The Gold Rush from Pictures and the Picturegoer
Item
- Title
- The Gold Rush from Pictures and the Picturegoer
- Creator
- Odhams Press
- Date
- 1925-07
- Description
-
This article is about Chaplin's film The Gold Rush (1925). It describes the general plot of the film, the setting of the characters and the scenes shot. It describes the authenticity of the scenes in the film.
Finally, the essay presents The Gold Rush opens up an entire world of contradictory situations and tragi-comic climaxes as Chaplin, with a Shavian manner and sympathetic vision, reveals the subtle art of burlesquing history on the silver sheet. - The review of Chaplin in Pictures and the Picturegoer
- Sell the Charlie Chaplin, the Fans Love Best!
- The Gold Rush, Charlie Chaplin, 1925 - Dinner Roll Dancing Scene
- Scholarly Significance
-
As the article suggests, this fusion of tragedy with comedy evolved with Chaplin's films, beginning with The Gold Rush (1925), which loses its comic and tragic qualities and tends to be a mixture of them.
The Gold Rush (1925) is, therefore, an excellent tragicomedy. - Place
- London
- Identifier
- picture10odha
- Cataloguer
- Yuan Yuan
Linked resources
Title | Class |
---|---|
The review of Chaplin in Pictures and the Picturegoer | Journal |