Añade un argumento en tu idiomaThe Little Tramp pretends to be a dentist. A patient can't stop laughing from the anesthesia so Charlie knocks him out. At a drug store, he fights with a man who becomes another patient and ... Leer todoThe Little Tramp pretends to be a dentist. A patient can't stop laughing from the anesthesia so Charlie knocks him out. At a drug store, he fights with a man who becomes another patient and pulls the skirt off the dentist's wife.The Little Tramp pretends to be a dentist. A patient can't stop laughing from the anesthesia so Charlie knocks him out. At a drug store, he fights with a man who becomes another patient and pulls the skirt off the dentist's wife.
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Also, I am not sure if it was just the copy that I watched, but part of the film plays in regular motion, rather than the slightly fast motion of most of the other short films, so you can see pretty clearly what it actually looked like when they were filming the fight scenes. Early in the film, Charlie walks into the dentist's office where he works and immediately has a fistfight with another guy, the receptionist, I guess, in the office. And this guy is tiny, by the way .Chaplin was a little guy himself, but this other guy makes Chaplin look like a giant. Anyway, they have a fight scene that is in normal speed, so it almost looks like slow-motion.
The film is also one of the more violent of the Keystone films; at one point a guy gets hit in the face with a brick and then seems to spit out some teeth, soon landing himself in the dentist's office and being worked on by Charlie, who threw the brick in the first place, with a pair of what looks like bolt-cutters. There is a brief use of laughing gas in the film, but most of it is another ten minute slapstick fight scene interspersed with some genuinely brilliant moments.
Also note that one scene in the film is filmed on the sidewalk in front of a place called the Sunset Pharmacy, which I imagine was a real place somewhere on Sunset Blvd. in Los Angeles. If anyone knows anything about that, please let me know!
This short is quite a bit better than the norm. While at times the plot degenerates to a lot of punching and kicking for absolutely no reason at all, the film also has a few decent laughs as Charlie pretends to be a dentist. Nothing outstandingly funny, but compared to the generally boring stuff he did for the studio, it's a big improvement.
It uses the same style of comedy Charlie later became synonymous with. But it's so poorly made that you can not laugh even if you wish to. It's all about kicking, hitting, throwing bricks and falling over each other which to this day, remain the most overused cliches in slapstick.
Asides from that, the acting is great!
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis film is among the 34 short films included in the "Chaplin at Keystone" DVD collection.
- Citas
Dr. Pain - the Dentist: Get something to bring this man to!
- ConexionesEdited into Comedy Cocktail (1951)
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Charlot, dentista
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración16 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1