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Public Domain

The Lily of the Tenements

1911 · Biograph Company · Dir. D.W. Griffith

A struggling young seamstress supports her elderly parents by working at home. The landlord offers free rent for sex, but she declines. He threatens foreclosure, but she is saved when a large sewing order comes her way. She rushes to the landlord’s office to arrange for an extension on the rent, encounters the landlord’s son, and leaves an ambiguous message saying only that she must see the landlord on important business. The old man receives the message and leaves for her apartment. His son, unaware of his father’s lechery, innocently follows after him to convey an urgent business message. When he walks in on his father attacking the seamstress, he interferes, denounces the old man, and provides the girl’s family with food and medical help.

Confidence
100
— Legal Reasoning —

Why this status applies

The Lily of the Tenements is a 1911 silent short film directed by D.W. Griffith and starring Dorothy West. This film was produced and published in the United States prior to the definitive copyright cutoff of January 1, 1928. Under the Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, all works published in the United States before 1928 have entered the public domain regardless of whether they were originally registered or renewed. This occurs because the maximum possible term of protection for works of this era (95 years) has elapsed. As such, the film has been in the public domain since January 1, 2007 (95 years after the end of 1911). It is currently available in various archives and public domain collections due to this status.
— Cited Sources —

Supporting facts

Research summary based on cited sources, not legal advice. Always consult a qualified copyright attorney before commercial use.