Film Review
City Lights marks the absolute
high point of the silent phase of Charlie Chaplin's filmmaking career,
but it was made just as silent films were fast becoming obsolete,
consigned to history by the public's burgeoning enthusiasm for that new
phenomenon, the talking picture. When Chaplin began work on the
film in 1928, audiences had already had their first taste of sound
films, starting with
The Jazz Singer
(1927), so it must have been tempting for Chaplin to follow
suit. However, Chaplin was so wedded to the silent film
that he resisted with an almost King Canute-like tenacity. It
would be another decade before he would make a conventional sound film,
The Great Dictator
(1940).
When
City Light was released
in 1931, sound had virtually taken over from silent cinema, and no one
was more surprised than Chaplin when film proved to be a huge
commercial success, loved by critics and audiences alike. The
film offered a much-needed diversion from the woes of the Great
Depression.
Although
City Lights has no
intelligible spoken dialogue, it does have a synchronised soundtrack
which comprises a score (composed by Chaplin) and sound effects (for
some very effective aural jokes).
Chaplin is renowned for his perfectionist approach to filmmaking, and
nowhere is this more apparent than on
City
Lights. The film took two years and eight months to make,
the longest period that Chaplin spent on a single film. One
scene, the one where the tramp meets the blind flower girl for the
first time, is reputed to have taken three months to shoot. The
ease with which the film flows and the effortless elegance in Chaplin's
performance both belie the extraordinary time and effort which went in to
making the film.
Chaplin's co-star on
City Lights
was Virginia Cherrill, a twenty-year-old socialite with no prior acting
experience. Although Cherrill gives an effective, even highly
engaging performance, she had an extremely bad working relationship
with Chaplin. At one point, Chapin became so annoyed with
Cherrill's apparent lack of interest in the film that he dismissed
her. He intended to replace her with Georgia Hale, who had
featured in his earlier film
The
Gold Rush (1925). When he realised the cost of having to
re-shoot Cherrill's scenes would be prohibitive, Chaplin had no choice
but to reinstate his original leading lady.
City Lights is replete with
the kind of visual gags that had earned Chaplin his reputation as
cinema's greatest clown and which are still highly amusing today.
It also features some of his most inspired set-pieces, including the
hilarious boxing ring scene, which is a reworking of a similar sequence
from an earlier Chaplin film,
The
Champion (1915). Chaplin wasn't just a first class
comedian; he also had a natural talent for pathos, as is apparent in
the very last scene in this film. The final shot is the most
poignant of any Chaplin film, and also one of the great moments in
cinema history.
City Lights
is a film that will make you laugh and then make you cry. This is
Chaplin at his best.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Charles Chaplin film:
Modern Times (1936)
Film Synopsis
One evening, a good natured tramp talks a depressed millionaire out of
killing himself and, in his gratitude, the millionaire declares that
they will be friends for life. The tramp asks merely for some
money so that he can buy flowers from a poor blind girl he met
earlier. When he learns that the girl and her grandmother
face eviction from their modest apartment, the tramp sets out to earn
money to pay their rent arrears. Having lost his job as a street
cleaner, the tramp decides to try his luck in the boxing ring...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.