City Lights (1931)
Starring
Charlie Chaplin
Director
Charlie Chaplin
Plot Synopsis
The Tramp falls in love with a blind girl and helps restore her
sight.
Film Notes
"City Lights is a film to pick for the time capsule,
a film that best represents the many aspects of director-writer-star Charlie Chaplin at
the peak of his powers: Chaplin the actor, the sentimentalist, the knockabout clown, the
ballet dancer, the athlete, the lover, the tragedian, the fool. It's all contained in
Chaplin's simple story of a tramp who falls in love with a blind flower girl (Virginia
Cherrill). Chaplin elevates the Victorian contrivances of the plot to something glorious
with his inventive use of pantomime and his sure grasp of how the Tramp relates to the
audience. In 1931, it was a gamble for Chaplin to stick with silence after talking
pictures had killed off the art form that had made him famous, but audiences flocked to City
Lights anyway. (Chaplin would not make his first full talking picture until 1940's The Great Dictator.) After all the superb comic sequences, the film culminates with one of
the most moving scenes in the history of cinema, a luminous and heartbreaking fade-out
that lifts the picture onto another plane. (Woody Allen paid homage to the scene at the
end of Manhattan.) This is why the term "Chaplinesque" became a part of
the language." (Robert Horton, Amazon.com)