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THE LITTLE DARLING Directed by D.W. GRIFFITH SILENT FILMS & TV SHOWS on DVDS at TVDAYS.com

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Uploaded by on Apr 9, 2007

The Little Darling 1909 cast: Mary Pickford, Mack Sennett, John B. Cumpson, Owen Moore, Arthur Johnson, William A. Quirk, Henry B. Walthall, Anthony O'Sullivan, Verner Clarges, Charles Avery. Gertrude Robinson

summary: A comic misunderstanding involving two old school friends. Lillie Green is expecting a visit from the daughter of an old school friend, and expects the visitor to be a little girl -- her boarders, all young men, prepare with toys and dolls, only to discover that the young lady is just that, a 17-year-old who is more interested in the young men than the toys they'd met her with.
DW GRIFFITH at THE AMERICAN MUTOSCOPE & BIOGRAPH COMPAONY by IRA H. GALLEN
It was an era that laid the foundation upon which was built the Golden Age of Cinema; an era whose development and advancement of the moving picture as an art form was inextricably tied to one man's creative and innovative genius.

The man's name is D. W. Griffith--David Wark Griffith--and his story is that of the period between 1908 and 1913 when he created a method of storytelling in purely cinematic terms that was to raise the moving picture permanently out of the category of a scientific curiosity.

This he did by the use of techniques that broke precedents and created a vocabulary of visual devices for the emergence of film as art as well as by the development of a stock company of actors and actresses with him at the American Mutuscope and Biograph Company in New York, who would later emerge as some of the greatest individual talents during the glory years of the Golden Age

David Wark Griffith's film creation, THE BIRTH OF A NATION, was to make history and achieve immortality when released in 1914. With THE BIRTH, Griffith was to bring together the words "art" and "film" as a permanent equation for the first time. Only five years after his initial explorations into the then crude world of moving picture images, his epic, THE BIRTH, was both an historical creation as well as a history making event in its own right.

The American artist, whom the world would come to recognize simply as D.W. Griffith, became as much a household name as any of his creations on film, and for him the status of "genius" was to be given; a father figure in the birth of film art. To describe "genius" in finite terms as it applies to the methods of D.W. Griffith is to seek after that which is beyond precise definition. He felt degraded by motion pictures and therefore sought to raise the level of the medium by breaking all of the conventions and existing practices of filmmaking as they then existed.

Despite the overwhelming importance of D.W. Griffith to the development of cinema art; his name, his work and the work of those who helped him create his moving pictures have become a generally unknown commodity amongst the American public.



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(400 DVD TITLES)

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Film & Animation

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Top Comments

  • It was 1909, not 2009. If you'd been around at the time you'd have probably been amazed.

  • Thanks for restoring the value of Griffith's movies here...

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All Comments (16)

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  • All those frisky young men! Griffith thought young people behaved, or should behave, that way. Pickford, though, is very restrained and natural; she would outright refuse DWG's direction if she disagreed with his ideas.

    P.S. Thanks for posting Griffith and Pickford's work!

  • All those frisky young men! Griffith thought young people behaved, or should behave, that way. Pickford, though, is very restrained and natural; she would outright refuse DWG's direction if she disagreed with his ideas.

  • beautiful!

  • i'm the dog that walks by at 2:05

  • @choirmasterUK The acting was wonderful, and of course there was no sound, it's a silent film.

  • Mekitcedek2 and the video Lovely Silent Film Actresses is something to see. Don't talk for that person but when its nice its nice

  • I caint belive the famous NYO&W Railroad was used in this short film at the Cuddabackville station. I live near this sight.

  • Standing Ovation!......What a thrill it would have been to see motion pictures in their infancy,many many thanks for posting this!

  • amazing dw griffiths films are timeless/priceless

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