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Grass (1925 film)

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1925 film

Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMerian C. Cooper
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Written byTerry Ramsaye
Produced byMerian C. Cooper
Ernest B. Schoedsack
StarringMerian C. Cooper
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Marguerite Harrison
Haidar Khan
Edited byTerry Ramsaye
Richard P. Carver
Music byHugo Riesenfeld
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • March 20, 1925 (1925-03-20)
Running time
72 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent film
Intertitles

Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life is a 1925documentary film[1] that follows a branch of theBakhtiari tribe ofLurs in Persia as they and their herds make their seasonal journey to better pastures. It is considered one of the earliest ethnographicdocumentary films.[2] In 1997,Grass was selected for preservation in the United StatesNational Film Registry by theLibrary of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."[3][4]

Production

[edit]

The film was directed and produced byMerian C. Cooper[1] andErnest B. Schoedsack,[1] with intertitles by Richard Carver andTerry Ramsaye. It was the first film produced by the team of Cooper and Schoedsack, who went on to produceKing Kong and many other films. Cooper was a writer performing research for theAmerican Geographical Society and Schoedsack was a cameraman.[citation needed]

Reporter and former spyMarguerite Harrison was an instrumental member of the production team. Harrison had met Cooper at a ball inWarsaw,[5] and she provided him with food, books and blankets when he was taken prisoner by the Russians in 1920 and sent to work in a prison camp.[6][7] Harrison also appears in the film as herself. Years later, Schoedsack commented that Harrison had not done "a damn thing" during the expedition.[8]

Funding was provided by a loan of $5,000 from Cooper's father and brother, and Harrison contributed an additional $5,000.[9]

In filming the journey, Cooper, Schoedsack, and Harrison became the first Westerners to make the migration with the Bakhtiari.[9] The only previous ethnographic documentary wasRobert Flaherty'sNanook of the North (1922). According to Cooper, the filmmakers were unaware ofNanook until their return to New York City from filming in Persia.[10]

Summary

[edit]
Grass (1925)

The film's producers were mainly concerned with documenting a way of life that was unknown to all those outside the Bakhtiari realm. The film highlights the extreme hardships faced bynomadic peoples, as well as the bravery and ingenuity of the Bakhtiari on their migration in search of grass, which meant abundant seasonal pasture for their animals.

Grass documents the caravan route from Angora (modern-dayAnkara,Turkey) to the Bakhtiari lands in Persia (western Iran inChaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province and the eastern part ofKhuzestan). The film then followsHaidar Khan as he leads 50,000 of his people and countless animals on a harrowing trek across theKarun River and overZard Kuh, a subrange of theZagros Mountains.

Reception

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Grass 1925 film advertisement

In a contemporary review forThe New York Times, criticMordaunt Hall wrote: "It is an unusual and remarkable film offering, one that is instructive and compelling but in no way a story. There is drama interspersed with captivating comedy, and the audience last night applauded some of the wonderful photographic sequences and at other times they were moved to laughter by the antics of the animals."[11]

The film was first shown atThe Explorers Club annual dinner held at theHotel McAlpin in New York City on January 24, 1925, along with a lecture by Cooper.[12] TheExplorers Journal reported: "It is Mr. Cooper's happy achievement to have portrayed poignantly and comprehensively the drama of a people in their primitive struggle with inexorable forces of nature. The pictures were a fitting climax to an evening of thrilling entertainment."[13]Grass was later purchased for distribution byParamount Pictures. Its theatrical debut took place at theCriterion Theatre in New York on March 30, 1925.[14]

Planned remake

[edit]

In 1947, Merian C. Cooper sought to remakeGrass, which he called a "damned half picture," and he said: "One man and one woman, and their children, will exemplify for the audience the whole of this struggle for survival which breeds a race that is proud and strong, rugged individuals all, meeting bravely the moods of natural forces seemingly bent upon their destruction."[15] Ernest B. Schoedsack told him to forget the idea because his Persian friends had informed him that a rail line now ran through the country, and much of the Bakhtiari's trek was now performed using cars and trucks.[16]

Reissue

[edit]

Grass was reissued theatrically in the early 1990s. Rights toGrass had been donated to theMuseum of Modern Art, andMilestone Film and Video obtained the rights in 1990.[17] Dennis Doros of Milestone said:

Out of the one hundred and fifty to two hundred films we've done,Grass andChang are among the ones I am most proud of distributing.Chang is a national treasure inThailand.Grass has images of race and culture that don't exist anymore, it's been called the greatest migration in modern history, and I agree. The journey of the Bakhtiari is so astonishing, the power of those images is like a dream, the way they're constantly moving and climbing.[14]

Grass has been issued in videocassette and DVD format.[18] It is also available for streaming on theCriterion Channel.[19]

In 2009, authorBahman Maghsoudlou published a book titledGrass: Untold Stories that includes background information and historical references related to the making of the film.[20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcHall, Mordaunt (April 30, 1927)."Chang A Drama of the Wilderness (1927)".The New York Times.
  2. ^"Part 1: Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life & 124 CosmoLearning Anthropology".cosmolearning.org. Archived fromthe original on September 15, 2017. RetrievedJune 25, 2017.
  3. ^"Complete National Film Registry Listing".Library of Congress. RetrievedApril 30, 2020.
  4. ^"New to the National Film Registry (December 1997) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin".www.loc.gov. RetrievedJune 23, 2020.
  5. ^Brin, David. (2005)King Kong Is Back!: An Unauthorized Look at One Humongous Ape, BenBella,ISBN 1932100644
  6. ^Brownlow. 2005
  7. ^Wakeman, John. (1988)World Film Directors. NY: W.H. Wilson,ISBN 0824207572, p.148
  8. ^Marguerite Harrison profileArchived March 11, 2016, at theWayback Machine, imdb.com, retrieved April 13, 2008.
  9. ^abHarrison, Marguerite "There's Always Tomorrow" 1935 Farrar & Rinehart ASIN:B00085QALK
  10. ^Behlmer, Rudy (1965),Grass DVD, Special Features: Merian C. Cooper- Rudy Behlmer Interview
  11. ^Hall, Mordaunt (March 31, 1925). "THE SCREEN".The New York Times. p. 17.
  12. ^Explorers Club annual dinner invitation in Cooper scrapbook, vol. 1 box 49, Copper Papers, BYU.
  13. ^Explorers Journal, vol. 4, Jan-March 1925, Box 49, Cooper Papers, BYU.
  14. ^abVas,Mark 2005 Living Dangerously: The Adventures of Merian C. Cooper, Creator of King Kong, Villard First edition (August 2, 2005),ISBN 9781400062768.
  15. ^"Grass" outline, Dec 17, 1947 p.1 MSS 1849, box 13, folder 8, Cooper Papers BYU
  16. ^Kevin Brownlow, interview with Ernest B. Schoedsack from cassette tapes of sessions with Merian C. Cooper, circa late 1960s, made available to the author Mark Vas by Kevin Brownlow.
  17. ^www.moviediva.comhttp://www.moviediva.com/MD_root/reviewpages/MDGrass.htm. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2017.{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|title= (help)[title missing]
  18. ^"GRASS: A NATION'S BATTLE FOR LIFE (DVD) | Film Threat". November 22, 2005. RetrievedDecember 18, 2021.
  19. ^"Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life".The Criterion Channel. RetrievedDecember 18, 2021.
  20. ^Maghsoudlou, Bahman (2009),Grass:Untold Stories

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toGrass (1925 film).
EnglishWikisource has original text related to this article:
Films directed byErnest B. Schoedsack
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