Birth of a Nation @ Market Arcade Film & Arts Centre

Buffalo Film Seminars - Conversations about Great Films. D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation - Tuesday 8/30 7:00 PM. Market Arcade Film & Arts Centre
A pivotal moment in film history. After The Birth of a Nation, nothing was the same: not the way audiences watched movies, not the way filmmakers created them. D.W. Griffith's jumbo-size saga of the Civil War expanded the boundaries of storytelling on the screen, conveying a richer, more complicated (and certainly longer) tale than anyone had seen in a movie before. The delicate relationships, the sad passage of time, the spectacular battle scenes all look as fresh and innovative today as they did in 1915. So do Griffith's brilliant actors, most of them--including favorite leading lady Lillian Gish--drawn from his regular stock company. What has become increasingly problematic about The Birth of a Nation is Griffith's condescending attitude toward black slaves, and the ringing excitement surrounding the founding of the Ku Klux Klan. Griffith, whose political ideas were naive at best, seemed genuinely surprised by the criticism of his masterwork, and for his next project he turned to the humanist preaching of the massive Intolerance. Despite protests, Birth sold more tickets than any other movie, a record that stood for decades, and President Woodrow Wilson famously compared it to "history written in lightning." That judgment has lasted. --Robert Horton

Back in September, Good Schools for All, an organization governed by a board of community stakeholders including local foundations, was awarded a $4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education. It was one of 32 granted nationally, and one of two given to NYS. They took that money and in collaboration with their Read To Succeed campaign, which involves a coalition of more than 50 local organizations that want to improve literacy in the City of Buffalo, started the Early Rea …
Ask David Byrne of the Talking Heads what motivated him to install artistic bike racks in NYC and he'll surely tell you that it's time to 'Start Making Sense'. You take a need and a want and deliver on them. NYC needs more bike racks and residents and visitors want cool artistic installations to look at. And how hard would it be to design and make a handful of fun and functional bike racks. While Buffalo is still waiting for our racks to appear on the streets, NYC has scored some …
If you're a true blue Buffalonian, then chances are that you're a friend of The Cotter. After all, The Cotter is the world's oldest operational fireboat and she lives a short way from the HSBC Arena. This event should not be missed for a number of reasons. First, we need to keep The Cotter's designation going. If she's not operational, then we lose a big part of our waterfront history. Second, the fundraiser takes place at the Bison City Rod and Gun Club on Ohio Street and on the …
On your way to work this morning you may have noticed hordes of beautification volunteers working throughout the city. I spotted about forty volunteers getting down and dirty at the Grace Manor on North Street near Kleinhans Circle. It was there that I spoke to Kim Williams, Activities Director at the manor. She told me that this was a huge effort on the behalf of the United Way. Each year the United Way reaches out to the corporate community to ask for the volunteer help of their … 


