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The Idle Class is a 1921 American silent comedy film written and directed by Charlie Chaplin for First National Pictures.

The Idle Class
Lobby card
Directed byCharles Chaplin
Written byCharles Chaplin
Produced byCharles Chaplin
StarringCharles Chaplin
Edna Purviance
Henry Bergman
Mack Swain
CinematographyRoland Totheroh
Edited byCharles Chaplin
Music byJohnnie von Haines (1969) Charles Chaplin (1972)
Production
company
Charles Chaplin Productions
Distributed byFirst National
Playhouse Home Video (1985) (USA)
Key Video (1989) (USA) (VHS)
Image Entertainment (2000) (USA) (DVD)
Koch Vision (2000) (USA) (DVD)
MK2 Diffusion (2001) (World-wide) (all media)
Warner Home Video (2004, DVD)
Continental Home Vídeo (Brazil) (VHS)
Release date
  • September 25, 1921 (1921-09-25)
Running time
32 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
The Idle Class

Plot summary


The "Little Tramp" (Charlie Chaplin) heads to a resort for warm weather and golf. At the golf course, the Tramp's theft of balls in play causes one golfer (Mack Swain) to mistakenly attack another (John Rand). Meanwhile, a neglected wife (Edna Purviance) leaves her wealthy husband (also played by Chaplin) until he gives up drinking. When the Tramp is later mistaken for a pickpocket, he crashes a masquerade ball to escape from a policeman. There, he is mistaken for the woman's husband. Eventually, it is all straightened out, and the Tramp is once more on his way.


Review


Helen Rockwell of the New York Telegraph wrote,

"...instead of going for a five-reel affair, he has returned to his first short love. But what there is of The Idle Class is so good and so funny that one realizes how much better is it to be entertained by two reels than bored in five."[1]

Chaplin biographer Jeffrey Vance describes The Idle Class as “one of Chaplin’s funniest short comedies.”[2] He notes that Chaplin began production on the film in January 1921 with the working title Vanity Fair:

“Ultimately, Chaplin favored a more equivocal title—The Idle Class—for it is purposely not clear in the film which is the idle class: the idle rich or the idle poor. Chaplin plays both. The film took five months to complete, an amazingly long time for a two-reel comedy.” Vance speculates, “It is perhaps ironic that the story of The Idle Class centers on an unhappy marriage between an absent-minded husband and a lonely wife. This state of affairs could easily describe the principal characters of the tragi-comedy that was Chaplin’s own marriage. In the film Chaplin manages to dramatize the two sides of his own personality: Charlie the Tramp and the Absent-minded husband, rich and neglectful, absorbed to his own interests and indifferent to others. The latter was certainly how Mildred Harris [his first wife] regarded Chaplin.”[2]


Cast



References


  1. "The Idle Class (25 September 1921)". Chaplin: Film by Film. August 31, 2018. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  2. Vance, Jeffrey (2003) Chaplin: Genius of the Cinema New York: Harry N. Abrams, pg. 117 and 121. ISBN 0-8109-4532-0




На других языках


[de] Die feinen Leute

Die feinen Leute (OT: The Idle Class) ist eine US-amerikanische Filmkomödie von Charles Chaplin aus dem Jahre 1921. Chaplin spielt in dem Film eine Doppelrolle.
- [en] The Idle Class

[ru] Праздный класс

«Праздный класс» (англ. The Idle Class, другое название — Vanity Fair) — короткометражный немой фильм Чарли Чаплина, выпущенный 25 сентября 1921 года.



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