Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Stanley Kauffmann
Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Stanley Kauffmann
STANLEY KAUFFMANN
[Before The Gold Rush, Chaplin] made very few films that took the Tramp out of contemporary city or country life. Tramps are, after all, a by-product of industry, urban or rural. Evidently (we can deduce after the event), Chaplin's unconscious saw at once, in those stereoscopic pictures, the advantages of the novelty of putting the Tramp into a context that, so to speak, had no direct relation to Trampdom, the possibilities for the "epic" that he was seeking. And, presumably, he saw the power in putting the image of the Tramp, whose black moustache is the center of the figure's color gradations, against predominantly white backgrounds. All in all, it was a chance to simultaneously vary and heighten what he had done up to now. (p. 299)
[The Gold Rush] is the "epic" that Chaplin was looking for. (p. 300)
[A] title announces "A Lone Prospector," and we see a narrow mountain path on the edge of a steep drop. I always laugh...
[The entire page is 1795 words long]
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