Saturday, December 29
Intolerable Silence

What kind of film would this be? Well, it would certainly be an epic of epics, taking place over four distinct times and places. Would it bring forth the stylistic and thematic similarities between these four distinct Films By Scorsese? Or would it encourage us to look at their differences? I'm not exactly sure, but I suppose the closest we'll get to knowing the answer is to view the only film I know of, though not By Scorsese, that was made in this fashion: D.W. Griffith's Intolerance. The 1916 film was first imagined as a straightforward exposé of the societal injustice of the day, but upon the extraordinary financial success of the perniciously racist Birth of a Nation, that concept was combined with retellings of the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, of the crucifixion of Christ, and of the fall of Babylon into a single film with a vast scope. It's like a one-film template for an auteurist approach to reading cinema. As cinematographer Karl Brown told it, the four stories were shot in succession and assumed by most of the crew to be destined for four different releases that for some whim of Griffith's happened to share the same title: the Mother and the Law. In fact, two of these four would indeed be re-edited and released as stand-alone films in 1919: the Fall of Babylon and the current-day the Mother and the Law.

Most recently, the American Film Institute, in its tenth anniversary of the AFI 100 swapped out Birth of a Nation (#44 back in 1997) for Intolerance (at slot #49). Still, in the age of DVD subscription services and laptop movie-viewing, I sense that a huge-scale film like Intolerance begins to become more and more marginalized by modern movie watchers. Which is why I was so glad to get a chance to see the film tower above me on the Castro Theatre screen earlier this month, courtesy of the SF Silent Film Festival and Photoplay Productions, whose Patrick Stanbury brought a tinted print from London, introduced the screening, and performed 42 manual projection speed changes to ensure that we had the best presentation of the film possible. What a revelation it was to see the film exhibited this way! For the first time, I felt I was starting to understand not only the technical scale and skill involved in the film's making, but also the way the four interlocking stories joined to create a unique and modern narrative. That the three historical tales end in disaster due to intolerance and lack of empathy, makes the 'contemporary' tale become a moving plea of hope that the tragedies of history might not have to repeat themselves. This may be obvious to most, but it's something I'd never grasped before, when trying to watch a home video version of Intolerance, admittedly half-bored, on a television set. Anyway, the film's ultimate message cannot be fully comprehended just by reading about it; it's the precise filmmaking techniques Griffith employs that give Intolerance its emotional impact.

What must be acknowledged is that the jumps and mismatches in Intolerance generate a tension within scenes which transcends continuity, the jaggedness of the cutting contributing to the content. One of the main difficulties facing a modern spectator who brings to the experience of seeing the film all the accumulated baggage and conditioned responses of continuity cinema is that Griffith's work demands a different quality of understanding wherein the whole is infinitely more important than the parts...There has been a recent discussion at girish's place about the function of musical accompaniment with a silent film. Let this screening of Intolerance stand as my Exhibit A in the argument for a terrific live performer providing music for a theatrical screening. It's interesting that I found myself registering cutting 'discontinuities' much less frequently in the action sequences, particularly toward the film's culmination as three of the four stories' narrative arcs (the Judean segment having become visually de-emphasized about halfway through the film) converged into a thrilling alignment. I have no doubt in my mind that Dennis James's unflagging Wurlitzer score had as much to do with my emotional involvement in Griffith's converging melodrama as any visual strategies of the director's own making. Does this mean I was manipulated by the music? Yes. But I'm pretty sure it was a manipulation Griffith would have approved of; he was always concerned with the quality of the musical scores sent to the orchestras in theatres playing his pictures, and I can't picture him wanting audiences to watch Intolerance in silence.

The Silent Film Festival's morning program gave Mr. James a chance to rest his hands and feet, as we were treated to a program of nine mostly-delightful, mostly-hilarious Vitaphone shorts featuring mostly-forgotten vaudeville stars telling jokes and playing music. If you're wondering why a silent film festival deigned to show a program of talking pictures, think of how many silent stars got their start on vaudeville stages (Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, "Fatty" Arbuckle, and Mary Pickford are a few names you might recognize), how many theatres (including the Castro) brought both silent films and vaudeville acts to their patrons, and how important the coming of sound is to an understanding of the history of silent film, and you'll get the idea. Also, the films are really entertaining, and this particular program had never been seen together, much less in Frisco where a theatrical audience for Vitaphone shorts might grow quite healthily. My personal favorites of the nine shown were the Foy Family in Chips of the Old Block, and the Norman Thomas Quintet in Harlem-Mania, featuring a truly unforgettable drummer, and some unexpected camera positions to help accommodate his gymnastics.

Monday night at Grace Cathedral there will be two performances of perhaps the most widely-seen of all silent films today, the Lon Chaney, Sr. Phantom of the Opera. It'll be accompanied by Dorothy Papadakos on the sanctuary's Aeolian-Skinner organ. I've never seen a silent film playing in a functioning place of worship before (no, the Paramount doesn't count!) so I'm particularly intrigued to check this out. There will be performances at 7PM for those of you with parties to go to by midnight, and 10PM for those of you who want to end 2007 with a scary movie.
The Pacific Film Archive has a terrific calendar for January-February, surely their best since, oh, way back in September-October at the very least. There's too much to process in one flip-through of the calendar program, but four series are of interest to appreciators of silent film and live music. First, a trio of Sessue Hayakawa films that, as I mentioned in my previous post, screen in conjunction with a UC Berkeley conference on silent cinema February 8-10. Second, a kid-friendly set of Saturday afternoon matinees including a program of Georges Méliès delights January 19th and a February 9th screening of Harold Lloyd in Speedy. Third, an extremely impressive series of European classics, some silent and some not, called the Medieval Remake, including Fritz Lang's rarely-shown Die Nibelungen in two parts January 20th, Dreyer's the Passion of Joan of Arc (paired with Robert Bresson's 1962 interpretation) January 27th, and Murnau's Faust February 16th. Finally, the resuming of the popular Film 50 series of screenings and lectures on the history of cinema will start off in the silent era and include a February 6th showing of the Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.

The Niles Essanay Film Museum has announced its Saturday evening program schedule through March, though not yet on its website. The year starts with Lon Chaney in False Faces January 5th, and continues with selections such as the Black Pirate January 26th (also expected to play the Balboa for that theatre's annual birthday bash February 27th), Charley's Aunt February 2nd, the Docks of New York March 15th, the Covered Wagon March 22nd, and much much more.
And just wait 'til you hear what Frisco's got in store when it comes to talkies!
Comments:
<< Home
Oh my goodness. Someone's been burning the midnight oil!! But what a great response to the rare screening of Intolerance!
Thanks, Michael; it's screenings like this that makes me feel certain we're lucky here on Frisco Bay to still have a filmgoing culture to support an event like this.
Yeah, you guys are lucky all right. I enjoyed your reactions to Intolerance too, Brian. Griffith's extraordinary effort can be underwhelming on the small screen, and I've been anxious to read your thoughts on viewing it in an ideal setting. I get the feeling this is an experience that will stay with you. A couple of thoughts: 1) I like your exploration of the unexpected editing choices. Mr. Fairservice suggests that our modern day viewing expectations make the mismatched or repeated cuts seem out of place to us and I certainly take continuity editing for granted, but the film's contemporary audiences were certainly aware that events follow one another in reality and don't repeat or jump and would expect cinema to reflect that reality (after all, past experimental cinema seemed as experimental to them as it does to us). I wonder if reviewers mentioned the cuts at the time? Maybe expectations aren't the only answer. If the cuts aren't only at visually interesting moments, as you note, then creative decisions, like the repeated rescue in The Life of an American Fireman (1903), don't completely answer the question either. Too bad we don't have a production history to help us understand how the film was edited because perhaps there is a technical and/or financial factor involved too. 2) re: musical accompaniment. Mr. James' live accompaniment sounds ideal. However, as it was hard to get his Wurly set up in my home theater I chose to view the picture in silence :P Was there any mention if the score he performed was made up of compositions originally compiled to accompany the film back in 1916 or did he decide which pieces should accompany various scenes himself? 3) I really like your idea that Scorsese create an epic after this fashion. Maybe even try to combine the stories...Imagine, Dafoe driving a Taxi and fighting with Irish gangs in old New York :D
1) docks of new york! o boy!
2)i really don't think the original audience would be disappointed in less-than-fluid editing. i imagine it was enough to follow a complex story on screen.
it's interesting that there were multiple showings in the fireman film thom mentions, but not really surprising. who wouldn't want to watch the most exciting scene a few times over? don't modern directors do the same thing, showing an explosion, for example, repeatedly from different angles? in present day we can watch films over and over at will, but back then images flew by quickly. i'm sure getting the right impression across was the true intention rather than editing perfection.
3)pretty snow - what film is the still from?
[beautifully written post, brian]
2)i really don't think the original audience would be disappointed in less-than-fluid editing. i imagine it was enough to follow a complex story on screen.
it's interesting that there were multiple showings in the fireman film thom mentions, but not really surprising. who wouldn't want to watch the most exciting scene a few times over? don't modern directors do the same thing, showing an explosion, for example, repeatedly from different angles? in present day we can watch films over and over at will, but back then images flew by quickly. i'm sure getting the right impression across was the true intention rather than editing perfection.
3)pretty snow - what film is the still from?
[beautifully written post, brian]
Sweet comments, Thom and Shahn.
Shahn, I like what you say about getting the right impression across. I think this might be the crux of why Griffith wasn't always so concerned about making his edits perfectly smooth; he was simply more concerned about the bigger question: does the film stir the audience? He might well have felt that fussing over other details was nothing but a distraction from his progress toward that goal.
One thing Brownlow notes about the unexpected editing choices (very nice neutral description there, Thom) is that they're not consistently found in all of his films. He writes that a Birth of a Nation and Intolerance have them, as does the 1922 Orphans of the Storm, but they're not to be found in his early Biograph films or the 1919 the Greatest Question. I haven't seen the latter, or very many of the early films, but it seems like perhaps the huger the scale of the film, the more likely it was to contain these kind of cuts. A thread for further research, for sure...
I wouldn't quote me on this, Thom, but I believe the Dennis James organ score was made up of his own compositions, though very much in the style of the period. I do know that James started on his career as an accompanist very early, and one thing he did as a teenager was track down surviving organists from the silent era and try to get them to teach him their methods.
I love the image of Dafoe as Christ, driving a taxicab to the Five Points with the Bernard Herrmann music blasting, perhaps with a sleepless Griffin Dunne and DeNiro as Jake LaMotta as his fares...
The snow image is from Flesh and the Devil. What a taunter I am.
Shahn, I tried to send you an e-mail. Did you get it?
Shahn, I like what you say about getting the right impression across. I think this might be the crux of why Griffith wasn't always so concerned about making his edits perfectly smooth; he was simply more concerned about the bigger question: does the film stir the audience? He might well have felt that fussing over other details was nothing but a distraction from his progress toward that goal.
One thing Brownlow notes about the unexpected editing choices (very nice neutral description there, Thom) is that they're not consistently found in all of his films. He writes that a Birth of a Nation and Intolerance have them, as does the 1922 Orphans of the Storm, but they're not to be found in his early Biograph films or the 1919 the Greatest Question. I haven't seen the latter, or very many of the early films, but it seems like perhaps the huger the scale of the film, the more likely it was to contain these kind of cuts. A thread for further research, for sure...
I wouldn't quote me on this, Thom, but I believe the Dennis James organ score was made up of his own compositions, though very much in the style of the period. I do know that James started on his career as an accompanist very early, and one thing he did as a teenager was track down surviving organists from the silent era and try to get them to teach him their methods.
I love the image of Dafoe as Christ, driving a taxicab to the Five Points with the Bernard Herrmann music blasting, perhaps with a sleepless Griffin Dunne and DeNiro as Jake LaMotta as his fares...
The snow image is from Flesh and the Devil. What a taunter I am.
Shahn, I tried to send you an e-mail. Did you get it?
By the way, the terrific post by Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell that I linked to above, has been updated with more commentary, including a description of identifying a "mystery" film, and a "Best Films of 1917" list. Here's the link again.
Really nice post! I have the DVD and was coincidentally planning to watch it again when I came across your piece. By the time I actually do that it'll probably be way too late to chime in on your post, but I'm a big silent film fan, so I'll try to comment on one of your future silent film posts.
-Editor A
-Editor A
Editor A, thanks for stopping by. I'd love to hear what you have to say on Intolerance when you watch it again, no matter how far down the line that is. I'm notified by e-mail whenever I get a comment, and I'm always pleased when an older discussion gets resurrected.
Post a Comment
<< Home