Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Hi. I'm Wheeler Winston Dixon, James Ryan professor of Film Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln,

  • and I'd like to talk for a few minutes about the work of Charlie Chaplin, who was one of the cinema's greatest comedians.

  • Born in England, Chaplin immigrated to the United States.

  • He was a vaudeville comedian who worked on stage,

  • but he found a home at Keystone originally, making Keystone comedies, and there he honed his craft.

  • One of his earliest films was a movie called "The Kid Auto Races at Venice,"

  • and this film had absolutely no plot at all.

  • It was basically a soapbox derby that was going on at Venice, California,

  • and Max Sennet said, "just go to the finish line and make a nuisance of yourself, and we'll just build something out of that."

  • And it's the first evocation of "the tramp" character on screen, whom he would build up over the years.

  • As time went by, Chaplin became incredibly well paid.

  • And then he went on to direct a series of feature films in his own studio.

  • He was one of the few comedians to have a combination of business sense...

  • He was also a brilliant screenwriter, director and actor.

  • And by 1925, when he made "The Gold Rush," he had complete creative control over his work.

  • He also very famously resisted the coming of sound saying:

  • "the moment that the tramp speaks, all of the mystery and magic will be gone."

  • So, he made "City Lights" in 1931 with the tramp character.

  • 1936, his satire of modern industrial methods called "Modern Times"... 1936, but still essentially a silent picture,

  • with just music and sound effects.

  • It wasn't until 1940, when he made "The Great Dictator," which was his brilliant satire of Adolph Hitler,

  • that he actually spoke on the screen. He played Adenoid Hinkle, who was a parody of Adolph Hitler.

  • And he does a fantastic scene where he floats the earth as this globe... my world... this poetic dance with this huge globe. It's just an amazing film.

  • After that, his career became more problematic for many people.

  • He directed a brilliant, but very dark comedy, called "Monsieur Verdoux," about a mass murderer who kills a series of wives for money.

  • "Limelight" in 1952, was about an aging clown.

  • "A King in New York" in 1957, and then "A Countess in Hong Kong," his final feature in 1967.

  • Darkening all of this just a shade was the fact that in 1952, he was forced to leave the United States.

  • On a publicity tour of England, he was refused re-admitance by the FBI, and labeled as a communist.

  • He settled in England, and then moved to Switzerland.

  • And it was only in 1972 that he was brought back and given an Academy Award, which he so richly deserved.

  • CHAPLIN: "Oh, you're wonderful, sweet people. Thank you."

  • He was also a great composer. He wrote a lot of songs that are pop songs, for example, "Love, Here is my Song,"

  • which was a huge hit for Petula Clark.

  • And had a surprisingly rich song book.

  • So, Charlie Chaplin, a rennaisance man... one of the great comedians of all time,

  • and someone who's films you should absolutely see at the early possible convenience.

  • I'm Wheeler Winston Dixon for Frame By Frame.

Hi. I'm Wheeler Winston Dixon, James Ryan professor of Film Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln,

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it