@article{327632, note = {Originally released as a motion picture in 1916.}, author = {Griffith, D. W. and Loos, Anita, and Bitzer, G. W., and Marsh, Mae, and Harron, Robert, and Turner, F. A. and De Grasse, Sam, and Lewis, Vera, and Cooper, Miriam, and Long, Walter, and Wilson, Tom, and Lewis, Ralph, and Ingraham, Lloyd, and M'Clure, Alexander W. and McCarthy, John, and Gaye, Howard, and Langdon, Lillian, and Grey, Olga, and Ritzau, Erich von, and Love, Bessie. and Brown, William H. and Walsh, George, and Wilson, Margery, and Pallette, Eugene, and Aitken, Spottiswoode, and Handforth, Ruth, and Bennett, Frank, and Talmadge, Constance, and Henabery, Joseph, and Clifton, Elmer, and Lawrence, W. E. and Paget, Alfred, and Owen, Seena, and Marshall, Tully, and Gish, Lillian,}, url = {http://library.usi.edu/record/327632}, title = {Intolerance a drama of comparisons / [videorecording] :}, publisher = {Kino on Video,}, abstract = {Switches back and forth between four separate stories from Babylonian times to the twentieth century to show humanity's inhumanity and intolerance through the ages. The Babylonian story deals with the fall of Babylon in 538 B.C. The Judean story treats the life of Christ. The French story centers on the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day in 1572. The modern story is set in an American mill town and the slum area of an American city.}, recid = {327632}, pages = {1 videodisc (197 min.) :}, address = {New York :}, year = {2002}, }