Chaplin (film)
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox film Chaplin is a 1992 biographical comedy-drama film about the life of English comic actor and filmmaker Charlie Chaplin. It was produced and directed by Richard Attenborough and stars Robert Downey Jr., Marisa Tomei, Dan Aykroyd, Penelope Ann Miller and Kevin Kline. It also features Charlie Chaplin's own daughter, Geraldine Chaplin, in the role of his mother, Hannah Chaplin.
The film was adapted by William Boyd, Bryan Forbes and William Goldman from Chaplin's 1964 book My Autobiography and the 1985 book Chaplin: His Life and Art by film critic David Robinson. Associate producer Diana Hawkins got a story credit. The original music score was composed by John Barry.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The film was a box office bomb, grossing $12 million against a $31 million budget, and received mixed reviews from critics; Downey's titular performance, however, garnered critical acclaim and won him the BAFTA Award for Best Actor along with nominations for the Academy Award for Best Actor and Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama.
Plot
[edit]An elderly Charlie Chaplin reminisces during a 1962 conversation in Switzerland with George Hayden, the fictionalized editor of his autobiography.
In the Victorian era East End of London, Chaplin escapes his poverty-stricken childhood by immersing himself in the world of variety circuit. In 1894, after his mother Hannah loses her voice onstage, five-year-old Charlie takes her place. Hannah is eventually committed to an asylum after developing psychosis. Over the years, Chaplin and his brother Sydney gain work with variety producer Fred Karno, who later sends him to the United States. He soon proposes to his girlfriend, dancer Hetty Kelly. However, Kelly declines, reasoning that she is too young. Chaplin vows to return when he is a success.
In the United States, famous comedy producer Mack Sennett employs Chaplin. He creates the Tramp persona, and due to the terrible directorial abilities of Sennett's girlfriend Mabel Normand, he becomes his own director. After Sydney becomes his manager, Chaplin breaks from Sennett to gain creative control over his films, with the goal of one day owning his own studio. In 1917, he completes work on his film The Immigrant and starts a two-year relationship with actress Edna Purviance.
Years later, at a party thrown by Douglas Fairbanks, Chaplin dates child actress Mildred Harris. He sets up his own studio and becomes "the most famous man in the world" before his 30th birthday. Chaplin tells Fairbanks that he must marry Harris because she is pregnant but later learns that it is a hoax. Chaplin has a confrontation with J. Edgar Hoover about actor/directors and propaganda. This sparks a 40-year-long vendetta by Hoover.
Harris's divorce lawyers claim Chaplin's film The Kid as an asset. Chaplin and Sydney flee with the footage, finish editing it in a Salt Lake City hotel, then smuggle it back to Los Angeles.
The brothers arrange for Hannah to join them, but Chaplin cannot cope with her worsened condition. In 1921, Chaplin attends the UK premiere of The Kid. He hopes to locate Hetty, but soon learns that she died in the influenza epidemic. The British working class resent him for not joining the British armed forces during World War I as they did.
Back in the United States, Hoover digs into Chaplin's private life, suspecting him of Pro-Soviet sympathies. Chaplin is forced to consider the effect of "talkies" on his career. Despite the popularity of sound films, he vows never to make a talkie featuring the Tramp.
In 1925, Chaplin makes The Gold Rush and marries bit-part actress Lita Grey. However, he later says to George that he always thought of her as a "total bitch" and barely mentions her in his autobiography. Chaplin marries Paulette Goddard and feels a sense of guilt and sympathy for the millions unemployed due to the Wall Street Crash. Chaplin decides to address the issue in Modern Times, but his dedication to this film results in the breakup of his marriage.
At an industry party, the partially Roma Chaplin refuses to shake hands with a visiting Nazi. Fairbanks comments that Chaplin resembles Adolf Hitler, inspiring him to create The Great Dictator. The film, which satirizes Nazism, is a hit worldwide and further enrages Hoover, who believes it to be propaganda against the United States.
Chaplin marries actress Oona O'Neill, who resembles Hetty. However, it is alleged that he is the father of the child of former lover Joan Barry. Despite a blood test proving that the child is not his, Chaplin is ordered to provide financial support after the test is declared inadmissible in court. With his reputation damaged, he stays out of the public eye for over seven years until producing Limelight. During McCarthyism, the Chaplins leave the United States together on a visit to Britain, but then the United States Attorney General revokes his re-entry permit.
In 1972, Chaplin is invited back to the United States to receive a special Academy Honorary Award. Despite being initially resentful after two decades in exile and certain that no one will even remember him, he is moved to tears when the audience laughs at footage from his films and gives Chaplin the Academy Awards' longest standing ovation ever.
Cast
[edit]In addition, the Academy Award tribute sequence at the end features footage of the real Chaplin.
Production
[edit]Richard Attenborough acquired the rights to Charlie Chaplin's biography in 1988 and intended to make it with Universal Pictures.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to Marc Wanamaker, who served as an advisor on the film, Attenborough had thought of making a miniseries at one point, to fully explore Chaplin's life.<ref name="youtube1">Template:Cite AV media</ref> Although Attenborough wanted Robert Downey Jr. for the part of Chaplin, studio executives wanted Robin Williams or Billy Crystal for the role.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Jim Carrey was also considered,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as was Tom Hanks.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On David Letterman's Netflix series My Next Guest Needs No Introduction, Downey Jr. revealed that Attenborough had also been interested in Tom Cruise for the role, but Cruise declined the offer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The film had a four-hour cut that was later edited down to two and a half hours for release.<ref name="youtube1"/>
Reception
[edit]Critical reception
[edit]The film received mixed reviews, lauded for its high production values, but many critics dismissed it as an overly glossy biopic.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Although the film was criticized for taking dramatic license with some aspects of Chaplin's life, Downey's performance as Chaplin won universal acclaim. Attenborough was sufficiently confident in Downey's performance to include historical footage of Chaplin himself at the end of the film. According to the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 61% of critics have given Chaplin a positive review based on 56 reviews, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Chaplin boasts a terrific performance from Robert Downey, Jr. in the title role, but it isn't enough to overcome a formulaic biopic that pales in comparison to its subject's classic films."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> At Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 47 out of 100 based on 22 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an "A–" on an A+ to F scale.
Vincent Canby of The New York Times lauded Downey's performance, and deemed the film "extremely appreciative".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Todd McCarthy of Variety remarked that Chaplin's life was too grand to be properly captured in a film, criticizing the screenplay, but praised the casting and the film's first hour.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times gave the film two out of four stars, dubbing the film, "a disappointing, misguided movie that has all of the parts in place to be a much better one", but praised Downey and the production values.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times felt Attenborough's filmmaking and Chaplin's life were ill-suited to each other, but said of Downey, "Lithe and lively and looking remarkably like the younger Chaplin, Downey does more than master the man’s celebrated duck walk and easy grace. In one of those acts of will and creativity that actors come up with when you least expect it, Downey becomes Chaplin, re-creating his character and his chilly soul so precisely that even the comedian’s daughter Geraldine, a featured player here, was both impressed and unnerved."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Box office
[edit]The film grossed £1.8 million ($2.7 million) in the United Kingdom<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> and $9.5 million in the United States.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Awards and nominations
[edit]Home media
[edit]The film was released on VHS and LaserDisc in June 1993<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> and later on DVD in 1997, and on LaserDisc by Live Home Video on July 5, 1998. A 15th-anniversary edition was released by Lions Gate Entertainment (who obtained the distribution rights to the film in the interim under license from the copyright holder, StudioCanal) in 2008. The anniversary edition contained extensive interviews with the producers, and included several minutes of home-movie footage shot on Chaplin's yacht. The box for this DVD mistakenly lists the film's running time as 135 minutes, although it retains the 145-minute length of the original theatrical release.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The 15th Anniversary Edition was released on Blu-ray on February 15, 2011.
Soundtrack
[edit]The soundtrack to Chaplin was released on December 15, 1992.
A newly expanded soundtrack with 35 tracks to celebrate the film's 30 anniversary was released by La La Land Records in 2023.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Primary source inline
- Track listing
References
[edit]External links
[edit]Template:Charlie Chaplin Template:Richard Attenborough Template:William Goldman Template:William Boyd
- 1992 films
- 1990s biographical films
- 1990s historical comedy-drama films
- American biographical films
- American historical comedy-drama films
- BAFTA winners (films)
- Biographical films about actors
- British biographical films
- British historical comedy-drama films
- Carolco Pictures films
- Comedy-drama films based on actual events
- Cultural depictions of Charlie Chaplin
- Cultural depictions of Laurel & Hardy
- Cultural depictions of J. Edgar Hoover
- Films scored by John Barry (composer)
- Films about comedians
- Films about filmmaking
- Films about the Hollywood blacklist
- Films based on autobiographies
- Films based on biographies
- Films based on multiple works
- Films directed by Richard Attenborough
- Films produced by Richard Attenborough
- Films set in London
- Films set in Los Angeles
- Films set in Switzerland
- Films set in the 1890s
- Films set in the 1900s
- Films set in 1917
- Films set in 1921
- Films set in 1923
- Films set in the 1930s
- Films set in the 1940s
- Films set in 1952
- Films set in the 1960s
- Films set in 1972
- Films shot in California
- Films shot in Switzerland
- Films shot in England
- Films with screenplays by William Goldman
- Films with screenplays by William Boyd (writer)
- Films with screenplays by Bryan Forbes
- StudioCanal films
- TriStar Pictures films
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s American films
- 1990s British films
- Films produced by Mario F. Kassar
- English-language historical comedy-drama films
- English-language biographical films