Rating: G
Genre:
Comedy
Release Date: 07/15/2005
SubTitles: English/Espanol/French/Por/TH/Cantones
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD5.1/DD1
Run Time: 83 Minutes
Distributor/Studio: Creative Design Art
This episodic satire of the Machine Age is considered
Charles Chaplin's last "silent" film, although
Chaplin uses sound, vocal, and musical effects throughout.
Chaplin stars as an assembly-line worker driven insane by the monotony of his job. After a long spell in an asylum, he searches for work, only to be mistakenly arrested as a Red agitator. Released after foiling a prison break,
Chaplin makes the acquaintance of orphaned gamine (
Paulette Goddard) and becomes her friend and protector. He takes on several new jobs for her benefit, but every job ends with a quick dismissal and yet another jail term. During one of his incarcerations, she is hired to dance at a nightclub and arranges for him to be hired there as a singing waiter. He proves an enormous success, but they are both forced to flee their jobs when the orphanage officials show up to claim the girl. Dispirited, she moans, "What's the use of trying?" But the ever-resourceful
Chaplin tells her to never say die, and our last image is of
Chaplin and The Gamine strolling down a California highway towards new adventures. The plotline of
Modern Times is as loosely constructed as any of
Chaplin's pre-1915 short subjects, permitting ample space for several of the comedian's most memorable routines: the "automated feeding machine," a nocturnal roller-skating episode, and
Chaplin's double-talk song rendition in the nightclub sequence. In addition to producing, directing, writing, and starring in
Modern Times,
Chaplin also composed its theme song,
Smile, which would later be adopted as
Jerry Lewis' signature tune.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide