As part of MoMA's To Save and Project festival, a selection of newly restored shorts have been programmed with Jean-Luc Godard & Anne-Marie Miéville's
The Old Place (which Godard and Miéville made when at the turn of the new millennium, MoMA commissioned them to make a film about the Museum, its collection, and its history). The pairing comes because Griffith is indeed brought up in their film.
There's one more screening later in the month and FYI the restorations are presented with
recorded scores, no live accompaniment:
MoMA wrote:
Those Awful Hats. 1909. USA. Directed by D. W. Griffith. With Mack Sennett, Flora Finch. DCP. 3 min
Romance of a Jewess. 1908. USA. Directed by D. W. Griffith. With Florence Lawrence, George Gebhardt, Gladys Egan. DCP. 13 min.
Father Gets in the Game. 1908. USA. Directed by D. W. Griffith. With Mack Sennett. DCP. 8 min.
An Awful Moment. 1908. USA. Directed by D. W. Griffith. With George Gebhardt. DCP. 12 min.
All films preserved by the Film Preservation Society.
The Musketeers of Pig Alley. 1912. USA. Directed by D. W. Griffith. With Lillian Gish, Elmer Booth. DCP. 16 min.
Preserved by The Museum of Modern Art with funding from The Lillian Gish Trust for Film Preservation.
Inspired by Jean-Luc Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville’s reflections on D. W. Griffith in The Old Place, from his pioneering development of film language and his politics to his crucial place in the history of MoMA’s own film collection, we present several shorts that Griffith made for the American Mutoscope & Biograph Company between 1908 and 1913. Whether in the canon or unseen for more than a century, these films have achieved an unprecedented visual clarity and coherence thanks to contemporary digital technologies and painstaking research by Tracey Goessel, Ruxandra Blaga, and Benjamin Solovey of the Film Preservation Society, as well as MoMA conservator Peter Williamson and other experts in the field. The films in this selection, which have been digitally restored using 35mm materials preserved by MoMA, the Library of Congress paper print collection, and other sources, allow us to trace Griffith’s experiments in visual storytelling: the melodrama Romance of a Jewess (1908), shot on location on New York’s Lower East Side; the suspenseful An Awful Moment (1908); the proto-Keystone comedy Father Gets in the Game (1908), starring Mack Sennett in his first-ever lead appearance; the trick film Those Awful Hats (1909), a spoof of nickelodeon moviegoing; and the seminal gangster film The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912).
They actually show
Those Awful Hats first since it can double as a courtesy notice to the audience, then
The Old Place, then the remaining Griffith shorts.
Watching these reminded me of something Gary Giddins said about Bing Crosby - it's hard for modern ears unfamiliar with that era to see what was so revolutionary about Crosby until you listen to him in context. (Once you hear other pop records at the time, his achievements in reshaping and profoundly changing singing in pop music is apparent where he brings in innovations that may have been heard in the most important jazz and blues of the time but were completely absent from pop recordings normally sung by white musicians.)
These films are too few with a big gap between the last two films to play as a precise and comprehensive look at how cinema evolved, but you do see the baby steps.
Romance of a Jewess is like a filmed play. It's also a melodrama of its time from story to acting style. It's all long shots that generally last for the duration of an entire scene, and nothing that comes off as remarkable tableaux filmmaking. (Usually the only visual elements of importance are a few actors that usually move along the x-axis.) But there is one startling shot that appears to have been set up on a genuine urban sidewalk - it's so much denser in detail than the other sets with such naturalist behavior from the designated "extras" that I'm guessing they set up a hidden camera and had the actress walk down the street as if she was a local. (It's possibly the only notable z-axis movement I can remember.) Either that or they uncharacteristically put a lot of resources into one shot that lasts several seconds. Also notable is how few intertitles there are, with no dialogue involved, but it's mainly because they throw them up to set a scene. The action and story are so elemental, they're rarely needed to clarify anything after they're used to set the scene.
Father Gets in the Game is a decent broad bit of comedy, and much of it is shot outside (possibly Central Park?) Again mostly long shots that reveal the entire height of the body and then some. There is one close-up I can remember of a business card, which is essentially an intertitle. (It's clearly mocked up, they didn't shoot a small card held in someone's hand.)
An Awful Moment is a suspense film where the climax works on the basic principle that we know something the central character does not, so we're bracing for something terrible to happen should a specific action occur. The film noticeably has more complex action. Again, it's mostly filmed with long shots that are static and last for the duration of a scene, but the opening shot is a pretty busy shot, dense with characters instead of just lead characters so it requires a lot of action/business to fill out the composition. There's one moving shot that follows a gypsy vertically as she climbs up to a window. Then the final shot is startling - we get a long shot that doesn't run for the entire moment, it actually cuts to a medium or possibly a medium closeup, and it's from the same angle too. So for the first time we're using something much closer than a long shot, and on top of that, we're cutting to it from the same set up ("we don't have to keep the shot the same, we can jump closer!") On the heels of the other shorts, this is a startling new development that strongly punctuates the conclusion.
Those Awful Hats is a funny and broad comedy. Shown first, it chronologically fits here. It's mostly a special effects piece, and I won't give away why, but it's the same long shot setup (which makes sense as a way of accommodating the effects), and there's a few jump cuts that look intentional, what Méliès did to cheat in special effects. The shortest so far, it's also the most entertaining.
A sizable three or four year gap comes between these preceding films and
The Musketeers of Pig Alley, and the advances are numerous. Camera's much closer, with medium shots dominating. Z-axis movement is not only a frequent component of how the general action is choreographed, it's possibly more dominant than x-axis movement (i.e. Griffith has really grown to love depth in composing a frame). Also most of the action is outdoors, but nothing that suggests a hidden camera. Lots more extras in most shots. The most startling shot is the use of a close-up, which I won't describe, it's wonderful seeing it for yourself and how it emerges in a scene. Also it only occurred to me later that changing focus is another development because they had to have done it given how much z-axis movement there is (combined with tighter shots). The acting in general is more subtle and naturalistic, a substantial change from before. (Lillian Gish is actually the first person you see, virtually marking the change we're about to see.) Seen in this context, the film comes off as revelatory.
All the restorations look amazing. The most impressive is
Those Awful Hats which used a paper print held by the Library of Congress to fill in gaps of a 35mm element, but it's virtually seamless.