As It Is in Life (1910) Poster

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7/10
"Choose between us"
Steffi_P6 February 2009
This sweet and simple Biograph short comes from the middle period in Griffith's career at the studio. Having spent most of 1909 developing his handling of action, he now began to turn his attention more and more to drama and poignancy.

Like many Griffith shorts from this period (see, for example The Unchanging Sea or The House with Closed Shutters), the story of As It Is in Life spans years and generations in its single-reel runtime. This cramming of lives into minutes can be a bit much, but Griffith's tactic in these cases (and it is particularly well-demonstrated here) is to familiarise us with a small number of locations and camera set-ups. Each of these has a particular context and can be used repeatedly down the years, as it were. As It Is in Life has three principle settings – the porch, the pigeon farm and the sweetheart's meeting place. In particular, the use of the latter for both the father's aborted romance and then the grown-up daughter's courtship makes the point that history is being repeated. The pigeon farm provides a unique and poetic backdrop for the tenderest moments between father and daughter, a sign of the increasing aestheticism of Griffith's work.

Although the Biograph shorts had made big strides towards naturalistic acting performances in the past year or so, there are still a few pantomimey exaggerated moments. However it's actually Griffith's arrangements and the fact that there were still a few problems of visual grammar that he had yet to iron out that are most jarring. When the father discovers his daughter with her young man – supposedly unobserved – he is in fact blundering about a few feet from them, which looks ridiculous. Fathers spying on lovers is a recurring image in Griffith's films, and they continue to do it from the same frame right up until 1914's The Avenging Conscience. It seems it was only in his longer features that Griffith learned to handle multiple camera set-ups in larger spaces.

Griffith's fascination for the generation-spanning short drama would only last another year or so. Really, the only excellent example of these that I have seen in Enoch Arden, and that at least was spread over too reels. For the most part his greatest one-reelers were tight, concentrated and focused.
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6/10
Good watch for fathers and daughters
Horst_In_Translation13 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"As It Is in Life" is an American silent black-and-white film from 105 years ago. The version I watched runs for 12 minutes and the whole thing is basically about a father-daughter relationship and how it changes as they both grow older. The director is D.W. Griffith who not only made films before Chaplin, Keaton, Lloyd, Laurel and Hardy rose to fame, but is also a much more dramatic film maker compared to their mostly comedic movies. This one here actually includes many cast members who had truly prolific careers back then, but the two most famous are obviously Oscar winners Mary Pickford and Mack Sennett. The story is kinda sweet, sometimes pretty dramatic and emotional, maybe too much for such a short film already. And I only saw one flaw with the film, namely about the father who wants his daughter to be happy, yet he wants her to sacrifice the one she loves just like he did when his daughter was still a child. That doesn't really make sense if he loves his daughter so much. It's an interesting take on how both of the protagonists' relationships kinda fail (for different reasons) and how they end up together finally. The part of the father's relationship is especially interesting because of the economic factors that play a role. A good watch for everybody with an interest in the early days of film. Thumbs up.
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6/10
Sweet Little Poem
jayraskin123 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Griffith is able to paint a sweet little picture on this very limited canvass. There are only four or five settings. The most interesting is a chicken farm.

George Nichols who went on to direct 95 shorts and to act in over 200 shorts gives an excellent performance. He is a man devoted to his young daughter (circa 10 years old). He gives up a woman because he feels he cannot support her and his daughter. Years later the daughter returns from school. She promises to be with him, but soon finds a bow. She gives birth to a child, but seems disappointed that nobody pays attention to her. She brings the child to her father who adores him.

I liked the naturalist actor without too much reliance on pantomime. The story is not much, but it does have a poetic, slice of life quality to it.

This is for Griffith and Pickford fans primarily.

Mary Pickford is fine, but she isn't really given much to do.
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A look on how times have changed in life and early film
chewbacuh18 February 2001
What I like about this film is studying it as a time capsule of history. The story is basically of a father not able to marry another woman after his first wife's death because he can't afford to do so. He has a daughter to care for from his first marriage (when she grows up in the film she is played by Mary Pickford). So he sacrifices his happiness to raise his daughter. When she is an adult, and her father is old, she must choose to marry or stay and care for her father. She chooses to marry with some misgivings.. In the end, she brings her baby to see her father, and he finds joy in his grandchild. Imagine, in 1910, when the film was made, no one could run to the welfare office. People actually took responsibility seriously in caring for their kids and actually making huge sacrifices for their decisions in life. The father found a job, remained poor, but did the best he could. A college professor once told my history class that the baby boomers only think with "Me". Today, the father might have put the kid off on someone else, and done what they wanted to do. Look how many kids are raised without fathers today. This film is highly recommended, as a look at film study and a look at history. It is available on Griffith Biographs on Image Silent Classics laserdisc.
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4/10
All's well that ends well....
planktonrules15 August 2013
This is about the fifth D.W. Griffith short film I've seen recently and it doesn't compare as favorably with the others. Much of this is because there is some over-acting/over-gesticulating by one of the actors and it's odd Griffith didn't re-shoot the scenes. I say odd because usually the actors in his films behave much more naturally than what you see in most others of the era.

The story is about a man who dedicates his whole life to taking care of his daughter after his wife dies. He forsakes his own needs for her--and this is probably why he behaved so badly when his now grown daughter (Mary Pickford) decides to get married. Fortunately, this film illustrates that time heals all wounds or all's well that ends well or....

The bottom line is that the story is fair and Pickford and most of the rest act fine--but watch Dad (George Nichols) and see him have a seizure instead of act in a couple scenes!
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5/10
Typically melodramatic Griffith short
JoeytheBrit22 October 2011
Warning: Spoilers
George Nichols plays a newly widowed father who devotes his life to providing for his small daughter by working in a pigeon farm. Years later, when she returns from school, Dad expects her to care for him in his limp-ridden twilight years and is aggrieved to discover that she has found herself a young man. When she chooses her new man over her old man, Dad falls into a state of depression that is only lifted when she introduces him to his new grandchild.

This is a typically melodramatic short from D. W. Griffith. By today's standards, the story is crude in both its concept and its execution, but even then Griffith was arguably one of America's foremost filmmakers. His style clearly wasn't fully developed yet, but the advances he'd made since his first directing effort in 1907 are impossible to miss.

Mary Pickford plays the grown daughter, and her star potential is obvious even at this early stage in her career.
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Griffith 1910
Michael_Elliott26 February 2008
As It Is in Life (1910)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

A rather strange film from D.W. Griffith. A father sacrifices his own happiness in order to take care of his daughter. Years later the girl falls in love and chooses this man over her father, which leads dad into a state of depression. There's the typical Griffith melodrama on display here but I'm really not sure what he was going for in this film. I thought he was trying to tell another story of the poor, which works in the first part of the film but why the father would be so depressed that his daughter meets another man never plays out.

You can get this film through Grapevine as part of their D.W. Griffith: The Director series.
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