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El chico

Título original: The Kid
  • 1921
  • A
  • 1h 8min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.2/10
143 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
4,637
256
El chico (1921)
Buddy ComedyComediaDramaFamiliaFarsaSlapstick

Charlot cuida de un niño abandonado, pero una serie de eventos comprometen su relación con él.Charlot cuida de un niño abandonado, pero una serie de eventos comprometen su relación con él.Charlot cuida de un niño abandonado, pero una serie de eventos comprometen su relación con él.

  • Dirección
    • Charles Chaplin
  • Guionista
    • Charles Chaplin
  • Elenco
    • Charles Chaplin
    • Edna Purviance
    • Jackie Coogan
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    8.2/10
    143 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    4,637
    256
    • Dirección
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Guionista
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Elenco
      • Charles Chaplin
      • Edna Purviance
      • Jackie Coogan
    • 311Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 123Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Película con mejor calificación n.º 138
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados en total

    Fotos102

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    Elenco principal68

    Editar
    Charles Chaplin
    Charles Chaplin
    • A Tramp
    • (as Charlie Chaplin)
    Edna Purviance
    Edna Purviance
    • The Woman
    Jackie Coogan
    Jackie Coogan
    • The Child
    • (as Jack Coogan)
    Carl Miller
    Carl Miller
    • The Man
    Albert Austin
    Albert Austin
    • Car Thief
    • (sin créditos)
    • …
    Beulah Bains
    • Bride
    • (sin créditos)
    Nellie Bly Baker
    • Slum Nurse
    • (sin créditos)
    Henry Bergman
    Henry Bergman
    • Professor Guido
    • (sin créditos)
    • …
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Orphan Asylum Driver
    • (sin créditos)
    B.F. Blinn
    B.F. Blinn
    • His Assistant
    • (sin créditos)
    Kitty Bradbury
    • Bride's Mother
    • (sin créditos)
    Frank Campeau
    Frank Campeau
    • Welfare Officer
    • (sin créditos)
    Bliss Chevalier
    • Extra in Wedding Scene
    • (sin créditos)
    Frances Cochran
    • Extra in Reception Scene
    • (sin créditos)
    Elsie Codd
    • Extra in Alley Scene
    • (sin créditos)
    Jack Coogan Sr.
    • Pickpocket
    • (sin créditos)
    • …
    Estelle Cook
    • Extra in Wedding Scene
    • (sin créditos)
    Lillian Crane
    • Extra in Wedding Scene
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Guionista
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios311

    8.2142.5K
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    Resumen

    Reviewers say 'The Kid' by Charlie Chaplin is a pioneering silent film that highlights Chaplin's inventiveness and physical comedy mastery. Featuring the Tramp and young Jackie Coogan, it blends humor with poignant social commentary. Chaplin's visual storytelling, slapstick, and emotional depth create a timeless narrative. The chemistry between Chaplin and Coogan, along with his direction, writing, and music, elevates the film. Despite minor critiques, its genius and impact endure.
    Generado por AI a partir del texto de las opiniones de los usuarios

    Opiniones destacadas

    Snow Leopard

    A Must-See Silent Comedy

    While perhaps not as celebrated now as some of Chaplin's later features, "The Kid" is an excellent achievement and a thoroughly enjoyable film. Charlie and young Jackie Coogan make an entertaining and unforgettable pair, and there is a lot of good slapstick plus a story that moves quickly and makes you want to know what will happen. Chaplin also wrote a particularly good score for this one, and most of the time the music sets off the action very nicely.

    While it's a fairly simple story, this is one of Chaplin's most efficiently designed movies. Every scene either is necessary to the plot, or is very funny for its own sake, or both. Except for Chaplin and Coogan, most of the other characters (even frequent Chaplin leading lady Edna Purviance) are just there to advance the plot when needed, and the two leads are allowed to carry the show, which they both do extremely well.

    "The Kid" is also impressive in that, while the story is a sentimental one, it strikes an ideal balance, maintaining sympathy for the characters while never overdoing it with the pathos, which Chaplin occasionally lapsed into even in some of his greatest movies. Here, the careful balance makes the few moments of real emotion all the more effective and memorable.

    This is one of Chaplin's very best movies by any measure. If you enjoy silent comedies, don't miss it.
    8rbverhoef

    The tramp and the kid

    A very poor woman (Edna Purviance) can't take care of her baby and therefore she puts him in the back of a car, hoping someone will take good care of him. By a coincidence the kid ends up in the arms of a tramp, played by Charlie Chaplin of course, and he finds a note that asks if someone will take care of the orphan child. The tramp takes the job and the story continues five years later.

    We see how the tramp and the kid (now played by Jackie Coogan) live and love each other, how they have little sneaky plans to earn money, how they belong to each other. In the meanwhile the woman has become rich and when she does a little charity for the poor she meets the kid not knowing it is hers.

    This is a great feature film with Chaplin as the tramp. He composed the music himself as well and it fits the story perfectly. The kid is very good and he does a great job in scenes where kids can easily overreact. There is one great sequence where the tramp is in dreamland and every single person is an angel. This could have been a great movie on its own. As the film says in the first seconds, 'The Kid' is good for a laugh and perhaps a tear.
    8AlsExGal

    First feature-length film from director-star Charlie Chaplin

    Chaplin plays the Tramp, who stumbles upon an abandoned baby, which he reluctantly raises. Five years later, he and the boy (Jackie Coogan) live a hard-scrabble life, but they have each other. When the child welfare department decides to take the boy, the Tramp takes him on the run, but some things are not meant to be. Also featuring Edna Purviance, Carl Miller, Lita Grey, and Jackie Coogan Sr.

    Chaplin's patented mix of slapstick humor, honest humanity, and shameless sentimentality are put on fine display here. The running time is slight (the version I watched was 53 minutes), but it seems just about right. The story is simple, the characters are basic and no more than necessary to tell the tale. Jackie Coogan was easily one of the best child actors in the history of film, extremely adorable without being precious, and immensely talented. Chaplin would continue to grow artistically, but this is the bridge from his early, Mack Sennett-era silliness and his later, multi-dimensional masterworks.
    10lugonian

    Charlie Finds a Son

    THE KID (First National Pictures, 1921), a comedy-drama written, directed and starring Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977), plays an important part his screen career. Aside from Chaplin cast opposite Marie Dressler in TILLIE'S PUNCTURED ROMANCE (1914), a Mack Sennett production hailed as the first feature length comedy, THE KID starts Chaplin with a whole new cycle of feature comedies, but releases coming once every two to three years. A comic genius who got his start in comedy shorts starting in 1914, eventually under the supervision and direction of himself, Chaplin's methods in movie making improved with each passing film. Like himself, Jackie Coogan, Chaplin's littlest co-star and title character, made such an impression with his initial performance, nearly upstaging his impresario, that he immediately found himself starring in movies on his own, becoming Hollywood's first important child star.

    THE KID starts off with inter-titles, "A picture with a smile and perhaps a tear," followed by "The woman whose sin was motherhood," titles much to the liking of a D.W. Griffith directorial tearjerker starring Lillian Gish, yet, in fact, might have seemed more logical for a Griffith film than Chaplin's, whose very name personifies comedy. A young girl (Edna Purviance) leaves a charity hospital with a baby in her arms. who turns out to be an unwed mother whose father (Carl Miller), a young artist, never returns to her life. The mother places her baby in the back of a limousine and walks away. Crooks enter the scene, stealing the car, discover the baby and place it in a trash bin in the poor district of town. Noticing the infant wrapped in a blanket, Charlie tries to pass it off to someone else, but after stumbling upon a note which reads, "Please love and care for this orphan child," he decides to raise the child himself. Five years pass. The kid (whose name is believed to be John), now Charlie's adopted son and sidekick, start off each day with brand new adventures in raising money. As for the kid's mother, she's become "a star of great prominence," devoting her spare time with charitable work handing out gifts to the children of poor districts, where lives the kid. The paths of the kid and his mother meet on numerous occasions, unaware of each other's identities. When the kid becomes seriously ill and in need of immediate medical attention, a middle-aged country doctor, having discovered Charlie not the boy's true father, sends for the authorities from the County Orphan Asylum to take the child away.

    THE KID consists of many ingredients to make this an everlasting product, especially for a silent movie made so long ago. Chaplin, who constructs his gags to perfection, has one difficult scene that comes off naturally, this being where Charlie cuts out diapers from a sheet for the infant as he's lying beside him in a miniature hammock crying out for his milk. The baby immediately stops after Charlie directs the nipple attached to a coffee pot (a substitute for a baby bottle) back into his mouth. Another classic moment, on a serious nature, is when Charlie is being held back by authorities, being forced to watch his crying "son" taken away from him. Charlie breaks away and goes after the truck as he's being chased by a policeman from the slanted roof-tops. The close-up where father and son tearful reunite is as touching as anything ever captured on film.

    Chaplin and little Jackie (billed Jack Coogan in the opening credits) display their talents as both funny characters and dramatic actors. Little Jackie is especially cute as a miniature sized Chaplin, right down to his baggy pants. Chaplin giving one of his most sensitive performances, is so convincing that it doesn't take away his screen persona as the lovable funny tramp. From this point onward, he would become less characteristic as a slapstick comedian and more agreeable as an serious actor, at the same time, adding more plot, pathos and truly great comedy routines.

    As much as the present showing of THE KID barely reaches the one hour mark, Chaplin includes enough gags and pathos to make it work. The dream sequence where he finds himself in Heaven surrounded by angels might appear trite and unnecessary for some, but actually makes it essential to the plot which fits into the scene that follows.

    THE KID, which had been unavailable for public viewing for many years, was resurrected in the 1970s in revival movie houses with a brand new and wonderful orchestral score conducted by Chaplin himself in 1971. It would be nearly another decade for many to fully get to see and appreciate this little masterpiece when distributed to video cassette in 1989 as part of the Charlie Chaplin centennial collection, double billed along with a comedy short, THE IDLE CLASS (1921). In the DVD format, the two disc set includes rare out-takes and deleted scenes. Turner Classic Movies has brought forth THE KID as part of its movie library, where it made its debut December 15, 2003, during its weekly Silent Sunday Nights, hosted by Robert Osborne, and later in March 2004 when Charlie Chaplin was selected as its "Star of the Month."

    For its age, THE KID holds up extremely well, thanks to the convincing performances of both Chaplin and Coogan. There's no doubt Jackie Coogan (1914-1984) became an overnight star with this one film. He was a natural. While the paths of Chaplin and Coogan would never meet again, on screen anyway, without them, there would never have been such a true classic from the silent screen era as THE KID. (****)
    vladymirror

    the greatest

    Is there a way to name the greatest filmmaker of all time? Probably not, to different people it's gonna be different person, so I can speak only for myself. Let me try to describe my favorite contestant for this award:

    This man is the true embodiment of the "American Dream": Having grown up in poverty and misery and virtually without parents (without a father and with insane mother), moving to America with basically nothing but his ability to speak English (in the era of the silent movies), this man manages to establish his own film company (United Artists) and becomes one of the creators of Hollywood. He produces, directs, writes, plays the leading role and composes the music for his movies. He is the creator of the most famous movie image on the earth-the Little Tramp. As you all probably know I am talking about sir Charles Spencer Chaplin.

    There are attempts, sometimes I read, to make Buster Keaton candidate for the Chaplin's throne. Well, I won't comment on that for I am not familiar with Keaton's work; I grew up with Chaplin so you could say I am being biased, however I would mention only one fact here: the only time the two meet on the screen is in a Chaplin's movie "Limelight." I think this says a lot.

    Why did I choose the movie "The Kid" as a podium for my tribute to the great Charlie? I have to say I like all of his movies, mistake, I love all of his movies, but this one is the true purl in his work to me. I don't think of any other movie, not only Chaplin's, that made me cry, I mean really cry, and laugh, I mean really laugh, like "The Kid." The closest I can think of now is another Chaplin's masterpiece "City Lights" but unlike the later one in the former one that is only him, the tramp, and the kid; and everything is silent. Think about it: the movie making at its purest.

    I don't know whether I could make my point with this review-probably not. There are not enough words to describe the respect and gratitude I feel towards Chaplin. To me he is simply the greatest filmmaker of all time.

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    • Trivia
      The off-screen chemistry between Charles Chaplin and Jackie Coogan was just as strong as their onscreen relationship. Every Sunday, during the first few weeks of filming, Chaplin would take Jackie to amusement parks and pony rides and other activities. Some have seen Chaplin's relationship with Coogan as an attempt for Chaplin to reclaim his own unhappy childhood, while others have interpreted Chaplin's attention toward the boy as recasting Coogan into the child he had just lost.
    • Errores
      On the rooftop, after the Tramp chases the two welfare workers who have captured and tormented John, the scene ends with the Tramp and one of the workers fighting on the back of the workers' pickup truck. After kicking the second welfare man off the back of the pickup, the Tramp makes a 'nonsensical' wave good-bye as he and John ride off to momentary safety. In reality Charles Chaplin (also the director) is waving 'CUT' to cameraman Roland Totheroh.
    • Citas

      Title Card: A picture with a smile - and perhaps, a tear.

    • Versiones alternativas
      A new version was reissued in 1972 with a new music score composed by Charles Chaplin, who also re-edited the film in order to omit a few scenes featuring the kid's mother.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)

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    • How long is The Kid?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 16 de noviembre de 1922 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Instagram
      • Official Site
    • Idiomas
      • Ninguno
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Kid
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Chaplin Studios - 1416 N. La Brea Avenue, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • Charles Chaplin Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 250,000 (estimado)
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 46,313
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 8min(68 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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