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The Pawnshop was Charlie Chaplin's sixth film for Mutual Film Corporation. Released on October 2, 1916, it stars Chaplin in the role of assistant to the pawnshop owner, played by Henry Bergman. Edna Purviance plays the owner's daughter, while Albert Austin appears as an alarm clock owner who watches Chaplin in dismay as he dismantles the clock; the massive Eric Campbell's character attempts to rob the shop.
The Pawnshop | |
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Directed by | Charlie Chaplin Edward Brewer (technical director) |
Written by | Charlie Chaplin (scenario) Vincent Bryan (scenario) Maverick Terrell (scenario) |
Produced by | Henry P. Caulfield |
Starring | Charlie Chaplin Edna Purviance Henry Bergman |
Cinematography | William C. Foster Roland Totheroh |
Edited by | Charlie Chaplin |
Distributed by | Mutual Film Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 25 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent |
This was one of Chaplin's more popular movies for Mutual, mainly for the slapstick comedy he was famous for at the time.
Synopsis
editChaplin plays an assistant in a pawnshop run by Henry Bergman. He goes about his job in the usual comic Chaplin manner: insulting various eccentric customers and dusting an electric fan while it is running. Quarreling over a ladder, Chaplin engages in a slapstick battles with his fellow pawnshop assistant and is fired. The pawnbroker gives Charlie a second chance because of his "eleven children"—a fiction which Charlie has hastily invented for the occasion. In the kitchen Charlie flirts with the pawnbroker's attractive daughter, helping her dry dishes by passing them through a clothes wringer. When a customer brings in an alarm clock to be pawned, Chaplin engages in one of his most famous solo sustained comedy bits: He thoroughly examines the clock as if he were a physician and a jeweler. He disassembles the clock piece by piece, damaging it beyond repair, and carefully puts the pieces into the man's hat. He then sorrowfully informs him that the clock can not be accepted.
A crook enters the store and pretends he wants to buy diamonds. Charlie, who has hidden in a trunk after another raucous dispute with his co-worker, spots the man trying to open the pawnshop's vault. Charlie emerges from the trunk, knocks the armed thief out. Charlie is congratulated by the pawnbroker and embraced by his daughter for his bravery and good deed.
The role of the pawnshop proprietor was Henry Bergman's first major appearance in a Chaplin film. (He had played a minor, uncredited role as an old man in The Floorwalker earlier in 1916.) Bergman would work closely with Chaplin until his death in 1946.
Primary cast
edit- Charlie Chaplin: Pawnbroker's assistant
- Henry Bergman: Pawnbroker
- Edna Purviance: His daughter
- John Rand: Pawnbroker's assistant
- Albert Austin: Client with clock
- Wesley Ruggles: Client with ring
- Eric Campbell: Thief
- James T. Kelley: Old bum
- Charlotte Mineau: Client with aquarium
- Frank J. Coleman: Policeman
Sound version
editIn 1932, Amedee J. Van Beuren of Van Beuren Studios, purchased Chaplin's Mutual comedies for $10,000 each, added music by Gene Rodemich and Winston Sharples and sound effects, and re-released them through RKO Radio Pictures. Chaplin had no legal recourse to stop the RKO release.[1][better source needed]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Thakur, Pradeep. The Most Important People of the 20th Century (Part-II): Artists & Entertainers. Lulu.com. p. 119. ISBN 9780557943777. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
External links
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