in a bold move, the greatest actors and directors of their day joined to
form a studio where they would be in control of their creations. Mary
Pickford, "America's Sweethart;" Charles Chaplin, "The Tramp;" D.W.
Griffith, whose epic film Birth of a Nation had rocked the country with
controversy; and Douglas Fairbanks, the leading actor as well as a
powerful producer of Hollywood, sought more control over their films and
decided to pool their impressive resources for a new studio dubbed "United
Artists".
Metro Pictures head Richard Rowland noted, "The inmates are taking over
the asylum". While the action may have produced a new wealth of art for
the growing medium of film, it struck a nerve in Hollywood's business
arena. If the greatest artists were to gain complete control of their
productions, which might be the best sellers, then the millions of dollars
to be made would be lost to those who had built up the movie business.
Worst yet was the ramifications for America. One producer noted, "We can't
have the eyes of the country glued to the works of a lady Canuck, a Limey,
a Clansman, and an adulterer". Only hours after the public release of
photos showing Pickford, Chaplin, Griffith, and Fairbanks signing the
contracts, a more secret meeting brought together the powerhouses of
Hollywood such as Rowland, Loew, Fox, and Laemmle (though none would admit
to being part of the conspiracy). While some suspected that the artist-run
company would die from overspending as artists tended to do, the
conspirators sought to bring United Artists down before it took root. The
stars shone over the public with considerable popularity, which became the
target for the studios.
"Something of a stretch. It was the size of the
domestic market that built Hollywood. And most people wanted shlock on on
a Tuesday night. But there was nothing to prevent Warner Bros. from making
the films it liked. I can't see anything here that would have prevented
Casablanca. And Bollywood, the towering capital of formulaic shlock, is an
entirely domestic phenomenon. " - reader's commentFeeding press
releases to newspapers, especially those owned by the powerful Hearst, the
first major break was the announcement of the "discovery" of the affair
between Fairbanks and Pickford. The two had met at a party in 1916 and
begun the affair, but the civility of the times kept such things quiet.
Fairbanks was currently in proceedings to finalize his divorce with wife
Anna Beth in preparation to marry Pickford (herself married to Owen
Moore), and the legal papers became fodder for an enormous scandal. With
news slow since the end of the Great War and the fights between President
Wilson and Congress only marginally interesting, the public was hungry for
shocking gossip. The following months tore into Pickford and Fairbanks,
ending their careers in America and eventually forcing them to sell out
their shares of UA to Chaplin. They left California and moved to Canada,
where they would begin new careers filming outside of Toronto.
Studio-owned theaters practically refused to show their films in America,
so they turned to exporting films, establishing new popularity almost
worldwide.
Griffith dropped out soon after, seeing that the resources of United
Artists were even less than those offered by penny-pinching studio
executives. He returned to creating epics under Louis B. Mayer, whose
theaters proved to return Griffith to his blockbuster standing, but his
career would fall off as sound transformed filmmaking. Ultimately he would
be a consulting director, giving his expertise on epics, such as the film
San Francisco in 1936.
Chaplin stood alone with his studio and sought help from wherever he could
find it. After barely producing The Gold Rush, he discovered that almost
no theater would show it. Quitting America, he returned to London and
joined the growing film industry there, which would make him into a titan
as audiences across Europe and the British Empire swarmed over his work.
Having successfully defended the business, the studios returned to work
creating what many referred to as "hash" or "schlock", depending upon
one's standing with Semitism. Still, audiences demanded entertainment
through the Depression, and they were given cheaply produced, yet
memorable, films. Actors, writers, and directors attempted to unionize
numerous times, but the studios crushed each attempt. After World War II,
studios fell under suspicion of monopoly, which they clearly were with
vertically and horizontally integrated firms controlling nearly every
theater, production company, and the distributors connecting them. The
studio system collapsed under government pressure and rebellious casts and
crews, and the desperate epics of the 1950s only hastened their demise.
While international films began to swarm the newly freed American theaters,
Hollywood would reinvent itself in the late '50s and '60s into smaller
production houses forced to create powerful, though inexpensive, films
that mirrored the more triumphant American medium: television. Hollywood
today is well known for its productions as well as its Andy Warhol
Factory-style, but it is a lesser powerhouse to the Canadian Academy,
British Film Corporation, and growing golden age of Bollywood.