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The Circus (2 Disc Special Edition)
 
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The Circus (2 Disc Special Edition) (1928)

Starring: Albert Austin, Eugene Barry Director: Charles Chaplin Rating: Unrated Format: DVD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: Albert Austin, Eugene Barry, Henry Bergman, Jack Bernard, Stanley Blystone
  • Directors: Charles Chaplin
  • Format: AC-3, Black & White, Closed-captioned, Dolby, DVD, Silent, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Georgian, Chinese, Thai
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Studio: Warner Home Video
  • DVD Release Date: March 2, 2004
  • Run Time: 71 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00017LVMS
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #15,621 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #4 in  Movies & TV > Classics > Classic Stars > Chaplin, Charlie
    #4 in  Movies & TV > Comedy > Comedy Directors > Chaplin, Charlie
    #4 in  Movies & TV > Classics > Silent Films > Comedy
  • For more information about "The Circus (2 Disc Special Edition)" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Special Features

  • Introduction by David Robinson, Chaplin biographer
  • 'Chaplin Today: The Circus,' documentary by Francois Ede Deleted 10-minute sequence 'October 7-13, 1926,' Outtakes from a week of shooting Three home movies from the archives of Lord Louis Mountbatten 'The Hollywood Premiere (1928),' Reportage on the L.A. premiere 'Camera A, Camera B,' shots made simultaneously from the two cameras used 3-D Test footage by Roland Totheroh Excerpts from 'Circus Day' with Jackie Coogan -- an adaptation of a favorite children's book Photo gallery, film posters, trailers, interactive menus, and scene access

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Made in 1928 while he was in the middle of a painful divorce case, Charlie Chaplin's The Circus was so associated with bad memories for its maker that he refused even to mention it in his 1964 autobiography. Consequently, it has enjoyed less of a reputation than such films as The Gold Rush (1925) and City Lights (1931). However, while it's not quite in their league, The Circus undoubtedly deserves to be rescued from relative obscurity.

Here, Chaplin's Tramp is taken on as a clown at the circus, having been chased into the big tent by a policeman wrongly suspected of theft and wowing the audience with his pratfalls. He falls in love with the ill-treated ringmaster's daughter (Merna Kennedy) but is swiftly rivaled by a new addition to the circus, a handsome tightrope walker. To try to win back her affections, the Tramp himself attempts the same act, culminating in the best sequence of the film, when he is assailed by monkeys as he totters amateurishly and precariously along a rope suspended high in the tent. Although The Circus is marred by the rather hackneyed and (even in 1928) stale melodramatic device of the cruel father and imploring daughter, it scores high on its slapstick content, with routines involving a hall of mirrors and a mishap with a magician's equipment demonstrating Chaplin's dazzling ability to choreograph apparently improvised mayhem. --David Stubbs



Product Description

When we first meet Chaplin's Tramp in this comic gem, he's in typical straits: broke, hungry, destined to fall in love and just as sure to lose the girl. Mistaken for a pickpocket and pursued by a peace officer into a circus tent, the Tramp becomes a star when delighted patrons think his escape from John Law is an act. Classic highlights include a frenetic fun-house sequence, the Tramp turning a magic skit into mayhem and his teetering tightrope walk while monkeys cling to his head. This is comedy without a net!

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Customer Reviews

29 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Chaplin's finest "pure" comedy, December 1, 2000
By Brian Jay Jones (Damascus, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Circus (DVD)
It doesn't have the raw sentiment of CITY LIGHTS or the social relevance of either MODERN TIMES or THE GREAT DICTATOR, but for pure laugh-out-loud moments, THE CIRCUS is probably Chaplin's finest straight-ahead comedy.

The plot is fairly straightforward -- Tramp joins circus, falls in love, tries to vanquish a rival suitor, then (in an ending of typical Chaplinian pathos) arranges for the rival suitor to get the girl. However, Chaplin packs the story with enough gags, extended jokes, and visual tricks to keep the film moving at a frenetic pace, even in its moments of sweetness.

The setting of the circus naturally lends itself to plenty of comic elements, and Chaplin makes the most of them in some unexpected ways. For example, there's the expected Locked In The Cage with The Sleeping Lion joke (which has subsequently and successfully been played to the hilt in Bugs Bunny cartoons), but Chaplin gives it a graceful twist with the addition of a pan of water that'll have you on the edge of your seat as he tries frantically not to drop it.

But Chaplin doesn't just use the circus to showcase gags -- he also uses the trappings to advance some extended and complicated jokes. The opening moments of the film, for example, feature the Tramp being mistaken for a pickpocket. After a full-out chase, the Tramp, the real pickpocket, and a policeman finally end up in a funhouse, complete with animated figures and a hall of mirrors. At this point, there are two wonderful visual jokes -- the first involves the Tramp's inability to pick up a dropped hat in a hall of mirrors(in what must have been an excrutiatingly technical shot to avoid reflecting the camera.) Chaplin, ever the perfectionist, executes the scene brilliantly. The second joke -- and the one which gets the biggest belly laughs -- involves the Tramp and the hapless pickpocket pretending to be animated figures to avoid being nabbed by the policeman. When Chaplin conks the crook over the head with his own cosh, then rotates mechanically to laugh giddily . . . well, there's hardly a funnier moment in film. Suffice it to say, the crook is caught, but only after ten minutes of gags to neatly bring the extended Mistaken Identity Joke to a neat end.

Chaplin also plays out a jaw-dropping tightrope walking scene (and remember while watching that Chaplin actually taught himself to walk a tightrope for the film -- there are no stuntmen involved) which becomes all the more entertaining through the addition of some uncooperative monkeys. The impromptu results are funnier than anyone could have scripted.

While the film stays free of social commentary, there is one telling bit of artistic elbow-nudging at one point in the film, when the Tramp, who has been hired as a clown, is lectured by the crabby Ringmaster on How To Be Funny. When the Tramp participates in the hackneyed skits himself, things go wrong from the start, making the skits funnier than imagined, but remarkably UNfunny to the know-it-all Ringmaster. The message is a subtle, but clear one on Chaplin's part -- don't tell ME what's funny; let me show YOU what's funny.

While MODERN TIMES and CITY LIGHTS are the more effective films in terms of storytelling and blending humor and pathos, THE CIRCUS stands as Chaplin's funniest film in terms of successfully executed gags, jaw dropping visuals (including a remarkably advanced dream sequence), and some fall-over-laughing moments. This is the film I show to my friends who have never seen a Chaplin film (apart from some highlighted moments from MODERN TIMES or CITY LIGHTS) to give them an idea of Chaplin's talent. While it has sometimes (though rarely) failed to elicit a "Wow!", it has never failed to generate a room full of laughter -- the true testimony to Chaplin's art.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One Of Chaplin's Best; Certainly Underrated, April 27, 2006
I enjoyed this a lot more the second time when I could see it on a very clear DVD print. I don't know why that would make a difference with the story, but it did as I found it very good for the entire distance, although that's just a scant 69 minutes. The special two-disc edition does this film justice.

In the story, Charlie Chaplin does his normally-great physical slapstick so well that he accidentally becomes a hit at the circus, which is run by a nasty man (Allan Garcia) who regularly beats his sweet step-daughter, played by a very pretty Merna Kennedy. Charlie, of course, gets smitten by her and comes to her rescue.

This movie has a different kind of ending that what you'd normally see for a comedy but it's inspiring as Chaplin performs a noble deed.

Chaplin's timing and clever slapstick routines never fail to amaze me. Even though silent films aren't seen by many people these days, it's works of art like this that will endure forever. This is not of one of Chaplin's more famous movies.....but it should be. I think it's one of his best.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Possibly his most underrated, December 17, 2006
By Anyechka (Rensselaer, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
While perhaps not up to quite the same fine level as, say, 'City Lights' or 'Monsieur Verdoux,' this film is a small minor masterpiece in its own right, and frequently cited as Chaplin's most underrated film. Viewing the film, it's hard to believe that the filming experience was such a nightmare, what with things like fires, heavy rains, theft, and Chaplin's messy divorce from his second wife. Generally speaking, Chaplin's features seem to have a bit more drama than endless gags (not that that makes them any less powerful or classic), with the focus being on the narrative storyline and not just a series of funny incidents, but this film rather plays like one of his earlier short subjects, where the laughs were far more frequent. The storyline is simple enough: The Tramp, on the run from the police yet again, even though he didn't really do anything that terribly wrong, eventually stumbles into a circus that's come to town. He makes friends with the horribly mistreated daughter of the circus owner, and falls in love with her, but like in just about all of his films, this love too is unrequited. The pretty bareback rider really loves Rex, the new tightrope walker. While in the circus, Charlie has all sorts of comic misadventures, most famously in the scene where the monkeys are climbing all over him while he's on the tightrope after he's accidentally lost the hidden wire that was keeping him balanced. After this latest mishap, it seems as though his future in the circus is over, though with the scheme he then hatches, things might not be so lost after all.

The extras on the bonus disc are plentiful--movie trailers, a poster and picture gallery, a delightful excerpt from the cute 1923 Jackie Coogan film 'Circus Days,' three brief home movies, a whole extra sequence (26 minutes in length) that was deleted from the final cut of the film, the usual introduction by David Robinson, the trailer for all of the films in the Chaplin Collection, and the featurette on the significance and influence of the film today, footage of the Hollywood premiere in January 1928, a brief film shot by Chaplin's chief cameraman Rollie Totheroh, of 3-D test footage, and simulatenous footage from two different cameras during a scene from the deleted sequence. Unfortunately, none of these bonus films have any soundtracks, not even just some generic piano or organ accompaniment. With all of the care that went into assembling the DVDs in the Chaplin Collection, one would think that the producers would have cared enough to have found soundtracks for all of these bonus short films on the discs.

Quite possibly his most underrated silent feature, if not his most underrated feature period, this film is just as wonderful as all of his other features and, due to how it often plays like one of his shorts from the Teens instead of his more serious features, it could very well be an ideal introduction to Chaplin for a new fan.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The Circus
Charlie Chaplin and Danny Kaye are in my opinion the funniest comedians that I have have heard or seen. The Circus is up to Chaplin's standard.
Published 11 days ago by Eugene Blank

4.0 out of 5 stars Circus + The Tramp = Great Laughs
A lesser known Chaplin film, The Circus involves Chaplin's persona The Tramp joining a circus when, in an effort to escape police after inadvertently taking someone's money, he... Read more
Published 4 months ago by fra7299

4.0 out of 5 stars Hilarious
One can argue that Charlie Chaplin wrote, directed, and starred in greater films than his neglected 1928 gem, The Circus, his last fully silent film, which he also wrote with... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Cosmoetica

5.0 out of 5 stars Running Away FROM the Circus
This was the Chaplin film that almost didn't get made, and once it did get made, it still remained relatively obscure. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Gregor von Kallahann

5.0 out of 5 stars Superb...One of Chaplin's Best.
"The Circus" is one of Charlie Chaplin's best and least-known films. It's got so many comic moments, so much poignancy, that it deserves to rank right up there with some of his... Read more
Published on February 17, 2007 by Joshua Miller

5.0 out of 5 stars A Friend's Photo
The technical quality of the DVD is excellent. My interest in the movie is the result of seeing a photo on a friend's wall of Charlie Chaplin and an actor. Read more
Published on October 1, 2006 by John T. Stanley

5.0 out of 5 stars MADE UNDER DIVORCE AND DESPITE SABOTAGE BY WARNERS AND MGM
it is amazing this final little tramp movie ever got made

his wife was giving him a divorce from hell

and the giant studios kept burning down his sets... Read more
Published on September 5, 2006 by C. Scanlon

5.0 out of 5 stars back when charlot was just trying to make us laugh
i think this was the last time chaplin just decided to be funny, rather than also being relevant. and let us be thankful for that! Read more
Published on August 3, 2006 by Jonathan Lapin

4.0 out of 5 stars Unknown Chaplin
The Circus is the story of a little tramp who stumbles upon a circus when he gets mixed up with the police. Read more
Published on November 4, 2005 by Samantha Kelley

5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Chaplin Film
I don't pretend to be an expert on Chaplin's history, but I do own the Chaplin Collection (both sets) and I have also seen other Chaplin shorts. Read more
Published on September 14, 2005 by M. Garcia

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