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Modern Times
 
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Modern Times

Starring: Charles Chaplin, Norman Ainsley Director: Charles Chaplin
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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2 new from CDN$ 85.99 2 used from CDN$ 75.28

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Product Description

Additional Features

A "Chaplin Today" feature includes the penetrating observations of Belgian directors Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne. Whimsically, there's a karaoke version of Chaplin's nonsense song (the first time his voice is heard in his films), plus a clip of Liberace crooning the famous Chaplin composition "Smile." A curious 10-minute Cuban film from 1967 records the reactions of villagers seeing a movie for the first time (it's Modern Times), and along with photo and poster galleries, the extras are somewhat padded out with two vintage promotional films about the machine age. --Robert Horton


Amazon.com Essential Video

Charlie Chaplin is in glorious form in this legendary satire of the mechanized world. As a factory worker driven bonkers by the soulless momentum of work, Chaplin executes a series of slapstick routines around machines, including a memorable encounter with an automatic feeding apparatus. The pantomime is triumphant, but Chaplin also draws a lively relationship between the Tramp and a street gamine. She's played by Paulette Goddard, then Chaplin's wife and probably his best leading lady (here and in The Great Dictator). The film's theme gave the increasingly ambitious writer-director a chance to speak out about social issues, as well as indulging in the bittersweet quality of pathos that critics were already calling "Chaplinesque." In 1936, Chaplin was still holding out against spoken dialogue in films, but he did use a synchronized soundtrack of sound effects and his own music, a score that includes one of his most famous melodies, "Smile." And late in the film, Chaplin actually does speak--albeit in a garbled gibberish song, a rebuke to modern times in talking pictures. --Robert Horton

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Customer Reviews

30 Reviews
5 star:
 (28)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (30 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
3.0 out of 5 stars Silent, but powerful, May 18 2007
By E. Lalonde (Ottawa) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
In spite of the lack of speech in Charlie Chaplin's "Modern Times", the socialist message that Chaplin portrays is difficult to ignore. The "Little Tramp" regularly visits prison and the unemployment lines, which puts a humorous spin on some otherwise very real difficulties of the Great Depression. The soundtrack and over-acting can, at times, be a little much (the film requires an active interest, not the kind you can just play in the background), for modern film enthusiasts, but Chaplin's solid directing and slapstick humour reinforces the wide-ranging and universal appeal of his undeniably classic film.
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5.0 out of 5 stars 'Where's the Boss?', Jul 1 2004
By Scamp Lumm "Littlesorrel/christian zionist" (Perseus-Pisces cluster, ~100Mpc) - See all my reviews
Caught between the cog wheels???

If you are suffering from work woes, this film is a great one to watch. A co-worker at my last job recommended this film to me. We worked for one of those genome companies, some of us working in a production capacity, doing the same repetitive tasks ad nauseum. The, (in real life), multi-talented Chaplin in this film is a simple-minded factory worker who spends his day going through the same motions over and over again. He does get lunch breaks, but of course his day at work is not without its mishaps. Funny that a 70 year old film about modern times is still not dated.

This film was made in 1936 during the Great Depression, a time when money and bread were scarce, many people feeling the effects. The story line for this movie reveals some of these circumstances, but as Chaplin lives through them, as when he is forced to drink rum bursting out of casks shot by robbers of a department store, one of whom was a previous co-factoryworker, you can't help but laugh, and as the song says, 'just smile'.

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5.0 out of 5 stars One of the golden gems of Charlot, Jun 8 2004
By Hiram Gomez Pardo (Valencia, Venezuela) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Modern times was a smart comedy in the previous years to WW2.
Charlot made raptures images in several sequences.
Our unlucky or disadapted little man , definitively wasn{t made for working with the industrial process. This kinetic introduction in the middle of the complex mecahnism of machine systems is a issue to develop unforgettable laughable situations. The sense of alienation in front the no ending belt , causes in him an insane loss of the reality. And the machine who feeds you without waste of time for your employers is a classic.
Obviously Charlot inspired himself in Metropolis, the bitter nightmare of Fritz Lang from 1927. (Watch for instance for the employer who works around the machine control) .
So our beloved anti hero goes out from this the factory to the hospital and over and over he tries to get a job but he fails , by one reason or another.
In the middle of the film will appear a deep inspiration. The eternally beauty Paulette Godard represents exactly that weird mix teenager-woman who will work out as link for him later.
He is a guy with good feelings. He acts always as humanity benefactor but the long arm of the fate runs behind him and the results are not succesful.
The sequences in the dinner hall with the chicken that never comes to the impatient client is a masterpiece. Literally it's a funny coreography dance in the purest sense of the word.
Smile ; no matter what's wrong with you. We'll keep ahead , overcoming all the possible obstacles.
A remarkable film and one of the landmark pictures of this timeless genius.
Haven't you seen it? Make yourself a favour and buy it as a gift for you or your wife or fiancee or kids. This film will never dissapoint you , at least in the next three hundred years.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Getting Chaplin
Until I saw "Modern Times" I only knew Chaplin from clips and impressions rather than from his films. I didn't see the talent. Read more
Published on Mar 12 2004 by Randall L. Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars Laugh & Tears as the Tramp struggles...
Modern Times is the last silent film that Charles Chaplin created in a time when talking was common on the silver screen. Read more
Published on Jan 10 2004 by Kim Anehall

5.0 out of 5 stars My favourite of this first series of Chaplin reissues.
It helps that Modern Times is one of Chaplin's best films, period, running a close second behind City Lights (I hope that's next on the re-release list). Read more
Published on Jul 30 2003 by D. Mok

5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful restoration
I love old movies and own several Criterion Collection DVDs from the 1930s, but in terms of picture quality, none compare with the new Chaplin Collection restoration of... Read more
Published on Jul 25 2003 by Eugene Koh

5.0 out of 5 stars a great movie for all 77 years and counting its been out!
This Feature is Chaplins last silent movie. Even though the title is Modern Times chaplin wasn't so easy on letting silent movies go. Read more
Published on Jul 24 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars a great movie for all 77 years and counting its been out!
This Feature is Chaplins last silent movie. Even though the title is Modern Times chaplin wasn't so easy on letting silent movies go. Read more
Published on Jul 24 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Chaplin's best
Modern Times (1936) is quite possibly the defining picture of Charlie Chaplin's career. I've been renting Chaplin movies lately and Modern Times is by far the best one that I've... Read more
Published on Jul 16 2003 by Joe Sherry

4.0 out of 5 stars my first Chaplin film
I take a media arts course at my school and I recently watched this movie in it. I love the guy and the use of the camera was so great for the time period. Read more
Published on Sep 17 2002 by Amazifier

5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic !!!
A day in a life of Charlie!

A true classic and a funny look at the industrial revolution, any one who has worked for a tyranical supervisor will enjoy this movie.

Published on Aug 23 2002 by stephens@accountmate.com

5.0 out of 5 stars Another Chaplin success.
This time, the city is all riled up about work in the factories. Chaplin again meets up with a girl that he likes and tries to deperately find work for money. Read more
Published on Aug 16 2002 by duke14

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