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Charlie Chaplin

 

Charles Chaplin is one of the beloved comedians of the world.

If Charles Chaplin had limited his career only to short films, he still would have left a strong influence on the development of world cinema.

Many of the two-reelers created from 1916 to 1917 are short masterpieces where a great deal of action in the form of slapstick comedy evolved. Comic chases and fights were developed by Chaplin to squeeze many gags from one situation. He was able to produce more laughs per two-reeler than anyone else.

In these short films his skill and innovation as an actor were revealed. Chaplin was a master of both broad, acrobatic pantomime and simple routines that demanded slight hand movements and facial expressions. He was able to make smoking a sigarette and counting money extremely funny. He had an acting intensity not possessed by other comedians.

The short film technique Chaplin carried over to his full-lengh movie of the 20’s. Three great feature films – “The Kid”, “The Gold Rush” and “The Circus” were created by Chaplin in the golden age of silent screen comedy. What distinquished his works in the 20’s was the ability to use sentiment in real dramas.the audience did not only laugh at the Little Tramp but also felt sorry for him. Chaplin was able to evoke both a tear and a laugh. At times the two were fused.

So great was Chaplin’s popularity that in the 30’s he was able to produce two feature-length comedies which were actually silent films. In the 1931 “City Lights” using a recorded music score and a few sound effects, Chaplin created another masterpiece when all the industry had turned to sound. No one objected to the lack of the human voice, and the picture was a great success with the public. It was the most sentimental story Chaplin had ever handled. It focused on the Little Tramp affection for a blind girl. The subject of the film may be regarded as tear-jerking and sentimental, but it goes without saying that it is made with restraint and taste.

In 1936 Chaplin produced “Modern Times” with only a few concessions to the medium that was then seven years old and fully accepted by everyone except Chaplin. He only used a radio, a record player and a jabber-wacky song which he sang himself at the end of the film. The song had lyrics created by Chaplin from a mixture of pseudo French, Italian and Spanish. The song was accompanied by a pantomime and was obviously intended as a satire of the talkies.

The film showed in justice and brutality of dehumanized society.

Chaplin is at his best when he burlesques the factory worker turned into a trained ape, or cruelty and heartlessness with which the Little Tramp is treated by the authorities. We sympathize with the human tenderness of the tramp that looks for a kind gesture in a cold, self-centered world.

Among the films of his sound period “The Great Dictator” (1940) is worth special mentioning. This film is a lampoon against fascism and autocracy. Chaplin burlesques the dictator’s self-inflating and even maniac ravings on a speaker’s platform.



One great scene shows the tyrant using a world map, in globe form of course, as a ball to kick around. It is one of the greatest anti-fascist and anti-war movies that has ever been created.

Chaplin left a great comic tradition that was to some extent carried on into the sound age. He was the most talented comedian to incorporate into the talkies the art that had been developed in the 20’s. His masterpieces are popular now and they will live on. They will never fade and will influence the film comedies yet to be born.

(From “The American Cinema” by Donald E. Staples)

 

E. Answer the following questions:

 

  1. What were the characteristic features of the short films produced by Charles Chaplin from 1916 to 1917?
  2. What great full-length silent movies were created by Charles Chaplin in the twenties?
  3. Did Charles Chaplin make any concessions to the sound in his film?
  4. What problems of contemporary life did Charles Chaplin touch upon in “Modern Times”?
  5. Why is “The Great Dictator” worth special attention?
  6. What contribution did Charles Chaplin make to the world cinema?
  7. Have you seen any films with Charles Chaplin? If so, what do you think of them?

 

F. Explain what is meant by:

 

  1. He had an acting intensity not possessed by other comedians…
  2. What distinguished his works in the 20’s was the ability to use sentiment in real dramas.
  3. So great was Charles Chaplin’s popularity that in the 30’s he was able to produce two feature-length comedies which were actually silent films.
  4. “The Great Dictator” is a lampoon against fascist and autocracy.
  5. Chaplin left a great comic tradition that was to some extent carried on into the sound.

 

G. Speak on your favorite actor.

 

H. You belong to a fun club of your favorite actor. Write a letter to him /her saying which of his/ her parts you like most and why.

 


Date: 2015-02-03; view: 1069


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