Charming Chaplin

This article was published in the June 16, 2008, edition of The New York Observer.

Charles Chaplin’s Monsieur Verdoux (1947), in a new 35mm print, will be shown at Film Forum for one week, June 13 to June 19, at 2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30. Chaplin (1889-1977) is supported by Martha Raye, Isobel Elsom, Marilyn Nash, Mady Correll, Irving Bacon, William Frawley and Charles Evans. The film was originally titled A Comedy of Murders, and the idea was reportedly suggested by Orson Welles, though it may have also been based on the real-life Parisian serial killer Landru, the subject of several French films.

Chaplin and Raye do a takeoff on the rowboat scene in Josef von Sternberg’s An American Tragedy (1931) that is even funnier than the one Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca performed on television. Chaplin’s stunned reaction to Raye’s signature raucous laughter in a later scene is one of his most hilarious sight gags in the talkie era. Forget the artistically and politically myopic reviews of the time (with the notable exception of James Agee’s complete rave) and its subsequent flop at the box office. It is a masterpiece. See it. 

asarris@observer.com

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Comments
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sakara (not verified) says:

same old 1960s retreads from sarris---why not peter cushing or mario bava or james hill to ever write about????....chaplin/ford/hawks/hitchcock-----BORING!

Evan (not verified) says:

As Sarris mentions in the first line, Monsieur Verdoux was released in 1947. I'm not sure how this qualifies as a "60's retread". I for one am glad to see one of the world's foremost experts on classical Hollywood writing about what he knows best. And besides, Monsieur Verdoux is neither talked about too much nor boring.

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