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Within Our Gates

  • 1920
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Within Our Gates (1920)
On this IMDbrief, we celebrate four unsung Black heroes of film history and four films to watch to get to know them better.
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Abandoned by her fiancé, an educated black woman with a shocking past dedicates herself to helping a near bankrupt school for impoverished black youths.Abandoned by her fiancé, an educated black woman with a shocking past dedicates herself to helping a near bankrupt school for impoverished black youths.Abandoned by her fiancé, an educated black woman with a shocking past dedicates herself to helping a near bankrupt school for impoverished black youths.

  • Director
    • Oscar Micheaux
  • Writer
    • Oscar Micheaux
  • Stars
    • Evelyn Preer
    • Flo Clements
    • James D. Ruffin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Oscar Micheaux
    • Writer
      • Oscar Micheaux
    • Stars
      • Evelyn Preer
      • Flo Clements
      • James D. Ruffin
    • 30User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

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    Unsung Black Heroes of Film History

    Photos14

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    Top cast17

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    Evelyn Preer
    • Sylvia Landry
    Flo Clements
    • Alma Prichard
    James D. Ruffin
    • Conrad Drebert - Sylvia's Fiancé
    Jack Chenault
    • Larry Prichard - Alma's Stepbrother
    William Smith
    • Philip Gentry - A Detective
    Charles D. Lucas
    • Dr. V. Vivian
    Bernice Ladd
    • Mrs. Geraldine Stratton
    Mrs. Evelyn
    • Mrs. Elena Warwick
    William Starks
    • Jasper Landry
    • (as William Stark)
    Mattie Edwards
    • Jasper's Wife
    Ralph Johnson
    • Philip Gridlestone
    E.G. Tatum
    • Efram - Gridlestone's Servant
    Grant Edwards
    • Emil Landry
    Grant Gorman
    • Armand Gridlestone
    Leigh Whipper
    Jimmie Cook
      S.T. Jacks
      • Rev. Wilson Jacobs
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Oscar Micheaux
      • Writer
        • Oscar Micheaux
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews30

      6.43.9K
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      Featured reviews

      7Art-22

      Oscar Micheaux directed and wrote this powerful story about racial prejudice and its consequences.

      I was deeply affected by parts of this story about the plight of negroes as told for negroes by negro director Oscar Micheaux. Ostensibly, it's about a woman who tries to help a poor southern school for negroes by getting financial help to supplement the meager amount the state provides, but it is laced with observations about racial prejudice. One bigoted southern woman living in the north is against the women's suffrage movement for fear that negro women will get the right to vote. And she expresses her negative sentiment about educating negroes: "Thinking will give them a headache." Micheaux gets more points across in the best part of the film, the flashback scene near the end prefaced with a title card "Sylvia's Story." We see how a negro preacher agrees with some condescending whites that the negroes should keep their place, but privately condemns himself for doing so, announcing that "negroes and whites are equal" to himself. We see how injustice reigns with a lynch mob and how the innocent, even an innocent bystander, can easily become victims of racial prejudice. The film is worth seeing for this sequence alone, providing images that caused me to lose some sleep. Micheaux also slips in comments about the negroes' accomplishments in the Spanish-American and Mexican wars and WWI, as if to bolster the low self-image of his negro viewers. The film may be primitive by some standards, but Oscar Micheaux tells a powerful story.

      The film was intended for negro audiences, but because of some controversial parts (rape and lynching) many exhibitors refused to show it, so very few saw it when it was released. This being the earliest surviving film made by an African American, it was placed on the National Film Registry and lovingly restored from the only surviving copy in Spain (see the alternative version listing for details). The Library of Congress is to be commended for doing such a fine job.
      7tavm

      Oscar Micheaux's Within Our Gates is an interesting historical fictionalization of the plight of African-Americans during the early '20s

      With this month being once again Black History Month, I'm-for the second time since first writing these IMDb reviews back in 2006-commenting on various films made by African-Americans both in front of and behind the screen in the order they were made and released chronologically whenever possible. So it's 1920, which is the year from which the earliest surviving movie made by writer, producer, and director Oscar Micheax comes from. In Within Our Gates, Sylvia Landry (Evelyn Preer) dedicates her life to helping poorly educated kids of her race get a good education in the Southern states she resides in. But the money the school gets are not enough so she goes up North to get some more funding from a rich white lady. I'll stop there and just say that while there are some compelling scenes concerning other characters-like that of a couple of people that betray their own race like that of Rev. Wilson Jacobs (S. T. Jacks) and Efram (E. G. Tatum), a loyal butler of a wealthy white man named Gridlestone-the most compelling focus of the story concerns Sylvia's background concerning her previous family life with the Landrys which consist of father Jasper (William Stark), his wife (Mattie Edwards), and their young pre-teen son, Emil, (Grant Edwards) when we learn of their fates and that of Sylvia herself when she nearly gets mixed up with another man named Gridlestone, especially when the intertitle reveals his connection with her. Some of the other characters like that of fiancée Conrad Drebert (James D. Ruffin), Alma Prichard (Flo Clements), Larry Prichard (Jack Chenault), Dr. V. Vivian (Charles D. Lucas), and Det. Philip Gentry (William Smith) don't seem so connected especially concerning Conrad but they also have some compelling scenes. One more thing, as a Chicago native, I was fascinated seeing the Windy City as it looked at the time and learning that some of these players came from there. So on that note, Within Our Gates is worth seeing.
      Michael_Elliott

      Good

      Within Our Gates (1920)

      *** (out of 4)

      Oscar Micheaux's response to Griffith's The Birth of a Nation faced its own share of controversy when originally released and was banned in black communities all over the country. The film was thought lost until a print showed up in Spain in 1993 and this remains the oldest surviving feature from a black director. A light skinned black woman, living up North, travels to the South to teach at an all black school. Since the government isn't helping to educate black kids, the woman goes back North to try and find rich white folks who will help in her cause but she's met with racism, from blacks and whites and a secret from her past might catch up to haunt her.

      As with the Griffith film, you could overlook all the controversy surrounding this film and judge is for what good it does do and its historical importance. Watching the film with today's standards and politically correct nature, it's still easy to see why so many black folks were offended by a film that was made to have a moral tale. Micheaux shows racism going from black to white and white to black but, unlike the Griffith film, he also shows that races can show hatred toward their own race. Not many people have viewed this film, which is a real shame because it's heart is certainly in the right place and if you take the historic importance away from the Griffith film, more folks should be checking out this movie instead of that one.

      Technically speaking it's rather amazing at how well Micheaux pulled this low budget film off. The editing is very good and really helps build up the suspense towards the end of the film. The story could have been worked on and a lot of the performances are quite poor but that doesn't take away from the film's message. The ending involves the backstory to our main character and this includes a lynching scene as well as a rape scene. Both of these scenes are very well done and pack quite a punch for a 86-year-old film. This sidestory, which is basically a remake of the ending to the Griffith film, has some over the top moments, which weren't needed but again, the film's heart and message is in the right place so hopefully more will seek this film out and let the other one die.
      7morrisonhimself

      Peter Reiher got it right, but the ending is thoroughly odd

      Oscar Micheaux is one of my motion picture heroes.

      With courage and determination, he set out to make movies for and about black people when it wasn't otherwise much done.

      He was a pioneer in independent film-making, raising money in the most unusual places and unusual ways.

      He deserves a lot of praise ... but, alas, his results were too often disappointing.

      "Within Our Gates" has a lot of potential, but most of it is unmet.

      The acting is pretty good, but the camera work and editing are lacking; and the script misses badly.

      The story is a good one, and the school that is at the heart of a major subplot has a real-life counterpart: Professor Laurance Jones created a school for the black people of the piney woods near Jackson, Mississippi, in the very earliest years of the 20th century.

      Professor Jones' story is incredibly inspiring and I urge everyone who cares about spirit and courage to take a look (http://www.antiqbook.com/boox/vol/21991.shtml is one source).

      Micheaux and Jones have somewhat parallel lives, though Jones ultimately achieved recognition in his lifetime.

      Micheaux should have, and I am grateful beyond words that at least his films are finally being seen by a wider audience.

      They are flawed, yes, but they present two stories we all need to know about: The actual topic of the movie, and that of Micheaux himself.

      The ending of this movie is, frankly, beyond my comprehension. It seems to come out of thin air, and I fear it must have been hastily tacked on in order to placate someone. Too bad, but still the movie is historically valuable.

      This is added June 10, 2015: There is a print available at YouTube.com, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1E0NrcnwAE

      I haven't watched more than a few seconds, but so far it's a terrible print.
      Reiher

      Only of historical and sociological interest

      Primitively filmed, with a fractured and meandering plot. Micheaux gives little evidence here of having much directorial ability. It's hard to imagine anyone actually enjoying watching it.

      Of historical and sociological interest as an early black-made film, but compares poorly to professional-quality films of that era from the US and elsewhere. Of some value because it presumably shows how educated blacks of that era looked at themselves.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The film has been repeatedly censored over the years. In its first outing, the rape and lynching scenes were heavily edited as they were deemed too provocative after the 1919 Chicago race riots.
      • Quotes

        Mrs. Elena Warwick: Since I have decided to give her my assistance, I would be grateful if, as a Southerner yourself, Geraldine, you could point me the best way to do so.

        Mrs. Geraldine Stratton: Lumber-jacks and field hands. Let me tell you - it is an error to try and educate them. Besides, they don't want an education. Can't you see that thinking would only give them a headache? Their ambition is to belong to a dozen lodges, consume religion without restraint, and, when they die, go straight up to heaven. Wasting $5,000 on a school is plain silly when you could give $100 to old Ned, the best colored preacher in the world... who will do more to keep Negroes in their place than all your schools put together.

      • Alternate versions
        In 1993, the Library of Congress Motion Picture Conservation Center restored this film as close to the original as possible, from the only known surviving copy in Spain. The Spanish intertitles were retranslated into English using typical Micheaux language. Only one short sequence was missing and that was summarized with an intertitle frame. The running time is 79 minutes.
      • Connections
        Featured in American Experience: Midnight Ramble (1994)

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      FAQ13

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • January 12, 1920 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • None
      • Also known as
        • Kapıların Ardında
      • Filming locations
        • Fort Lee, New Jersey, USA
      • Production company
        • Micheaux Book & Film Company
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 19m(79 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Silent
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1

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