Modern Times (1936)

modern times

The Tramp struggles to live in modern industrial society with the help of a young homeless woman.

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Reviewed by Tom Gooderson-A’Court. Please check out his blog:

 At The Back 

Follow him on twitter @TheBackFilms

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imdb

Top 250 #52

Year of Release: 1936

Running Time: 87 min.

Director: Charlie Chaplin

Cast:

Charlie Chaplin - A Factory Worker
Paulette Goddard - A Gamin
Henry Bergman - Cafe Proprietor
Stanley Sandford - Big Bill
Chester Conklin - Mechanic

1936’s Modern Times finds Charlie Chaplin’s iconic Tramp character at work in a modern, mechanized factory. He struggles to keep up with the ever quickening pace of the production line where he screws nuts onto bolts and suffers a mental breakdown. After being released from hospital, The Tramp finds himself as the accidental leader of a Communist rally and is thrown in jail. Once released he finds life in the Depression ruined 30s difficult but meets an orphan girl with whom he develops a friendship. The film then follows their ups and downs as they try to scrape by and stay out of jail.

Modern Times is one of Chaplin’s best remembered films and features some wonderful set pieces. Just some of the iconic scenes include; when he gets caught up in the cogs of the factory machines, when he mistakes cocaine for salt, when he roller skates blindfolded and when he is used to test a new feeding machine. All of these scenes are laugh out loud funny. While the film features some of Chaplin’s funniest moments, the laughs are spread more thinly than in some of his earlier films. This is much more of a comedy/drama than out and out comedy.

Chaplin’s politics are obvious to see throughout. The opening scene shows sheep being lead out and then cuts to men streaming into a factory. Once inside, the workers are worked to exhaustion and we see the harsh conditions of the unemployed. Chaplin is later falsely accused of leading a Communist march and gets thrown in jail, an eerie premonition of what later happened to him. It is obvious that Chaplin blames modern industrialization for the conditions of the Great Depression and understandable why it came under scrutiny at the time.

Chaplin is joined on screen by the beautiful Paulette Godard, who was also his wife at the time. Despite playing a homeless orphan she still manages to dazzle and is also superb in the more touching scenes. Chaplin as always is sublime. There are little touches in every scene that cement him as cinema’s greatest entertainer.

The film is still considered ‘silent’, despite it containing ‘talkie’ moments. Most of these moments come from inanimate objects or from one or two characters but I wish it had been one way or the other. It’s a bit of a cop out to be a mixture of silent and spoken but by 1936 silent films were considered very old fashioned so its understandable why the decision to introduce some dialogue was made.

Unfortunately, Modern Times was one of Chaplin’s final films and the last to feature his Tramp character. For that reason its ending carries even greater significance and is wonderful. The film contains some of Chaplin’s best moments and is a magnificent reminder of his genius and the class of his film making.

imdbIMDB Rating 8.5/10

Tom’s Rating 10/10

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7 thoughts on “Modern Times (1936)

  1. Excellent review Tom, thanks again for doing this. Never seen a Chaplin film I don’t think, yet your review makes me want to really make an effort and rectify this. Another 10 though, hopefully one of these guest reviews will find some flaws with one of these films :)

    • Thanks mate. If you do ever see one this is a good place to start. I’m working my way through his entire filmography at the moment but only up to 1915. I’ll have to look through the top 250 and find a film I hate.

  2. I’ve been wanting to start out with Robert Downey Jrs “Chaplin” and then work my way through Chaplin’s work. I was thinking of starting with the dictator movie.

    • The Great Dictator is very good but towards the end of Chaplin’s cannon and more of a political piece. I’d recommend starting with this, The Kid or my favourite City Lights. Attenborough’s Chaplin is a really good biopic though and worth a watch whether you see a Chaplin film or not.

  3. Pingback: Head In A Vice Newsletter #1 | Head In A Vice

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