Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaEdna's father wants her to marry wealthy Count He-Ha. Charlie, Edna's true love, impersonates the Count at dinner, but the real Count shows up and Charlie is thrown out. Later on Charlie and... Leggi tuttoEdna's father wants her to marry wealthy Count He-Ha. Charlie, Edna's true love, impersonates the Count at dinner, but the real Count shows up and Charlie is thrown out. Later on Charlie and Edna are chased by her father, The Count, and three policeman. The pursuers drive off a p... Leggi tuttoEdna's father wants her to marry wealthy Count He-Ha. Charlie, Edna's true love, impersonates the Count at dinner, but the real Count shows up and Charlie is thrown out. Later on Charlie and Edna are chased by her father, The Count, and three policeman. The pursuers drive off a pier.
- Young Butler
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- Undetermined Role
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- Cop with Baton
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- Old Butler
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- Cop
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- Edna's Father
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- Count Chloride de Lime - Edna's Suitor
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Recensioni in evidenza
The picture opens, not with the tramp, but with a scene establishing the set-up and a background story for the action to take place in. Chaplin here demonstrates what he has learnt from DW Griffith, with some neat, functional shots, and making nice use of tree branches to frame Edna Purviance. As his little tramp character has developed, he is giving him more attention-grabbing entrances, this time appearing from an iris in an iconic pose, framed starkly against a brick wall.
However, a Jitney Elopement is often thought as one of Chaplin's weakest Essanay efforts, and it's not hard to see why. In spite of this promising opening, Chaplin seems to have skimped on good comedy. The dining-table routine is a bit lifeless, and we then descend into a Keystone-ish farce-in-the-park and car chase. There also seem to have been some problems with editing, as a few two-shot gags are poorly timed looking very unprofessional. Great supporting players like Leo White and Bud Jamison are underused. Chaplin would make a more successful job of blending gags with a romantic storyline in his next appearance – The Tramp.
And now, the all-important statistic –
Number of kicks up the arse: 2 (1 for, 1 against)
The first half of this film consists of Charlie trying to rescue his love from a forced marriage to a rich swell. He impersonates the swell and the film runs smoothly--especially since there is a real plot--something many of the Keystone and early Essanay shorts lack. However, after Charlie's ruse is discovered, the film becomes standard slapstick--with chases and violence, etc. It's like two very different shorts fused together without regard to the whole.
Even Chaplin's most ardent fans will be hard pressed to find much to enjoy in this rather uninspired short, but while watching it again recently I found three points of interest. First, there is a piece of comic business Charlie executes during a lunch with Edna and her father that is expertly rendered. While chatting away, seemingly unaware of what he's doing, Charlie slices the bread he's holding into a perfect coil, then briefly "plays" it like a concertina, i.e. one of those musical instruments that looks like a big Slinky. It's a brief gag, practically a throwaway, but beautifully performed. It also suits the moment, for Charlie is nervous, and this gives him something to do with his hands. Next, a sequence in a park shortly thereafter features a very rare instance of Edna Purviance taking part in knockabout comedy: she's sitting on a tree branch, and tumbles to the ground twice. For Mabel Normand at Keystone this would have been all in a day's work, but Edna is usually more demure, and was very seldom put in this sort of situation. Lastly, the movie concludes with an extended car chase, which is also a rarity in Chaplin's work. We almost never see Charlie at the wheel of a car. In later years he wrote in his autobiography that he didn't like chases because the player's personality is lost; on those occasions when he did employ chase sequences, they usually occur on foot. For what it's worth, the automobile chase in A Jitney Elopement is well filmed and well edited, with a cute gag or two along the way and a nice wrap-up.
Beyond these minor points, admittedly, there isn't much to see here that Chaplin didn't do better elsewhere, but for viewers interested in studying the work of this uniquely gifted comedian I'd say the "bread gag" and the chase finale make this film worth a look. And for fans of the beautiful, underrated Miss Purviance, this may be your only opportunity to see her fall out of a tree, not once but twice!
Her father wants her to marry a well-to-do count who has requested he make the arrangement for them.
However, she is attracted to Charlie's wit and antics, and asks him to be her knight in shining armour, by whisking her away from this unhappy fate.
At first, Charlie pretends to be the count, wooing both her and her father in the process...that is, until the count shows up and exposes his attempted con.
Run out of the house, Charlie must resort to his back up plan...which involves stealing her away from the count when they go to visit Golden Gate Park.
He puts his plan into action, and it results in a hilarious slapstick chase, as the count, her father and a couple police officers who get caught up in the ordeal, begin to pursue the two lovers as they try to escape through the park.
Culminating with the first filmed car chase sequence in the history of San Francisco...beginning, first, on the speedway, in front of the iconic windmill, and eventually ending up on the Great Highway.
All in all, it's a simple, yet effective, silent romantic comedy...and one of the first films shot in San Francisco, which would later become an iconic filming location for many films to come.
A bit of a prcedent setter, one might argue.
6 out of 10.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizCharlot prende moglie (1915) has been restored by Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna and Lobster Films in collaboration with Film Preservation Associates, from a nitrate fine grain preserved at The Museum of Modern Art and a nitrate print preserved at the Cinemathèque Royale de Belgique.
Intertitles have been reconstructed from re-release titles of 1920's found in both 35mm and Kodascope 16mm original elements.
Scanned at L'Immagine Ritrovata laboratory.
- BlooperDuring the auto chase, Chaplin is wearing his hat during the close up scenes but is bareheaded in the distant shots.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Silent Clowns: Charlie Chaplin (2006)
- Colonne sonoreThe Jitney Bus
words by Edith Maida Lessing
music by Roy Ingrahm
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- Tempo di esecuzione26 minuti
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