The 1920 silent film Within Our Gates screens as part of The St. Louis International Film Festival Saturday, Nov. 12 at 7:30pm at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium. The film will be accompanied by Stace England and the Screen Syndicate, who play an album of songs inspired by Oscar Micheaux, writer-director of Within Our Gates. The screening is sponsored by Renee Hirshfield. Ticket information can be found Here
As part of the 25th-anniversary celebration, The St. Louis International Film Festival reprises a special event from our 2009 edition by screening “Within Our Gates,” writer-director Oscar Micheaux’s impassioned response to D.W. Griffith’s “Birth of a Nation.” The film shines a revealing light on the racism of U.S. society, provocatively including scenes of lynching and attempted rape. Micheaux was a pioneering African-American filmmaker and novelist whose career stretched from the silent era through the 1940s. “Within Our Gates,” one of the oldest surviving “race” films,...
As part of the 25th-anniversary celebration, The St. Louis International Film Festival reprises a special event from our 2009 edition by screening “Within Our Gates,” writer-director Oscar Micheaux’s impassioned response to D.W. Griffith’s “Birth of a Nation.” The film shines a revealing light on the racism of U.S. society, provocatively including scenes of lynching and attempted rape. Micheaux was a pioneering African-American filmmaker and novelist whose career stretched from the silent era through the 1940s. “Within Our Gates,” one of the oldest surviving “race” films,...
- 11/9/2016
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Black filmmaking pioneer Oscar Micheaux’s 1920 film "Within Our Gates," was his second film from the over 40 films he made during his career and some consider it his best film. The film was shot in and around the Chicago area when his production company was based there, before he moved to New York (which remained the center for most of his film productions until his last film "The Betrayal" in 1948, which he returned to Chicago to make). And Micheaux made "Gates" not only as a response to D.W. Griffith’s "Birth of Nation," but also to the infamous Chicago race riots of 1919, known as the “Red Summer of 1919,” in which 23...
- 9/1/2014
- by Sergio
- ShadowAndAct
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