in different spaces and distances
in the shot.
I also watched "The Musketeers of Pig Alley" so far, which I have been
wanting to see for years. What struck me more than anything here was the
illusion of documentary realism Griffith achieved. I've read that the film
may not have even been shot in New York's Lower East Side after all, but
rather in Fort Lee, New Jersey. If that's the case, it's all the more
impressive what a convincing depiction Griffith manages to create here. His
use of background extras was especially notable, each going about their
business in the background in realistic spaces to create an utterly
believable environment for the story to play out in.
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1 comment:
D. W. Griffith is the distant cousin of my busdriver from Colorado due to her maiden name Oglesby.
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