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| Index | 16 reviews in total |
11 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Oh Charlie, how wonderful, 5 October 2003
Author:
Michael Open (open.house@ntlworld.com) from Belfast, Northern Ireland
When I was a young boy (about five years old), my parents couldn't afford a
TV and, in order to give me entertainment, my dad bought a second hand
silent cine projector and showed me some silent westerns (which I have all
but forgotten) and - oh joy, oh bliss - the Essanay and Mutual Chaplin
films. The greatest of these - by a long way, in my estimation is 'The
Adventurer' indeed, it is one of the very few short films worthy of the term
'masterpiece'.
The Adventurer is a sonata on the number 3. There are three main locations -
the beach, the pier and the house. The cliff location in the beach scene is
triangular, Charlie and his two pursuers make an hilarious trio, with every
combination of characters and apexes of the triangle being
explored...
Then we go onto the pier... There we have three sub-locations - the top of
the pier, the car and the sea. Charlie explores all of these and then moves
onto the house.
Here we also have three locations - upstairs, downstairs and the terrace.
You can see dozens of other 'threes' in the film, but the coda, in which
Charlie is chased three times round the set is like the delirious coda to
Mozart's 41st Symphony when the orchestra seem to take off. There is noting
like it in all cinema.
Of course I had no idea about all this subtlety when I was a kid, I just
looked and laughed in wonder and said with a pleading thrill in my voice....
'Play it again, Dad.'
Without these wonderful Chaplin films, I doubt that I would have given my
life to the cinema for the last fifty years.
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Brilliant, 19 October 1999
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Author:
Russell Dodd (ye5.man@tesco.net) from Essex, England
Certainly, in my opinion, the Greatest comedy short of all time. Charlie, an escaped convict, saves life of rich woman and is taken in by her family(and jealous Eric Campbell - who tragically died in an automobile accident a year after). How long will it be till the law catches up with him? There's an absolutely SUPERB sequence as him dodging the law using sliding doors, it will leave you laughing loud. This film alone demonstrates Chaplin's unique and incredible talent. Many people get turned off by Chaplin's shorts as they are silent. It's a shame as some of them represent his best work.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
The one with the lampshade, 9 May 1999
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Author:
Stefan Kahrs from Canterbury, England
Not all the early Chaplin films are classics, but this one is. The best bits are the chasing scenes, especially at the beginning (Charlie escaping from prison) and in the middle. The way Chaplin makes excellent and varying use of a humble lampshade should put many modern filmmakers with their inflated budgets to shame.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
As Good As It Gets For Chaplin's Early Silent Films, 19 April 2000
Author:
packofk9s from Portland, Oregon
I've seen The Adventurer well over a dozen times and each time it is just as
funny as the time before. I repeatedly find myself thinking during the
first scenes (where Charlie is on the beach and on the lamb from the police)
that those scenes must be the high of the movie and as such that the movie
will progessively sink from the close of those scenes on. Yet each time I
watch the film I am pleasantly refreshed to the fact that the whole film is
equally great.
Chaplin is excellent in the film, and his frequent foil in the early movies,
Eric Campbell, is also perhaps at his best.
This film is well worth watching (several times).
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
One of Chaplin's funniest, 30 November 2003
Author:
hausrathman
In The Adventurer, Charlie plays an escaped convict who briefly manages to
enjoy the good life after rescuing a drowning rich woman before the police
find him again.
The Adventurer is the last of Chaplin's twelve films for the Mutual Company.
Lacking any attempt at the pathos and social commentary that Chaplin
injected in some of his previous Mutual shorts, this chase comedy almost
appears to be a throwback to his rough-and-tumble roots at Keystone.
However, there is one major difference, this film much funnier than anything
did at Keystone. While I do not consider this to be his best short, it is
arguably his funniest. The chases that bookend the film are hilarious. The
middle is hilarious too. The film is a laugh fest through and through. If
this film doesn't put a smile on your face, check your
pulse.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Very Funny Slapstick Comedy, 25 June 2001
Author:
Snow Leopard from Ohio
Although there isn't quite the depth to "The Adventurer" that many of
Chaplin's films have, since most of it is just slapstick comedy, on
that level it is still quite a success. It is non-stop fun with a lot
of good gags, with good work not only from Chaplin but also from his
supporting cast.
Charlie plays a convict who escapes from prison and tries one thing
after another to stay free. Early in the movie, when he happens to save
a rich girl (Chaplin regular Edna Purviance) from drowning, he is taken
into her home, and from there, some hilarious situations and a lot of
frantic activity follow.
One of the things that works very well in this feature is the re-use of
a couple of the same gags with different details. Chaplin and the rest
of the cast also work together well in building up the humor as it goes
along. There are also some hints at some of Chaplin's usual social
themes. For pure comedy, this is one of the best of Chaplin's short
films.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Charlie Chaplin, the super clown, 16 March 2000
Author:
Petri Pelkonen (petri_pelkonen@hotmail.com) from Finland
Charles Chaplin plays an escaped convict, who saves a rich girl and her mother, and is treated as a hero.But how long can he hide from the law.The Adventurer is a great short silent comedy movie from 1917.The movie has many funny scenes, like when Charlie is chased by the cops.It is great fun to watch these old silent movies and see how much the movies have changed from those days.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Chaplin as an ex-convict. fun times, 30 May 2010
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
There are almost too many pratfalls in this short (then again when is there enough when done right). Chaplin plays a prisoner who escapes (his entrance in the movie is just fantastic on the beach), and is chased for a little while by the guards- as he does daring-do to escape like rushing up a cliff-side or doing a fun way of pulling a gun on someone- and then gets away by helping two women from drowning and is sucked up into their bourgeois existence. There's barely a beat when a gag is missed, and Chaplin takes every one. It was in the style of the 'Keystone Kops" series where there were chases and chases and more chases, and just lots of variations on gags. What makes it work is that it's gut-bustingly funny, from how he saves the pretty woman and leaves the other woman still drowning until he goes back (or how he knocks the big man back into the water, having to use his big fake beard to pull him out!). He also uses sliding doors to great usage here. And if memory serves there's even a fun gag involving ice cream! It's nothing brainy, it's just a really fun comic-book like short that utilizes all of Chaplin's physical prowess and his guts, and his timing running up those stairs in the house is one of the most brilliant things out there.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Chaplin, 22 May 2005
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Author:
Atavisten from Tellus
Chaplin is a funny man that can do a lot with very little. His humour
is slapstick and he is very good at it.
Here we follow a convict on the run through diverse escapades in which
he amongst other things saves a woman's mother and steals the woman
from her suitor.
His jokes are very simple and effective, that said they can be a bit
repetitious and today obvious.
Funniest part is in the beginning when he bumps into police everywhere
and repeats his mistakes all the time and also the bit with the sliding
doors.
"A tired guest", 26 April 2010
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Author:
Steffi_P from Ruritania
All good things come to an end, and when that good thing was Charlie
Chaplin's tenure at a studio, it tended to come to an end in style.
This was Chaplin's last picture for Mutual, and his second studio
finale to have the apt if disparaging theme of the little tramp's
escape from the long arm of the law.
But really, the man-on-the-run angle is just a bit of trivial
cheekiness. This is not one of Chaplin's great story pictures. Instead,
he appears to be simply having a bit of fun with his last fling at
Mutual. The Adventurer consists of a varied series of escapades, linked
loosely by the narrative, but all of which could easily have come from
another picture or even been expanded into a short in their own right.
So we move from Charlie the fugitive to Charlie the rescuer of drowning
women, to Charlie the party-crasher and so on. And yet The Adventurer
is not vague or bitty. Instead this is perhaps Chaplin's most flowingly
funny picture to date. The comic now had the professional ease of a
seasoned acrobat, and here he reels off the gags with an almost casual
comedic agility.
Supporting Charlie here are the usual familiar supporting players
Edna Purviance, John Rand, Albert Austin, Henry Bergman all of whom
would follow him to his next stable, First National. And yet these are
all in relatively minor functional parts in the Adventurer. Chaplin's
real partner here is Eric Campbell, who sadly would not follow the
tramp on any more adventures. Campbell died several months after the
picture's release. Here however you can see him at his best, as he
seemingly relishes playing one of his most unforgivably mean
characters. He exhibits a wonderful knowledge of what his job is in the
comical scheme of things, brilliantly treading that line between
authoritative ogre and buffoon.
And so we end again with that all-important statistic Number of kicks
up the arse: 8 (5 for, 3 against)
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