CHARLIE CHAPLIN

POSTED IN FLYERMALL.COM BY SPYROS PETER GOUDAS 

The Rounders 1914CHARLIE CHAPLIN & FATTY ARBUCKLE

 

Charlie Chaplin - Getting Acquainted (1914)

 
 

Caught in a Cabaret 1914 Charlie Chaplin

 

Laughing Gas 1914 CHARLIE CHAPLIN - Mack Sennett

His Favorite Pastime 1914 CHARLIE CHAPLIN & FATTY ARBUCKLE

 

CHARLIE CHAPLIN FATTY ARBUCKLE MABEL NORMAND FORD STERLING

 

His Prehistoric Past (1914)

CARLITOS E AS SALSICHAS - Charles Chaplin 1915

Charlie Chaplin - A Woman 1915

The Bank 1915 Charlie Chaplin, with Edna Purviance, Carl Stockdale, Charles Inslee, Lloyd Bacon

  

THE CHAMPION 1915 Charlie Chaplin, Edna Purviance

Starring: Charlie Chaplin, Edna Purviance, Bud Jamison, Leo White, Lloyd Bacon, Billy Armstrong, Paddy McGuire, Broncho Billy Anderson, Ben Turpin Directed by Chaplin

Chaplin Modern Times 'non-sense song'

 

Charlie Chaplin The Adventurer 1917

"The Immigrant" -1917-One of Charlie Chaplin's most beloved comedies

 Charlie Chaplin - Boxing  PART 1

 

Charlie Chaplin - Boxing  PART 2

 

 Such a great comedian. Chaplin will forever be missed.    

 

The Rink (1916) Charlie Chaplin skating. With Edna Purviance, Eric Campbell

Papa Yaw Adu Over 100 yes Charlie is still in comfortably lead, amazing displays by all standard

Olwal Boniface  I wish he was from my country Kenya. Nkt

Charlie Chaplin in The Pawnshop 1916 

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.

This was one of Chaplin's more popular movies for Mutual, mainly for the slapstick comedy he was famous for at the time. Charles Chaplin: Pawnshop assistant Henry Bergman: Pawnbroker Edna Purviance: His daughter John Rand: Pawnshop assistant Albert Austin: Client with clock Wesley Ruggles: Client with ring Eric Campbell: Thief

Iftekhar Hossain Chowdhury  So talented actor, writer & director. Really amazing.

Siontrix  What a great video! Please don't make another one, I'm serious, don't.
 
kameshwar prasad  He is really genius
 

  

The Rogue 1918 OLIVER BABE HARDY  BILLY WEST - Arvid E. Gillstrom

 Father takes his family for a drive in their falling-apart Model T Ford, gets in trouble in traffic, and spends the day on an excursion boat.

As the boat is about to leave Charlie rushes ashore for cigarettes. As he returns the boat is leaving, but a fat lady has fallen forward with feet on the dock and hands on the deck so Charlie is able to rush aboard across her back.

The Adventurer 1917 Charlie Chaplin, Edna Purviance, Eric Campbell

  

Charlie Chaplin - A Day's Pleasure

   

The Fireman 1916

 

Triple Trouble 1918 CHARLIE CHAPLIN  EDNA PURVIANCE

Charlie Chaplin- O Garoto (1921)

Charlie Chaplin Easy Street 1917 Full Movie

Carlos Siguenza  100 years ago ...wow amazing Charles Chaplin I'm in love with your films.
 
kowanut is Great stuff. Thanks for posting it!
 
NightOwl this man is a genius.
 

 

Charlie Chaplin Modern Times 1936

 

Was Charlie Chaplin Communist? "Treachery Against Tramp

 

The Great Dictator 1940

MOVE ZONE  Dictator Adenoid Hynkel tries to expand his empire while a poor Jewish barber tries to avoid persecution from Hynkel's regime.

solarisengineering15  This is a beautiful film. Charlie Chaplin lived in arguably the darkest period in human history. Some historians consider 1914-1945 like a second 30 years war.
For over thirty years, there was no peace in Europe. People were told to hate and kill one another. Garbage like Stalin, Hitler and Mussolini terrorized the world. Spain suffered a horrific civil war.
Millions were impoverished during the great depression. Crippled men sulked in every corner, their spirits broken the gas attacks and shellfire in their dreams that kept them from sleep every night. It was during this time that Chaplin wrote most of his films.
He wanted to make people happy, to show that hatred was invented to make people serve an agenda, to make them realize that the pain they felt was simply the passing of greed, of the bitterness of men. Dictators did die, and the power they took from the people, is returning to the people.
Chaplin gave us a message: We, the people have the power.
The power to create machines, the power to create happiness. We can make this life a wonderful adventure. So, in the name of democracy, let us use that power, let us all unite.

The Great Dictator Speech 

Andy Foster I watch this video every few months to give myself inspiration, that humanity can still be saved and it still gives me goosebumps watching it, it truly is the best speech ever given! Amazing how it's still is after 70 years.
 

The Great Dictator Speech (by- Charlie Chaplin ) with Subtitles HD

The Great Dictator Speech (by- Charlie Chaplin ) with Subtitles HD

Things You Didn't Know About Charlie Chaplin

Charlie Chaplin's Honorary Award: 1972 Oscars

Yair Sasson Art  Truly inspiring. what a legend.

diykitkat  I can't believe I'm crying while watching this, what a man! Even on stage he intentionally slipped his hat to make the audience laugh! All he wanted was to make his audience laugh

Marmar   I'm crying while watching this...Chaplin was a true example of talent, Class, and humility.

Harry Smart  It surely does make me cry to see a legend leaving us !! sadly we all have to go someday!!
 
Shehryar Khan  He made billions laugh without uttering a single word, but in this video, he looks to be the saddest person on the planet!! RIP. Salute you, sir.
 
Adi Adrian  Sir Chaplin, the world thanks you
 
Wilson Vave  One must understand Charlie's life when watching this video! Betrayed by a country he loved, he was kicked out of the country. After thirty years, the US finally opened its doors back to him and offered him this honorary award. If we go back farther, we can see his hopes and dreams as a young child enslaved to an orphanage. His mother in an asylum, his father an alcoholic. Charlie, against all the odds, rose up to become one of the Greats. I can't help but see Charlie's entire life swelling up in the form of tears... He did swell
 
peter kung1150   I want to tell my feelings I like his movie Although I was born in 2001 when I watched his movie It made me happy I want to meet him again. but it would not be possible. I miss him, I want to cry. Charlie Chaplin is my idol. I will remember him forever.
 

Michael Barnhart  This was a great moment and fortunate that it happened within his lifetime ( He died in 1977.) His genius entertained and inspired generations - and continues to do so. His personal life was a mess, with marital indiscretions and communist links in a paranoid time, resulting in much judgment heaped upon him. It was wonderful that they could take the opportunity to honor him for his art - that is what endures beyond the life of its creator. :-)
 

Shwetha Thomas  Raped two underage girls. Made them pregnant, married them to make them his sex slaves, and for all these crimes what he gets is a full 12-minute standing ovation. How wonderful
 
Gnirol Namlerf  When would the film have become such a dominant art form without Chaplin? When would we have learned to laugh and cry at the same time in response to one shared look between two people without Chaplin? Who knows? He was not only a film genius but a genius at understanding humanity. How fortunate we are to have lived when he lived or to live after him and still be able to see what he created as much as a century ago! Thank goodness the film industry finally showed its appreciation in an appropriate manner.
 
dominick antonelli The audience gave him a 12-minute standing ovation. They could have applauded for 12 days and it still wouldn't have been enough.
 

Charlie Chaplin's Honorary Award: 1972 Oscars 

 The Tragic Life of Charlie Chaplin

 

 

A medical examination found no evidence of sexual assault.

A clip from Paul Merton's excellent BBC documentary. For further reading, I suggest "The Day The Laughter Stopped" by David Yallop, and "Frame Up" by Andy Edmonds.

'Fatty' Arbuckle and Hollywood's first scandal

 

The Trials of Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle - UMKC Law Students - FS 2015

 Spyros Peter Goudas