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El nacimiento de una nación

Título original: The Birth of a Nation
  • 1915
  • A
  • 3h 15min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.1/10
28 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
El nacimiento de una nación (1915)
DramaDrama de ÉpocaÉpicaÉpica de guerraGuerra

La familia Stoneman ve como su amistad con los Cameron es afectada por la Guerra Civil, ya que ambos luchan en ejércitos opuestos.La familia Stoneman ve como su amistad con los Cameron es afectada por la Guerra Civil, ya que ambos luchan en ejércitos opuestos.La familia Stoneman ve como su amistad con los Cameron es afectada por la Guerra Civil, ya que ambos luchan en ejércitos opuestos.

  • Dirección
    • D.W. Griffith
  • Guionistas
    • Thomas Dixon Jr.
    • D.W. Griffith
    • Frank E. Woods
  • Elenco
    • Lillian Gish
    • Mae Marsh
    • Henry B. Walthall
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.1/10
    28 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas Dixon Jr.
      • D.W. Griffith
      • Frank E. Woods
    • Elenco
      • Lillian Gish
      • Mae Marsh
      • Henry B. Walthall
    • 453Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 74Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados en total

    Videos1

    How 'Antebellum' Began as a Timely Nightmare of the Present Day
    Interview 3:49
    How 'Antebellum' Began as a Timely Nightmare of the Present Day

    Fotos113

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
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    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal64

    Editar
    Lillian Gish
    Lillian Gish
    • Elsie - Stoneman's Daughter
    Mae Marsh
    Mae Marsh
    • Flora Cameron - The Pet Sister
    Henry B. Walthall
    Henry B. Walthall
    • Col. Ben Cameron aka The Little Colonel
    • (as Henry Walthall)
    Miriam Cooper
    Miriam Cooper
    • Margaret Cameron - The Elder Sister
    Mary Alden
    Mary Alden
    • Lydia Brown - Stoneman's Mulatto Housekeeper
    Ralph Lewis
    Ralph Lewis
    • Hon. Austin Stoneman - Leader of the House
    George Siegmann
    George Siegmann
    • Silas Lynch - Mulatto Lieut. Governor
    • (as George Seigmann)
    Walter Long
    Walter Long
    • Gus - A Renegade Negro
    Robert Harron
    Robert Harron
    • Tod - Stoneman's Younger Son
    Wallace Reid
    Wallace Reid
    • Jeff - The Blacksmith
    • (as Wallace Reed)
    Joseph Henabery
    Joseph Henabery
    • Abraham Lincoln
    • (as Jos. Henabery)
    Elmer Clifton
    Elmer Clifton
    • Phil - Stoneman's Elder Son
    Josephine Crowell
    Josephine Crowell
    • Mrs. Cameron
    Spottiswoode Aitken
    Spottiswoode Aitken
    • Dr. Cameron
    George Beranger
    George Beranger
    • Wade Cameron - The Second Son
    • (as J.A. Beringer)
    Maxfield Stanley
    Maxfield Stanley
    • Duke Cameron - The Youngest Son
    • (as John French)
    Jennie Lee
    Jennie Lee
    • Mammy - The Faithful Servant
    Donald Crisp
    Donald Crisp
    • Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
    • Dirección
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas Dixon Jr.
      • D.W. Griffith
      • Frank E. Woods
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios453

    6.127.6K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    5cerwiggle

    How do you rate a movie like this?

    The first half of this movie, if sold as a finished product by itself, would be remembered alongside movies like The Jazz Singer. A technical landmark that mostly holds up but is held back by some cringe-inducing elements of the time. The reality is that Birth of a Nation keeps going after the assassination of Lincoln. And in the second half, the intent of the film becomes one with the text and the reality of what you're watching becomes impossible to ignore. D. W. Griffith has famously claimed that he had no ill intent in making the movie, but after having seen it, Griffith was either lying or so monumentally blind to his own prejudices that he should never have been allowed out of the house.

    This movie is not anti-Union, it is not pro-Antebellum south. It is anti-Black. The movie frames the ending of slavery as the beginning of the end for civilized society in the south, brought about by a conspiracy of carpet-baggers and scheming mulattos and blacks. The answers to this issue are redemptive violence by the Klu Klux Klan and a return to the master-servant relationship of slavery. The movie frames "the loyal soul" blacks who accepted their ownership and didn't want slavery to end as the redeemable memebers, while those that welcomed the end of slavery did so entirely to then turn that systemic violence back against the whites.

    I genuinely do not believe that you can understand how malicious and hateful this movie is if you haven't seen it. One can have it described to them, one can know the individual scenes of hatred within, but until one has experienced the slow, pernicious leaking of racial hatred firsthand, it can't sink in how contemptible this movie is.

    Technically important? Yes, nobody is denying that. Even as the movie's message becomes more and more evil, it is shot with a competency and ambition that it would take the rest of the industry decades to catch up to. It is worthy of preservation in that regard. But it is also entirely indicitave of the era that a movie which makes such strides (and was the first film to see great success in America and be played in the white house) is a movie which frames the idea of a white man being expected to shake a black man's hand as an indignity which exceeds lynchings and enslavement.
    Douglas_Holmes

    Fascinating, expensive movie.

    This movie had the stockholders quaking when they saw the costs mount. It was the most expensive movie made up to that time, and it shows that silent films really COULD create spectacle on a grand scale.

    One of the posters remarked on how ridiculous the Klansmen's hoods looked. Actually, the original "ghost costumes" were all homemade and there was no standardized uniform- some had spikes on the head, horns, painted faces on the masks, etc.

    I myself had an ancestor who was a member of the Reconstruction Ku Klux Klan, and they saw themselves as guerilla fighters against an occupying power, not as terrorists. Today we can condemn them. At the time, it must have seemed to them that the war was over, but that the battle lines were still firmly drawn.

    This film is a good peek into the attitude of the general public in 1915 about Reconstruction. It became a national obsession, and probably gave impetus to Col. William Joseph Simmons's decision to "resurrect" the Klan in that year.
    Larry-4

    show it in my American History classes

    I am a Ph.D. candidate in American History. I show BOAN (as does most American history professors) to my undergrads. Not only is it an accurate portrait of the propaganda being written in the 1870s, but it is a primary source document on how people in the 1870s and 1910s saw African Americans. Anyone wonder why the Civil Rights movement happened, or why lynchings happened, or why ML King, Jr.was assassinated? Well, watch BOAN and you'll get an insight into that most American of institutions, racism. Why is there racial hatred today, because of the rhetoric of hate by the people who made BOAN and the people who are depicted in it. If they affect you still, shouldn't know what they said? Especially if you find it abhorrent, watch it. It is also a good reminder of how distorted history can be made to look legitimate on celluloid.
    jdab

    Bad History

    Anyone who thinks that this film depicts real history is seriously deluded. One commenter noted that the KKK was fighting for a good cause during Reconstruction, but not now. I guess to him good causes include killing and intimidating freed slaves who were merely attempting to exercise their rights to vote and make a living.

    Griffith's portrayal of Reconstruction black politicians is not only racist, but blatantly untrue. Only in rare instances and for a short time did black representatives control any Southern legislatures, and this at a time when they were the majority of voters in many Southern states! For years teachers of Reconstruction have emphasized carpetbaggers, but have ommitted the fact that the post-Reconstruction governments were founded with the explicit purpose of disenfranchising blacks and violently enforcing their underclass status. For this reason and others, Birth of a Nation's claims to historical accuracy would be comical, if not for the horrific implications of the film.

    That said, this film should be seen, mainly because it provides a document of a poisonous way of thinking that is by no means dead. It also represents the pop cultural moment when Northern and Southern whites reconciled over the memory of the Civil War, mainly to the detriment of blacks. Lastly, those who want this film burned only give ammunition to the idiots who still praise the KKK. It's better to let these jerks hang themselves with their own rhetorical ropes than to let them claim victim status.
    satya232

    What does it mean to say something is 'Politically Correct'?

    I don't think there's ever been a more maligned phrase than "politically correct" out there; the words immediately evoke a kind of liberal pseudo-fascism that some would have you believe is dominating freedom of speech and thought around universities and media outlets everywhere. I'm not so sure about that, but I am concerned at the counter-trend, of things that are labeled politically incorrect now proudly sporting that label as if they were a rebel, a David fighting these psedo-fascist Goliaths. That is hardly the case. D.W. Griffith's movie, far from being a politically incorrect movie unfairly condemned by the liberal elite, was a movie that perpetuated and, to a certain extent, created a Southern Myth that was damning to black people all throughout the country. The scary bit about this movie is not that it is one voice amoung many giving a personal recount of reconstruction. The movie is not presented that way, nor was it received that way. Until the 1960s, this movie WAS the commonplace, everyday understanding of reconstruction, understood by both Northerners and Southerners (aside: notice how the movie intentionately put as much distance between Northerners and Southerners as possible? The enemy is blacks and "radicals" (who were nothing of the sort), not Lincoln or the union soldiers. The movie was trying to appeal to a Northern audience).

    Anyone who ever complains about the political correctness or historical "revisionism" of today's academics, see this movie. And understand, that it is the work of historical "revisionists" that are responsible for teaching the facts about our nation's history, grasped out of the hands of fictions like Griffith's horrific Birth of a Nation. And don't be so smug about complaining of political correctness in the future.

    And don't try to seperate this film as an artistic work with the historical perspective of the film. Keep in mind, this film was not only a portrayl of history, it was also a *part* of history. It served to defend racial segregation, lychings, and the Klan at a time when all three of those were very real political issues. It is not a coincidence that the greatest period of lychings and Jim Crow laws came shortly after this movie. In short, this film oppressed people. So don't treat it like it existed in an entertainment vacuum, unaffected by and unaffecting everything else around it.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      President Woodrow Wilson is famously rumored to have responded to the film with the remark: "It is like writing history with lightning. And my only regret is that it is all so terribly true." After the film became subject of controversy due to its heroic portrayal of the Ku Klux Klan, Wilson denied through his press secretary as to having known about the nature of the film before screening it at the White House, or having ever endorsed it. Nevertheless, Wilson's published works as a historian are closely aligned with the film's negative portrayal of Reconstruction (some of his writings are even quoted onscreen in certain prints of the film). Wilson was also notably a consistent pro-segregationist as President.
    • Errores
      The Ku Klux Klan never fought or won any battles with federal troops, black or white.
    • Citas

      intertitle: While youth dances the night away, childhood and old age slumber.

    • Créditos curiosos
      The following was listed in the opening credits: A PLEA FOR THE ART OF THE MOTION PICTURE We do not fear censorship, for we have no wish to offend with improprieties or obscenities, but we do demand, as a right, the liberty to show the dark side of wrong, that we may illuminate the bright side of virtue--the same liberty that is conceded to the art of the written word--that art to which we owe the Bible and the works of Shakespeare.
    • Versiones alternativas
      In both 1921 and 1927, edited versions of the film were released to reflect current political viewpoints.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into The Revenge of Pancho Villa (1932)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes20

    • How long is The Birth of a Nation?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Wallace Reid---What Happened to Him?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 15 de diciembre de 1915 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Birth of a Nation
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Calexico, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • David W. Griffith Corp.
      • Epoch Producing Corporation
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 110,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 3h 15min(195 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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