Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Max Reinhardt
Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Max Reinhardt
MAX REINHARDT
According to recent press reports from Berlin The Circus has been hailed both as a supreme screen comedy and as a philosophic contribution of the highest significance. Some critics profess to see a philosophy in every scene. (p. 6)
Fortunately we have passed beyond that stage. We can enjoy Chaplin and let who will philosophize. There was a time, just before and after The Gold Rush, when we too used the heavy approach. There was much talk of the underlying pathos, the tragedy of frustration and other phrases invented by self-conscious critics who were afraid of laughing at Chaplin for his own sake. Echoes of this higher criticism seem to have reached Chaplin himself and to have cramped his spontaneity for a while, if we are to judge from some of the scenes in The Gold Rush where the pathos was laid on a little too thickly.
Chaplin has recovered from that phase and so have we…. [Whatever] Chaplin's philosophy may be,...
[The entire page is 448 words long]
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