In Collection
#1651
Seen It:
No
Comedy
USA / English
| Charlie Chaplin |
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| Dawn Addams |
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| Robert Arden |
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| Maxine Audley |
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| Phil Brown |
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| Clifford Buckton |
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A King in New York A King in New York, Charlie Chaplin's penultimate film--featuring his final starring performance--was made in 1957 but wasn't officially released in America until the '70s, when it, surprisingly enough, won an Oscar for Chaplin's score. What took so long? Thanks to his politics and unorthodox personal life, Chaplin was pretty roundly hated by the late '50s, but had the movie been better, someone might've brought it stateside sooner. Chaplin plays King Shahdov of Estrovia, on the lam when revolution grips his homeland. In New York, despite the occasional indignity, he's treated as royalty until he takes a stand against the commie-hunters, a plotline that hit way too close to home at the time (Chaplin, remember, was ahead of everyone in attacking Hitler when he made The Great Dictator). There's one inspired bit, as Shahdov orders dinner over the din of a supper club, but overall, the satire is strident, and Chaplin's takes on such things as technology and pop music make him look decidedly like an old fogey.
--David Kronke
A Woman of Paris
At the height of his popularity, Charlie Chaplin chose to make a straight dramatic feature--without himself in a starring role. The plot of A Woman of Paris is perhaps not new: after a tragic misunderstanding, a small-town girl (former Chaplin paramour and longtime co-star Edna Purviance) goes to Paris and becomes the mistress of a rich playboy (Adolphe Menjou). But if the outline is familiar melodrama, the film still looks remarkable for its measured, adult attitude toward its characters; they are not black or white, but complicated, sophisticated shades of gray. Menjou, in particular, is a charming and thoroughly delightful cad. The film's matter-of-fact spirit on the subject of how adults conduct their sexual lives is also impressive. Critics loved the picture, but audiences did not, and Chaplin soon returned to comedy. He can be glimpsed, disguised, in a one-scene walk-through as a clumsy train porter. --Robert Horton
| Distributor |
Warner Home Video |
| Edition |
2-Pack |
| Barcode |
085393765323 |
| Region |
Region 1 |
| Release Date |
3/2/2004 |
| Packaging |
Keep Case |
| Screen Ratio |
Fullscreen (4:3) |
| Subtitles |
Chinese; English; French; Korean; Portuguese; Spanish; Thai |
| Audio Tracks |
SIL [English] |
| Layers |
Single Side, Dual Layer |
| No. of Disks/Tapes |
2 |
| Disc 1: |
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A King in New York Introduction by David Robinson - Chaplin's biographer discusses the historical and cinematic context of the film. Chaplin Today: A King in New York - Documentary by Jerome de Missolz with the participation of Jim Jarmusch. Deleted Scenes - 14 brief scenes deleted from the film for later reissue. Mandolin Serenade - Rehearsing one of the film's main musical themes. Chaplin personally conducts the orchestra. Photo Gallery - Production stills and photos of the actors. Film Posters Trailers Chaplin Collection
A Woman in Paris Introduction by David Robinson - Chaplin's biographer discusses the historical and cinematic context of the film. Chaplin Today: A Woman in Paris - Documentary by Mathias Ledoux with the participation of the Norwegian film actress and director Liv Ullmann. Deleted Shots - Scenes cut by Chaplin from the film when he composed the musical score for the film's reissue. United Artists - Singing the contract creating United Artists: Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and D.W. Griffith Paris in the 20s - Images of the French capital in the Roaring Twenties, the setting and the period of the film's history. Camille (1926) - An amateur movie by Ralph Barton based on La Dame aux Camelias and featuring numerous personalities of the New York (and visiting) intelligentsia of the time, including Anita Loos, Paul Robeson, Sinclair Lewis, Ethel Barrymore, Sacha Guitry, Yvonne Printemps and Charles Chaplin Photo Gallery - Photos of the production, sets and the star, Edna Purviance Film Posters Trailers The Chaplin Collection
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