Editorial Reviews
From the back cover
Oscar Micheaux's Within Our Gates is the earliest surviving feature directed by an African American. However, this startling film, unseen for 75 years, is far more than a historic curiosity. The 1993 Library of Congress inter-title restoration reveals it as passionate social history, confronting racism through a story of a young African American woman who seeks a Northern white patron for a Southern school for black children. The scenes of lynching and attempted white-on-black rape may be a response to D.W. Griffith's The Birth of A Nation and remains shocking to this day. Plot Summary
Southern negro Sylvia Landry visits her cousin Alma in the north, where there is less racial prejudice than in her home town of Piney Woods in the deep south, & is awaiting her fiancé, Conrad. But Alma has designs on Conrad & tricks Sylvia into a compromising situation when he arrives & he abandons her. Disheartened, she returns to Piney Woods to help a reverend running a school for young negroes. Sylvia learns that the reverend hasn't the heart to turn away poor students, and unless he can raise $5,000 to supplement the $1.49 per child per year that the state supplies, the school will be closed. She goes up north again to try to raise the money & has little success but meets kindly negro, Dr. V. Vivian, he helps her regain her stolen purse. When she saves a child from being hit by an auto, she is slightly injured. But the owner of the car is philanthropist Mrs. Elena Warwick, who is sympathetic to her quest & promises to donate the $5,000 to the school. Her bigoted southern friend, Mrs. Stratton, tries to talk her out of the donation, & Mrs. Warwick gets so incensed she raises the amount to $50,000. Her job done, Sylvia returns to Piney Woods. But Dr. Vivian has fallen in love with Sylvia & goes to Alma to try to find her. There he learns the shocking details of her past & that of her family.
Summary by Arthur Hausner {genart@volcano.net}