This Week In Film History, 02.03.13

 

Jane RussellFebruary 8, 1915: D.W. Griffith‘s Civil War epic, The Birth of a Nation, opens. At a White House screening, President Woodrow Wilson calls it “like writing history with lightning.”

February 8, 1926: The New York Sun is the first to use the term “documentary,” in its review of Robert Flaherty‘s Moana.

February 5, 1927: Buster Keaton‘s comedic masterwork The General, based on a true Civil War incident, is released.

February 5, 1936: At the New York premiere of Charles Chaplin‘s Modern Times, riot police are called in to control the crowds trying to see the stars attending the festivities.

February 5, 1943: Producer/ “director” Howard Hughes‘ controversial frontier drama The Outlaw makes a star of his buxom discovery, Jane Russell.

February 6, 1943: A Los Angeles jury finds Errol Flynn not guilty of statutory rape charges made against him by two teenage girls.

February 9, 1960: Groundbreaking ceremonies celebrate Hollywood’s Walk of Fame. The first star unveiled belongs to actress Joanne Woodward.

February 8, 1968: Planet of the Apes, which will spawn four sequels, opens, starring Charlton Heston and “simians” Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter and Maurice Evans.

February 4, 1970: George C. Scott, Karl Malden and General Omar Bradley attend the premiere of 20th Century Fox’s Patton in New York.

February 7, 1974: Western movies are never quite the same after Mel Brooks‘ spoof Blazing Saddles tickles audiences with its premiere in Los Angeles.

February 6, 1985: Just Jaeckin‘s Emmanuelle finishes its record 10-year, 32-week-run at the Paris City Cinema, beating out previous record-holder West Side Story.

February 3, 1989: Maverick filmmaker John Cassavetes, whose work preceded the rise of the independent cinema, dies of lung cancer at 59.

  • Blair Kramer

    Even back nearly 100 years ago when it was first released, BIRTH OF A NATION was widely reported to be a decidedly insensitive film to people of color. The KKK was shunned by most people at that time, but for some reason (possibly because the director of the film, D W Griffith, was a Southerner), the KKK was portrayed in the film as heroic! MY GOD!!! And President Woodrow Wilson said the film was “…like writing history with lightning?!” Well, I don’t know. But is anyone surprised he said it? Not only did that evil bastard try to subvert our capitalist system, he was also an overt racist! Wilson was personally responsible for segregating each individual branch of the military!

    • Wayne P.

      Not to mention he tried to make the world safe for democracy…translation: saddling history with that horrible precursor to the UN, The League of Nations…make that last one the league of useless nations…because, his actions set the stage for the weakness in the west that led to the rise of both fascism and communism causing more carnage and evil destruction in the next war than all prior wars combined to that point or since…his policies were so bad they forced changing the term progressive to liberal…one more problem now though…the more recent failed legacy of political liberalism has got their leaders pondering a change back to the progressive label…a lesson: those that dont remember history are truly condemned to repeat it!