Film Review
When Charlie Chaplin had his visa revoked, preventing his return to
America in 1952, he had every reason to be bitter.
The most high profile casualty of the McCarthyist anti-Communist witch hunts that had
poisoned the political and intellectual climate of America in the early
1950s, Chaplin was forced into exile in Europe and retaliated with
A King in New York, a vehement
assault on all things which, he believed, had robbed America of its
true cultural and democratic values. There is hardly an aspect of
modern American life that Chaplin does not lay into. Widescreen
cinema, rock music, advertising, celebrity, cosmetic surgery and
politics are all mercilessly lampooned by Chaplin, who appears to be
far more preoccupied with settling old scores than seeking laughs.
Made at Shepperton Studios, England, on a tight budget,
A King in New York is marred by
some obvious technical flaws, the result of some aggressive penny
pinching by an overly cost-conscious director. The film's main
failing, however, is its script, which lacks focus and is too broad a
satire to be entirely effective. Chaplin's habit of lecturing his
audience on the failings of modern society is also apparent, most
notably in the long outpourings of invective that he puts into the
mouth of his ten-year-old son, Michael. Yet, despite its
many failings,
A King in New York
is a film that is extremely hard to dislike. The film may not be
as perfectly crafted nor as tirelessly funny as Chaplin's previous
comic masterpieces, but it is an effective and quite daring commentary
on the period in which it was made. If nothing else, it deserves
credit for being the first film to openly condemn the anti-Communist
hysteria that was sweeping America at the time.
In his last major screen role, Chaplin is in fine form and turns in an
engaging performance, although he is completely eclipsed in some scenes
by his son Michael, who shows a maturity in his acting that is way
beyond his years. Chaplin's scenes with his son have a similar
emotional warmth to those seen in
The Kid (1921), mirroring
Chaplin's partnership with the young Jackie Coogan. As in that
earlier film, Chaplin shows us that it is the children who suffer most
from the societal ills; the most moving sequence is the one in which
Michael Chaplin's character is revealed to have betrayed his parents'
friends to the anti-Red brigade in order to have his parents released
from prison. No one films the suffering of children more
eloquently and poignantly than Chaplin.
By virtue of its subject matter, it was many years (not until 1967)
before
A King in New York was
screened in the United States. The reaction to the film on its
first release in Europe was generally positive, although since then
critics and Chaplin enthusiasts have been divided as to its
merits. It certainly has more going for it than Chaplin's next
and final film,
A Countess
from Hong Kong (1967), not least of which is an improbable (and highly
amusing) encounter between Chaplin and another comedy giant in the
making, Sid James. There may be far fewer gags than we would
expect from a Chaplin comedy, but the highly symbolic punchline, in
which Chaplin literally dampens the ardour of the HUAC, is well worth
waiting for.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Charles Chaplin film:
A Countess from Hong Kong (1967)
Film Synopsis
Igor Shahdov, the King of Estrovia, leaves his country just as it is
plunged into revolution. He arrives in New York City, hoping to
make his fortune by selling his blueprints for an atomic power
station. When his Prime Minister absconds with all his money,
King Shahdov has no option but to appear in television commercials,
trading on the fact he has become the latest media star having been
secretly filmed at a dinner party. He takes an interest in a
ten-year-old boy, Rupert Macabee, whose parents are arrested for being
members of the Communist Party. Shahdov himself ends up being
suspected of having communist sympathies and is summoned to the House
Committee on Un-American Activities...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.