Man's Genesis (1912) Poster

(1912)

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6/10
Something different from the folks at Biograph (What were they thinking?)
wmorrow5918 August 2002
Although this short drama of primitive man was apparently intended as a serious work, it's awfully difficult to watch it today without at least cracking a smile. Whatever the filmmakers' intentions -- and they're not entirely clear -- Man's Genesis is undeniably funny. Maybe director D. W. Griffith was concerned that audiences would find this material amusing no matter how he handled it, for he added a subtitle calling the film "A Psychological Comedy Founded Upon the Darwinian Theory of the Evolution of Man." It looks like he was hedging his bets: if they laugh, fine, it's a comedy. If not, it's a drama. (And by the way, what's a "psychological comedy"?) The story is presented as a parable of ancient times which takes the audience back to the discovery of creative intelligence, specifically, to the very moment a primitive man discovers his ability to craft a tool to achieve an important goal. This isn't at all the "genesis" of humanity, but why quibble?

The caveman episode which comprises the bulk of this film is presented as a tale-within-a-tale, told by an old man to a little boy and girl who are squabbling, a pair of siblings who are presumably his grandchildren. (One aspect of unintended comedy is the implication that this anecdote is a flashback to Grandpa's childhood, back in the Stone Age!) Despite having to wear grassy outfits and fur pelts that are sure to provoke mirth, the actors in the Stone Age sequence appear to take their roles seriously, especially the solemn leading lady, Mae Marsh. Mae struggles to maintain her dignity while the male actors behave in an ape-like fashion, crouching behind boulders and barking at each other. As you'd imagine the story enacted is rudimentary, a basic conflict between a bullying Goliath and a weak but clever David. The intended moral is problematic, however. It seems the old man telling the tale intends to teach the children that we should use our intelligence to solve conflicts, that Might does not make Right, yet the protagonist of his story uses his intelligence to build a club, then uses this weapon to pound his enemy to death. Hasn't he demonstrated that Might, backed by intelligence, is indeed Right? (Or perhaps that, right or wrong, Might WINS!) At the end, when the old man finishes telling this story, we half expect the little boy to utilize the lesson by building a club to pummel his sister; instead, the kids go off together happily, hand in hand, having learned . . . what, exactly?

Man's Genesis is not entirely ridiculous. It's certainly unusual and well worth seeing, either for campy laughs or to get some sense of what contemporary attitudes were about early civilization, but no one is going to mistake it for a serious work of speculative anthropology. I would love to know what the director and his players actually believed they were doing.
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6/10
Man's Genesis review
JoeytheBrit25 June 2020
Griffith takes his stock company back to prehistoric times for this tale of the invention of the first weapon. It's essentially the same story he had told countless times before, but as it involves silent cavemen there's little opportunity for any kind of character development. The Godawful online print (which runs only 11 minutes) makes it impossible to make out much detail, but it all looks vaguely - and unintentionally - hilarious, particularly when Bruteforce keeps coming back for more every time he's clonked over the head by Weakhand's new toy (and I can't help thinking Weakhands has created a rod for his own back there...)
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Great Fun
Michael_Elliott27 February 2008
Man's Genesis (1912)

**** (out of 4)

Early caveman film from D.W. Griffith is rather unique since the director hadn't done a film like this before. During the prologue, a grandfather is walking his granddaughter and grandson as the boy begins to hit the girl with a stick. The grandfather then sits them down and tells them a story of when cavemen didn't have nothing to fight with except their hands. The film then flashes forward to the cavemen segment where Bruteforce (Wilfred Lucas) and Weakhands (Robert Harron) are fighting over Lilywhite (Mae Marsh). After getting beat up, Weakhands discovers a way to use a stick and rock as a weapon. This is a really, really interesting little film because I like the fact that the cavemen are in a silent film. They couldn't talk in real life so seeing them in a silent movies just works wonders. I'm rather curious to why Griffith added the prologue but it doesn't matter because the cavemen footage is so great. The costumes and facial hair looks very realistic and all three give strong performances. Certainly worth seeking out, although this is pretty hard to get a hold of. Griffith made a sequel two years later in Brute Force.
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A psychological comedy founded upon the Darwinian theory of the origin of man
deickemeyer31 December 2016
An old man climbs a hill with two children, a boy and a girl. The boy attempts to strike the girl. The old man sits down with the children and tells them a story. The title describes it as a psychological comedy founded upon the Darwinian theory of the origin of man. The light fades on the peaceful, fertile countryside, dotted with homes. It reappears on a rocky waste. Weakhands crawls out of his cave. When he goes as a suitor for a woman he is driven away by Bruteforce, as big and powerful as Weakhands is frail and anemic. Lilywhite, through the death of her mother, is forced to go out of her cave. She meets Weakhands, hiding from Bruteforce. Weakhands rushes for her and lays hands on her. She goes with him, willingly. While out of her cave the leering Bruteforce takes Lilywhite, and when Weakhands, with a courage not justified by his strength, interferes, he is pushed down the hill and injured. He crawls back to his cave, from which he can see Lilywhite bemoaning her fate. Weakhands, in his cave, picks up a stick and absently fits it into a rounded stone. The stone falls off and hurts his leg. He puts the stone on again and tries the weapon lightly against his head. It hurts. Over the expressionless, almost beast- like, face of Weakhands there flashes a look of intelligence. It is the birth of an idea. Securely fastening the stone to the stick, he sets out for the cave of Bruteforce, where he finds Lilywhite, and beckons her to come to him. She holds back through fear. Bruteforce rushes at Weakhands, his fist in the air. The rapidly descending club collides with his wrist. In dumb mystified fashion Bruteforce looks at his limp hand and raises the other. The club gets that, too, and it is useless. The battle goes on all over the hillside. Finally a blow on the top of Bruteforce's head ends the struggle. The amazed clan of Bruteforce assail Weakhands, but the club stops them. Weakhands leads away his companion. Night slowly settles down. The jagged rocks at the crest of the hill are outlined against the sky; all is dark. Day breaks across the beautiful valley. The old man arises from the rock with the children. The boy shakes the girl's hand. The work of Weakhands, Bruteforce and Lilywhite enthralls. The illusion is complete. - The Moving Picture World, July 27, 1912
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