3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Drunken excuses for slapstick., 16 April 2007
![]()
Author:
Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) from Luoyang, China
In another disappointing short comedy, Charlie Chaplin once again plays
the standard, belligerent drunk, drinking himself into oblivion and
then stumbling around this run-of-the-mill slapstick comedy. There are
some mildly interesting items, such as the fact that the altogether
unamusing but watchable opening scene features Chaplin and Keystone
colleague Fatty Arbuckle as fellow drinkers in the pub, taking beers
away from each other and gradually getting drunker and drunker, as well
as the fact that this is one of the earliest, maybe even the origin, of
one of Chaplin's gags that he would later perfect and use with great
success, the lighting of the match on the seat of his pants. Other than
that, there is not much else of note here.
The comedy of the film is really nonexistent, which is not to say that
it is entirely bad, just a failed experiment. The obnoxious drunk has
long since lost its appeal, if it ever had any, and I imagine even
audiences back in 1914 must have been getting tired of it. The film
features some of the most blatant racism of any of his films, although
certainly not the last (remember the three minds with but a single
thought from A Day's Pleasure?). At one point late in the film, Charlie
follows a woman right into her home and hits on her, and is then
horrified when he realizes that she is black. He also drops a lighted
match into a black man's hand when he holds it out for a tip, which is
exactly the kind of thing that makes this drunken character so
dislikable.
Most of the rest of the film is composed of people pushing and shoving
other people around and hitting each other, and ultimately it seems
that Chaplin simply uses drunkenness in the film to serve as a reason
to stagger around and hit people and get in fights with swinging doors
and fall over stairway banisters and such. The plot outline on the IMDb
says "A very plastered fella follows a pretty woman home, and proceeds
to make a nuisance of himself." And sadly, there's not much difference
between watching the film and reading that one line.
| Plot summary | Ratings | External reviews |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |