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Film Fun, New York, August 1918.

Star Theatre (...)

Charley Chaplin in A DOG‘S LIFE (...)

IT‘S SOME PICTURE

(...) Evening Herald, Klamath Falls, July 12, 1918


„And patiently waited in the cold entrance“

Editorial content. „Comments and Criticisms of a Free-Lance

      By Linda A. Griffith (Mrs. David W. Griffith)

      Some Nuisances of the Movies“ (...)

      „The pie slinging, except when practiced by the only

Chaplin, might well be dispensed with.“ (...)

      „The Genius of Charlie Chaplin

      When the day is dark and cold and dreary, be thankful

for Charlie Chaplin. When the sun is shining brightly

and cheer and pleasantness obtain, give thanks for Charlie

Chaplin. The long-awaited picture, the first from his

own new million-dollar studio, has arrived. A Dog‘s Life,

it is called. It seems the exhibitors fussed a bit about

paying an additional 25 per cent, for this picture, which

overran the usual 2,000 feet by an additional 700

or more. As it was in the contracts that anything over 2,000

feet would mean an extra charge of 25 per cent,

why were the exhibitors peeved? Considering the mobs

that were on hand at the theatres as early as

six-thirty p. m. in order to get a seat, and the hundreds

that had the doors closed in their eager faces and

patiently waited in the cold entrance way for the second

running of the picture, and considering the excellence

of this Chaplin picture, why need anyone be

peeved? The audience even endured without protestation

(perhaps some slept – you couldn‘t have blamed

them if they did) the most stupid, deadly dull five-reel

picture, a Triangle feature, which preceded the

Chaplin film in the San Francisco theater I attended. This,

I presume, was good business judgment on the part

of the house manager to cut down expenses by securing

a cheap picture to fill out the bill and even up for

the Chaplin film. The audience survived this Triangle picture

only in the hope of what was coming. One flash on

the screen of their beloved ,Charles.‘ and they immediately 

,came to.‘

      A Dog‘s Life shows what Chaplin can do as actor,

author and manager. Chaplin is not only the one geniune

comique the screen has produced. He has dramatic

ability as well. In one of his early pictures he gave a hint

of this in a pathetic scene, not much more than a

pause and a droop of the head. It told volumes. In A Dog‘s

Life the pathetic note is there, but Chaplin is too wise

to think the public will ever accept him in serious roles. The

public will keep him where they want him, as the one

gloriously funny man of the screen. But though ,funny man

of the screen‘ he is destined to ever be, he is withal

a genius. He is the one movie star universally admired by the

young and old, from children to their grandparents,

enjoyed in equal measure by men of intellect and the carrier

of hod, by sedate matrons and giggly girls.“ (...)


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