Way Down East is a 1920 American silent romantic drama film directed by D. W. Griffith and starring Lillian Gish. It is one of four film adaptations of the melodramatic 19th century play of the same name by Lottie Blair Parker. There were two earlier silent versions and one sound version in 1935 starring Henry Fonda.[3] Griffith's version is particularly remembered for its climax in which Gish's character is rescued from doom on an icy river.
Way Down East | |
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Directed by | D. W. Griffith |
Written by |
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Based on | Way Down East by Lottie Blair Parker |
Produced by | D. W. Griffith (uncredited) |
Starring | |
Cinematography | G.W. Bitzer |
Edited by | |
Music by |
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Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 148 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
Budget | $800,000[1] or $635,000[2] |
Box office | $7,500,000[2] |
Plot
editAnna is a poor country girl who is tricked by handsome man-about-town Lennox into a fake wedding. When she becomes pregnant, he reveals the truth of their relationship and leaves her. She has the baby, named Trust Lennox, on her own in a boarding house.
When the baby dies she wanders until she gets a job with Squire Bartlett. Despite being unofficially engaged, David, Squire Bartlett's son, falls for her, but she rejects him due to her torrid past. Lennox then shows up as an old friend of the Bartletts, and lusting for another local girl, Kate. Seeing Anna, he tries to get her to leave, but she refuses to go claiming she never did anything wrong, although she promises to say nothing about their history.
Finally, the woman running the boardinghouse while visiting the Bartletts recognizes Anna. Squire Bartlett eventually learns of Anna's past from Martha, the town gossip. In his anger, he tosses Anna out into a snow storm. She agrees to go, but not before naming the respected Lennox as her despoiler and the father of her dead baby. She becomes lost in the raging storm while David leads a search party. The unconscious Anna floats on an ice floe down a river towards a waterfall, until rescued at the last moment by David, who then marries her.
Cast
edit- Lillian Gish as Anna Moore
- Richard Barthelmess as David Bartlett
- Lowell Sherman as Lennox Sanderson
- Burr McIntosh as Squire Bartlett
- Kate Bruce as Mother Bartlett
- Mary Hay as Kate, Squire's niece
- Creighton Hale as The professor
- Emily Fitzroy as Maria Poole, landlady
- Porter Strong as Seth Holcomb
- Edgar Nelson as Hi Holler
- Mrs. Morgan Belmont as Diana Tremont
- Vivia Ogden as Martha Perkins
- George Neville as The Constable
Production
editActor Lillian Gish, referring to the famous “chase sequence on the ice-floes,” quipped: “All that winter, whenever Mr. Griffith saw an ice cake, he wasn’t satisfied till he had me on it.”[4]
D. W. Griffith bought the film rights to the story, originally a stage play by Lottie Blair Parker that was elaborated by Joseph R. Grismer. Grismer's wife, the Welsh actress Phoebe Davies, became identified with the play beginning in 1897 and starred in over 4,000 performances of it by 1909, making it one of the most popular plays in the United States. Davies died in 1912, having toured the play for well over ten years. The play, an old-fashioned story that espoused nineteenth-century American and Victorian ideals, was considered outdated by the time of its cinematic production in 1920.[5]
The story rights were purchased for $175,000.[citation needed]
Some sources, quoting newspaper ads of the time, say a sequence was filmed in an early color process, possibly Technicolor or Prizmacolor.[6][7]
Clarine Seymour, who had appeared in four previous Griffith films, was originally cast in the role of Squire Bartlett's niece, Kate. After Seymour's untimely death, Mary Hay was cast and Seymour's scenes were reshot.
The famous ice-floe sequence was filmed in White River Junction, Vermont. An actual waterfall was used, though it was only a few feet high; the long shot where a large drop is shown was filmed at Niagara Falls.[8] The ice needed to be sawed or dynamited before filming could be done. During filming, a small fire had to be kept burning beneath the camera to keep the oil from freezing. At one point, Griffith was frostbitten on one side of his face. No stunt doubles were used at the time, so Gish and Barthelmess performed the stunts themselves. Gish's hair froze, and she lost feeling in her hand from the cold.[9][10] It was her idea to put her hand and hair in the water, an image which would become iconic. Her right hand would be somewhat impaired for the remainder of her life. The shot where the ice floes are filmed going over the waterfall was filmed out of season, so those ice floes are actually wooden. Cinematographically, the ice floe scene is an early example of parallel action.
Censorship
editSimilar to other Griffith productions, Way Down East was subjected to censorship by some American state film censor boards. For example, the Pennsylvania film board required over 60 cuts in the film, removing the mock marriage and honeymoon between Lennox and Anna as well as any hints of her pregnancy, effectively destroying the film's integral conflict.[11] The resulting film may have surprised viewers in that state when a child suddenly appears shortly before its death. Other cuts removed scenes where society women smoke cigarettes and an intertitle with the euphemism "wild oats."[11]
Reception
editBox office
editAlthough it was Griffith's most expensive film to date, it was also one of his most commercially successful. Way Down East is the fourth-highest grossing silent film in cinema history, taking in more than $4.5 million at the box office in 1920.[12] The picture was “second only to his Birth of a Nation (1915) as a money-maker.”[13]
It played as a roadshow, then earned $2 million as a normal release.[1]
The film earned $1 million in profit.[14]
Retrospective assessments of the film
editAfter viewing the drama at a public screening in 1994, film critic Mark Adamo of The Washington Post was especially impressed with Gish's performance and with Griffith's highly innovative "cinematic style":
What's astounding about the film is not that the rickety conventions of 1890s stage melodrama dog its every frame. (Even the film's seeming pioneering of feminism is hoary: the Leviticus-style titles would have us believe that Lillian Gish's tremulous ingenue fallen prey to a heavily mascaraed roue is "the story of Woman.") What's amazing is that so much of Gish's tough, funny, intuitive performance, particularly in the film's middle section as she bears her illegitimate child, transcends time, place and technology. Equally amazing is Griffith's mighty striving, with his arty location shots, quirky close-ups and riskily staged set pieces, to forge a new and expressly cinematic style.[15]
“Way Down East was the most passionate of Griffish’s many paeans of praise for the Christian home; on this score, at least, he could have satisfied Harriet Beecher Stowe.” — Literary and film critic Edward Wagenknecht.[16]
Later, in 2007, in his comparison of this production to other works by Griffith, film reviewer Paul Brenner judged it to be one of the director's better, less "preachy" screen presentations:
Many of Griffith's features suffer from sententious moralizing, a sense of God speaking to the masses, and outright racism. But Way Down East highlights the greatness of Griffith without having to sit through the Sermon on the Mount or the Ride of The Klan. In Way Down East, Griffith's psychotic nuttiness, for once, didn't get in the way of a good film.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Big Picture Costs and Road Show Profits". Variety. March 18, 1925. p. 27. Retrieved March 20, 2022.
- ^ a b "Griffith's 20 Year Record". Variety. September 5, 1928. p. 12. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
- ^ Way Down East at IMDb.
- ^ O’Dell, 1970 p. 132-133: “...Lillian Gish’s well-known quote…” O’Dell may be quoting from Gish’s 1969 memoir “The Movies, Mr. Griffith, and Me” See O’Dell p. 158 Bibliography note no. 19
- ^ a b Brenner, Paul (2007). "Way Down East Movie Review". FilmCritic. Archived from the original on November 23, 2008. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
- ^ Way Down East at SilentEra.com
- ^ eMoviePoster.com
- ^ O’Dell, 1970 p. 133: “...some rather obvious cut-ins of Niagara Falls…”
- ^ James L. Neibaur (2012). "Way Down East (Web Exclusive)". Cineaste.com. Cineaste Magazine. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^ "Making Movies, 1920". www.eyewitnesstohistory.com. EyeWitness to History. 2002. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^ a b Smith, Frederick James (October 1922). "Foolish Censors". Photoplay. 22 (5). New York: 39, 41. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
- ^ Dirks, Tim. The Greatest Films, film review, 1996-2008. Last accessed: February 24, 2008.
- ^ ODell, 1970 p. 127: Quote is from Elleen Bowser in D. W. Griffith American Film Master, 1965 see footnote no. 2, O’Dell Bibliography, p. 157
- ^ Balio, Tino (2009). United Artists: The Company Built by the Stars. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-299-23004-3.
- ^ Adamo, Mark (July 18, 1994). "Way Down East". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 3, 2013.
- ^ Wagenknecht, 1962 p. 126: Note: Stowe, author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) was an abolitionist and publicly condemned slavery.
Sources
edit- O’Dell, Paul (1970). Griffith and the Rise of Hollywood (1970 ed.). New York: A. S. Barnes & Co. p. 163. ISBN 0-498-07718-7.
- Wagenknecht, Edward. 1962. The Movies in the Age of Innocence. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma. OCLC: 305160
External links
edit- Way Down East at IMDb
- Way Down East at the TCM Movie Database
- Way Down East at SilentEra.com
- Way Down East at The Greatest Films by Tim Dirks
- Way Down East film on YouTube
- Way Down East is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive