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80 of 80 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
More missing footage found!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
David Shepard gave a sneak preview of these new DVDs at the Niles-Essanay Film Museum's Edison Theater on June 23,2006. I must say that while the last DVD restoration was great, this one keeps that same excellent film transfer, but adds more missing footage & title/dialogue cards from newly discovered prints.
ONE AM has the biggest improvement with a total of over 7 minutes of additional footage, I was not able to do a side-by-side comparison but there were scenes I did not remember. I do not want to spoil the comedy surprises of new footage here, you will have to enjoy it yourself. Other shorts such as THE RINK included new comedy bits and title / dialogue cards that helped the flow & understanding of the story. The bottom line is that this restoration does not improve on the already sharper picture quality of the previous release, but it does add missing footage not seen in the U.S. since the films' original releases. UPDATE 7/20: I have now had a chance to do a syncronized side-by-side comparison. While all of the other shorts are restored as mentioned above, adding new footage to the existing transfer, ONE AM is a totally new transfer. My reaction to this new transfer is mixed. The big plus is a total of 7 minutes of new material added through out the short! In addition, the old transfer was from a print that was matted on the sides to add a soundtrack, causing a tall & thin picture. This new transfer restores the original square framed picture, adding to the sides of the picture. The negative side to this new transfer is that the complete full frame print is from a negative that is a couple more generations away from the original camera negative. This is most noticable in the opening (and longer) taxi scene. Picture details in the taxi are lost in the blacks, where the older transfer shows some vehicle details. In a conversation I had with David, he said that trying to add the new footage to the existing footage on this title was too jarring, plus the sides of the picture were missing on the old transfer. The decision was made to go with the complete print for the whole transfer. It should be noted that the bulk of the short that takes place inside the house does not look bad and the benefits of the added picture to the sides are a big plus in keeping the new transfer. David also stated that he was working on restoring Chaplin's Keystone comedies! If it is a David Shepard project, it is well worth getting.
26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The definitive Mutual collection of all the Mutual collections,
By
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
Chaplin's Mutual-two-reelers, which by many are looked upon as the comedian's noblest work, have been brought out on video and DVD several times, always with variable quality. Some have been good, others weak.
I once heard a proverb which fascinated me, "The biggest enemy to great, is good." Well then, CHAPLIN MUTUAL COMEDIES: RESTORED 90TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION is not among the good sets; it is the greatest one out there. Not only does it include clear prints of the twelve pearls, all with beautiful musical scores composed by Carl Davis -- several of the movies, such as ONE A.M. and THE RINK, also have recently discovered footage added, available for the first time since their original release in 1916-17. This makes the collection very well worth to get even if you own all of the movies from before, like I do. Oh well, the set would be a treat anyway, because of the special features, which actually could have worked as its own release. Especially interesting are two rarely-seen documentaries. The first one of them, THE GENTLEMAN TRAMP (78 min.) from 1975 --which I'd tried to find for years-- is narrated by Laurence Oliver, Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, and includes numbers of home movies, archive footage, etc. The second documentary, CHAPLIN'S GOLIATH (54 min.) from 1996 covers the life of Eric Campbell, the heavy Scotsman who played the villain in each one of Chaplin's Mutual-comedies. Also included are two fine and very interesting booklets: "The Chaplin Mutuals" by Jeffrey Vance and "The Making of The Gentleman Tramp" by Richard Patterson. My only complaint is that while the music is very good --beautiful, really-- and fits the films wonderfully, there are a few times that I think it sounds a little too dramatic or melancholic when it, in my opinion, rather should be amusing; especially in ONE A.M. But that's just according to my taste. Sadly, there still seems to be certain footage missing available elsewhere even in this set, especially in THE CURE. However, this is the closest to perfection anyone has come yet and is, needless to say, a "must" to every Chaplin-fan. Well worth the money!
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chaplin's Finest Work,
By
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
When Charlie Chaplin signed with the Mutual Film Company in 1916, he became the highest-paid performer at that time (with an annual salary of $670,000) and produced a dozen two-reelers that served as a blueprint for the rest of his career. The Mutuals captured the essence of Chaplin's serio-comic brilliance while revealing an artist at his creative peak. A stronger sense of ensemble was evident in the menacing presence of Eric Campbell, who became regarded as the ideal Chaplin heavy. "Easy Street" and "The Immigrant" (both 1917) represent the comedian's first masterpieces - incorporating social criticism that foreshadowed his feature-length efforts. The rough-edged quality of the Keystone and Essanay shorts has been replaced by a more polished style, with "The Rink" (1916) and "The Cure" (1917) displaying remarkable physical virtuosity. Charlie's later films never matched the exuberance and self-assuredness of that glorious 16-month period when the Little Tramp reached his artistic maturity.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The essence of Chaplin's art.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
It has been 90 years since these great comedies were made (1916-17) and many folks that are new to Chaplin may dismiss them as funny shorts. Chaplin by 1916 was a real big star and was paid $650,000 to do these 12 comedies in a little over a year. A ridiculous sum in 1916. Unlike his full feature films from the 20's and 30's (with the exception of City Lights - a masterpiece)) where there was much emphasis on pathos,and tearjerking scenes, these comedies are wild and wacky. In 1970, I bought some of these on 8mm films thru Blackhawk Films and the quality was OK, but these prints are a revelation. The Mutual Comedies are the height of Chaplin's art. Each film features a theme: The Pawnbroker, The Rink, The Vagabond, Easy Street etc. and they are all hilarious. The Mutuals had a cast of stock actors that too were outstanding including his 300-pound bully Eric Campbell, Edna Purveyance, his love interest, Albert Austin, Henry Bergman and others. THIS IS THE FINEST QUALITY EVER SEEN ON THESE MOVIES! There are Documentaries galore which are also very interesting. Without dialogue, Chaplin could make you laugh just with his eyes or an expression, or his walk. People forget that he revolutionized motion pictures by bringing movies even to the smallest of towns. People all over the world loved Chaplin. This is a milestone in cinema history and every serious student of film should own this and watch a master at work.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best prints I've ever seen from the 1910's!,
By Ben Parker "Cheshire" (Church Point, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
This is the best I've ever seen the mutuals looking. If you've only seen them on a cheapie DVD with the same Duke Ellington jazz tune played on every film, you don't know what you're missing. Every film is scored by the best silent composer working today, Carl Davis, and taken from some of the best prints I've ever seen of anything from the 1910's, which is usually barely watchable, here looks as clear as something from the 40's. Most importantly they're fun films, funnier than Charlie's more sentimental 20's stuff.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best I've seen!!,
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
This collection of Chaplin's Mutuals is the absolute best I've seen! The quality is so beautiful. I've spent my pennies on some rather disappointing collections. It's made me see that when it comes to Chaplin it's quality, not just quantity I want. I highly recommend this beautifully restored collection to any Chaplin lover! It will not disappoint! :)
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nice set!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
I was introduced to Chaplin's Mutual comedies as a kid, when I bought an 8mm film copy of "Easy Street" from Blackhawk films back in the late 1960's. I was totally hooked. Since then I have taped "Easy Street" off of Television (A&E network) and my daughter bought be an inexpensive boxed set of Chaplin short subjects for Christmas that included "Easy Street." Both prints were edited to disguise the fact that the man who menaces Edna Purviance toward the end of the film is a drug addict. This always bothered me. I wanted a complete copy of the film, like I had when I was a kid. So when this edition went on sale, I jumped at it. I was much more than satisfied. Not only was the print of "Easy Street" complete, but the contrast and definition were much better than I ever knew existed. You can even see the milk pouring out of the baby bottle in the worship service scene at the beginning of the the film. I always knew that was happening as it is inferred by Charlie's reactions, but I can't remember seeing a print of the film where you can really see it.
All of the films in this set are of the same high quality (given their age), both technical and artistic with high quality music accompaniment that fits the action with out being so broad as to be "cartoonish." I even enjoyed the documentary on Eric Campbell, an actor I always wondered about, as he was featured so prominently in these films and then was tragically killed soon after their completion. There are not many silent films that I would recommend to someone who has never seen a silent film and might be skeptical of whether they could enjoy something out of so distant a past, but these comedies are a great place to start. Chaplin raised the art of silent film making to it's pinnacle in his day and can still be richly enjoyed in ours.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The evolution of Chaplin as a filmmaker,
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
This set consists of all twelve of the two reel films Charles Chaplin made for the Mutual Film Company in 1916 and 1917, and is a good place to start for people who are curious about the early work of Charles Chaplin. His early films, such as "The Floorwalker" and "The Fireman" have more of the crude slapstick style of humor present in Chaplin's Essanay and Keystone comedies. However, as the series progresses, you can clearly see Chaplin's evolution as a filmmaker. "The Vagabond" seems to presage "The Kid" in its melodramatic style, and "One AM" shows Chaplin do a rare solo act in which he plays a drunk man returning home from a bar at closing time and using just about every piece of furniture in his home as a comic prop as the house itself becomes his nemesis. He begins to become a much better storyteller as well as a good comedian, and the entries from the end of the series, such as "The Immigrant" and "The Cure" are considered among his best work and are quite cleverly done. As the other reviewers have said, this set is very high quality in regards to the video. This is not one of those cheap Chaplin sets that you can pick up for less than twenty dollars that are barely watchable. In addition to the twelve comedies on the first two discs are two documentaries on the final two discs. The first documentary, "The Gentleman Tramp", is a very well done 1975 biography of Chaplin's life including plenty of clips of home movies of his later life as well as clips from his shorts and features. The final disc is a documentary about Eric Campbell (1880-1917), the large man who is Chaplin's foil throughout the Mutual series of films.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Why???,
By Jon (NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
Why is this updated superior version out of print and only the earlier edition available? With new dvd prices above $200, this situation is intolerable, Image! At the very least, a blu-ray version is due, yes?
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is Actually Funny,
By
This review is from: Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition (DVD)
Generally, I find Charlie Chaplin not funny and I have always wondered why people view him as a comic genius. I now realize that his reputation was built on shorts he made during World War I because the shorts on this DVD that were made in 1916 and 1917 are pure genius. I actually laughed out loud several times.
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Chaplin Mutual Comedies - Restored Edition by Charles Chaplin (DVD - 2006)
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