For his next film, Griffith had a breathtakingly original concept. “Intolerance,” screening once Saturday in a stunning new digital 167-minute restoration at the Castro Theatre, was not a huge ...
Intolerance-- After making his racially biased "The Birth of a Nation" (1914), D.W. Griffith shot a potboiler titled "The Mother and the Law" (1915). It is a moral tale of how a husband is sent to ...
The statues are part of a tribute to Griffith's Babylon set of "Intolerance" from 1916. The giant white elephant statues at the Hollywood and Highland Center, a popular tourists’ destination in Los ...
The movies have come back to New Jersey — where they left, 100 years ago. How this spot in Fort Lee started it all.
The white fiberglass elephant statues at the Hollywood & Highland shopping center are being removed in a rejection of filmmaker D.W. Griffith’s racist legacy. According to the Los Angeles Times, the ...
After the relatively low box office takings of 'Intolerance', D. W. Griffith would revisit his epic film three years later by releasing two of the film's interlocking stories as standalone features, ...