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Else 2022-03-12 08:01:02
some thoughts
When they saw the last two silent film comedy masters, Chaplin and Keaton, in the sound film, the CCP stage dream linkage was filled with tears several times. The two masters remembered and paid tribute to the proud and glorious live stage performances and silent films era. Although their...
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Ellen 2022-03-12 08:01:02
You were born before me, and I am old when I was born.
With the accumulation of the number of movies, it becomes more and more difficult to be impressed, and it becomes more and more difficult to see surprising works. Now I rarely watch new movies, I often look back to find those distant classics, and I often reap long-lost touches. This is a...

Ray Beltram
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Hilma 2022-03-12 08:01:02
The intuitive feeling is of course not as good as Chaplin's talent and achievements in silent films. He tried his best to display his versatility, but in the end, he had to miss the laughter and applause of the sound film era. Chaplin was a little unfamiliar with the modern age spots, but only when he returned to the stage, relying on his rich expressions and flexible limbs, he became the familiar tramp.
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Blaze 2022-03-19 09:01:10
Although not Chaplin's last work, this one can almost be regarded as a complete autobiography of a great comedian, an elegy for the end of the era of silent film giants. The historical significance is higher than the plot of the film itself, and the plot is indeed a little indulged in didactic dialogue, which takes a long time. Buster Keaton and Chaplin worked together for the first time in a feature film (in fact, they appeared together in a documentary short film in 1922), but Keaton's life at this time was poor, and it was very satisfying to have a cameo appearance. (1950's "Sunset Boulevard" also had a glimpse), Chaplin himself was expelled from the United States, and the scenery was no longer. It just confuses me that the burlesque scenes in which the two masters of silent film work together can't be called funny, maybe it's more of a sad nostalgia that permeates the whole film. The happiest thing for an actor is to die on stage, and that's exactly how it ends. The era of silent films is over, and musicals have become the mainstream of the times.
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