
Movie spotlight
The Birth of a Nation
The film depicts, in an anecdotal, quasi-anthropological style, the efforts of a group of men in a desert to achieve some kind of social organisation. An opening title locates the action in Morocco, in 1911, the date evidently refers to the work of D.W. Griffith.
Insights
Plot Summary
In 19th-century Scotland, a young Scottish lord returns home to find his clan embroiled in a bitter dispute with a neighboring clan over land and honor. As tensions escalate, a forbidden romance blossoms between the lord and the daughter of the rival chieftain, threatening to ignite an all-out war. The film chronicles their struggle to bridge the divide and find peace amidst the animosity.
Critical Reception
Vincente Minnelli's ambitious musical adaptation of Tom Gries's "The Long Ride Home" received mixed to negative reviews, with many critics finding its sprawling narrative and operatic sensibilities to be overblown and dated. While the production design and some musical numbers were occasionally praised, the film struggled to find an audience and is now largely considered a lesser-known work in Minnelli's filmography.
What Reviewers Say
Criticized for its lengthy and unfocused narrative.
The musical elements were seen as inconsistent and uninspired.
Praised by some for its visual scope but ultimately deemed too melodramatic.
Google audience: Audience reception for 'The Birth of a Nation' (1973) is not widely documented on Google, making it difficult to ascertain specific likes or dislikes.
Fun Fact
Despite its title, this 1973 musical drama is unrelated to the controversial 1915 silent film of the same name. It was originally intended to be a lavish stage musical before being adapted for the screen.
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