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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › City_LightsCity Lights - Wikipedia

    Chaplin biographer Jeffrey Vance has summarized all the best criticism and all the notable filmmakers who have singled out City Lights as their favorite Chaplin film throughout the decades in the Criterion Collection audio commentary track for the film. [69]

  3. Dec 21, 1997 · If only one of Charles Chaplin's films could be preserved, “City Lights” (1931) would come the closest to representing all the different notes of his genius.

  4. Sep 27, 2021 · CITY LIGHTS isnt my favorite Charlie Chaplin movie. That distinction goes to THE GOLD RUSH (1925), and in fact, THE KID (1921) is in second place. But this is something we could call...

  5. Mar 11, 2017 · Blindness. 1. The film’s structure and its use of comedy. When talking about a film’s structure, there is a variety of elements that one has to consider besides the plot and the performance itself. In Chaplin’s case, as a comedian, he of course dealt with a number of components which the average drama often didn’t feature – elements of comedy.

    • Masterpieces: Charlie Chaplin's City Lights
    • A Sight For Blind Eyes
    • The Bet on The Table
    • Legacy
    • A Viewer's Guide

    But instead of packing it in, Chaplin decided to fight back. He wanted to produce one final movie that would put talkies in their place and showcase “the great beauty of silence.” When no one would finance his picture, he doubled down on his bet, cashing out his entire stock portfolio to finance it himself. “Nothing could deter me from making it,” ...

    From the beginning, Chaplin knew City Lightswould be about blindness. His original plot involved a circus clown who loses his sight, then must hide the fact from his sickly child. After tweaking the concept, Chaplin settled on an idea he liked better: his signature character the Tramp would fall in love with a blind flower girl, then try valiantly—...

    For City Lightsto truly outshine the talkies, Chaplin knew he couldn’t rely on gags alone. In previous films, he’d built thin scripts around a series of vaudeville set pieces. This time he insisted that plot and characters drive the action—a modern notion for comedies. He also retooled his storytelling: Chaplin interweaved the pathos and comedy to ...

    When City Lights finally debuted in New York in 1931, the reaction was overwhelmingly positive. The film was so popular that the theater had showings from 9 a.m. to midnight continuously, every day except Sunday. According to historian Charles Maland, “by the end of 1931, the [United Artists’] ledgers reveal, City Lights had already accumulated mor...

    Making Noise In the opening scene, Chaplin throws a curve ball at the crowd. A town official and a woman dedicating a statue are heard speaking. But instead of words, all the audience hears is Charlie Brown-style quacking. Minutes later, the Tramp is caught napping on the unveiled statue and climbs down. As an official yells at him, Chaplin pauses,...

    • Bill Demain
  6. Apr 17, 2024 · Starring and directed by icon and comic Charlie Chaplin, City Lights is cherished as one of the last hit silent films. However, what is sometimes missed on initial viewings of City Lights is how brilliantly it manages to meld comedy and critique to tell a poignant and entertaining story about modern America.

  7. City Lights, the most cherished film by Charlie Chaplin, is also his ultimate Little Tramp chronicle. The writer-director-star achieved new levels of grace, in both physical comedy and dramatic poignancy, with this silent tale of a lovable vagrant falling for a young blind woman who sells flowers on the street (a magical Virginia Cherrill) and ...