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Shoulder Arms Clippings 32/246

Moving Picture World, New York, July 20, 1918.

Shoulder Arms Scenes

& Pat Sullivan

The creator of Felix the Cat

(...) Photo, Pictures and Picturegoer,

London, Nov. 1925, detail

& The Biggest Laughing Feast of the Season

„HOW CHARLIE CAPTURED the KAISER“

      A Roaring Side-Splitting Burlesque Cartoon by the famous

      Humorist PAT SULLIVAN

(...) Moving Picture Weekly, Sept. 14, 1918, double page

& The biggest Laugh hing Fest of the Season!!

      A Roaring Side-Splitting Burlesque Cartoon by the famous

      Humorist PAT SULLIVAN

„How Charlie Captured The Kaiser“

      BOOK IT!   BOOK IT   BOOK IT!

      It‘s A Riot!

(...) Motion Picture News, Aug. 31, 1918 (also in Moving

Picture World, Aug. 24, 1918)

& The Funniest Reel Ever Made

      HOW CHALIE CAPTURED THE KAISER

      Pat Sullivan Made It

(...) Moving Picture World, Sept. 14, 1918

& „HOW CHALIE CAPTURED THE KAISER“

A RIOT! (...) shaking the whole country with laughter (...)

Universal Film MFG. CO Carl Laemmle President

(...) Moving Picture World, Oct. 19, 1918

& One Reel of Funniest Foolishness

      Pat Sullivan‘s Cartoon

„How CHARLIE CAPTURED THE KAISER“

      Book it today – It‘s a Riot!

UNIVERSAL FILM MN‘FG. CO.  

(...) Moving Picture World, Sept. 28, 1918

& Pat Sullivan‘s Greatest Animated Cartoon

      „How Charlie Captured The Kaiser“

(...) Moving Picture Weekly, Dec. 7, 1918


Shoulder Arms! Is Chaplin‘s Next“

Editorial content. „,Shoulder Arms!‘ Is Chaplin‘s Next

      It Is Designed for Entertainment of Soldiers and Their Families

      – Comedian Finds Possibilities in Grenades.

      The secret is out. Charlie Chaplin‘s second picture to be made under his contract with the First National Exhibitors‘ Circuit

is to be a military subject, and will be entitled Shoulder Arms! It will

probably be published early in August.

     The comedian decided during his recent Liberty Loan tour

to make a picture primarily for the amusement of the boys

in khaki and their friends and families. Those who have had

a peep at some of the scenes already filmed declare that

they represent the last word in comic novelty. Chaplin is said

to be as expert in the manipulation of a hand grenade

as a trench veteran, although the effects he secures with his

marksmanship are extraordinarily different from the

accepted military kind.

      Corporal O. W. De Varila, who fired the first shot

in France for the United States artillery, and who is now in this

country on furlough, has recently visited the Chaplin studios

to give his friend Charlie some first–hand pointers on life as it is

actually lived in dugout, trench and camp. There is

a possibility that de Varila may himself appear in some

of the scenes.“

      Identical text in Exhibitors Herald, July 17, 1918.


Redaktioneller Inhalt.


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