Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Otis Ferguson
Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Otis Ferguson
OTIS FERGUSON
The Great Dictator opens on some pretty dated nonsense in the war zone and the kind of lighting and movie action they used in Shoulder Arms. What's new is the acting, the new and different character, a mixture of sharp mimicry and the devices of absurdity. And as we might have expected from the wonderful double-talk song in Modern Times, Chaplin is as acute and perfect verbally as he is in pantomime: he has the splenetic and krauty fustian of the German orator as exactly as Hitler himself….
[When a scene is funny] it is funny as always, in the shop, on the street, around the chimney pots, with some of the oldest Chaplin favorites still peeping through. But it is also tragic because a people is being persecuted; these Jews are straight characters, not the old cartoons; and the laughter chokes suddenly and is reluctant to start again. Chaplin likes to pull out all the stops on sentimental passages, but this thing is too near...
[The entire page is 326 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Minnie Maddern Fiske
- Max Reinhardt
- G. W. Stonier
- Alexander Bakshy
- Barnet G. Braver-Mann
- Gilbert Seldes
- William Hunter
- Winston Churchill
- Otis Ferguson
- Louis Zukofsky
- Lewis Jacobs
- Otis Ferguson
- Basil Wright
- Northrop Frye
- James Agee
- Jean Renoir
- Al Capp
- Theodore Huff
- Gavin Lambert
- J. L. Tallenay
- Parker Tyler
- Vernon Young
- Penelope Houston
- FrançOis Truffaut
- Ernest Callenbach
- Dwight Macdonald
- Roger Ebert
- David Bordwell
- André Bazin
- Richard Schickel
- Stanley Kauffmann
- Colin L. Westerbeck, Jr.
- Ronald Tuch
- Eric Bentley
- Stanley Kauffmann
- Copyright
