Added: 4 years ago
From: SirCharlesChaplin
Views: 98,695
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  • maganda pelikula ni Chaplin halos lahat ng nakita sa maka bagong comedy film ay kopya pala kay Chaplin the Great.....hahahaha....alam ko na...

  • I really appreciate your clips. It irratates me to no end these people who think they are funny as Mr. Chaplin. There was only one and you have captured some great clips. Thank you.

    RM Ward

  • beautiful video

    great Charlie

    thanks for sharing

    kisses from Brasil

  • grande maestro

    

  • Comment removed

  • its amazing how we can say this movie is a hundred yeards old O_o

  • Charlie Chaplin the choreographer of slapstick.

  • HA }}{{{ HA

  • pause at 09:24, now thats Charlie

  • well if that was the case why did he pay her off ?why was he turned down by the british govt for a nighthood ?

  • he was the first peadophile to practice the art before it became fashionable ,allegedly .

  • @RICHARDTOMLEY10WHARF

    Charlie married a 16 year old, that does not mean he was a pedophile, at 16 you are Leagally allowed to marry, Charlie was not breaking any laws.

  • And the other guy (23 seconds in) is Mack swain. another ledge who goes unnoticed .

  • 12 seconds in.. "Snub" Pollard, also seen in films with Harold Lloyd , Buster Keaton and Laurel and Hardy. We all know the main men, but these supporting actors did so much to help the legends.

  • @ronniesoak2003 Actually, that's Chester Conklin, not Snub Pollard. Pollard was not in this film.

  • @jarjon76 you are correct. Snub's first appearance with Chaplin (uncedited ) was in the 1915 "By the sea"

  • weird that all this people are dead now

  • @EasterBunnySucks YEP WORLD started when u born stupid asshole :)

  • The womens dresses look more like the 1920's. And did they have automobiles of those kinds in 1914?

  • @hotbreeze2

    Yes they did have automobiles of those kind in 1914 thanks to the Ford company. Also you could tell if it was 1920s if the girls had bobbed hair styles which were all the rage in the 1920s. which these girls don't have.

    Plus, in Wikipeadiea this film clearly says it is 1914, October 29, 1914.

  • hey check out my videos of the classics. like chaplin and harold lloyd. if you subscribe, ill upload more videos of chaplin and others.

    from Mr. Nation.

  • Hi there. ... . Tory from Austin Texas. Singer songwriter musician. Check out my originals and subscribe if you like. Please listen to my own original of The Little Tramp..a tribute to Charlie Chaplin

  • @4:55 HAHA, Charlie's so badass, he bit the guy's nose! :p

  • @datalal624 That was a bit (no pun intended) he most likely learned from Ford Sterling, who left Keystone shortly after Chaplin arrived there. Not taking anything away from Charlie, just wanted to give Ford Sterling credit for the nose biting bit.

    If you are interested in Chaplin, esp early Chaplin, I would highly suggest you pick up a copy of "Chaplin at Keystone". It's a 4 DVD box set containing this and other restored Chaplin Keystones. It really gives Chaplin's Keystones new life.

  • @jarjon76 Thanks very much for the info. Would that I could afford to buy DVD box sets right now. :-\

  • @datalal624 I had a mess of Amazon gift cards, so I was able to get it on the cheap. It is a very expensive set (around $70-80 on average), but if you can find it on discount pick it up. It's well worth getting.

  • great! Chaplin of course! ,)

  • This is a great short movie. I just read a book about how people had it on that time this were shoot, and most of them where a little bit poor. I saw some photos too, and no-one smiled. Not even abit.

    I think this is sad. I didn't think people had a good time for a hundred years ago, BUT Charles Chaplin seems to make it really funny to live on that time! In his shorts, life is wonderful. How did he made it.. His the best person i'll ever see on screen.

  • I think during those times people in general never used to smile while taking pictures.

  • Well, people didn't smile in photographs (at least in the early days of plate photography) for a good reason---because the exposure time was long, and it's hard to hold a smile for one minute, let alone several minutes or more. By the 1900s, not smiling in photos was just a convention: people wanted to look sober and respectable. Film never had this convention, though. Even in the earliest Edison and Lumiere Bros. films, they show some people smiling, laughing and having a good time.

  • @xSilyeah  Times where tough back then, to be sure, but admirably, the people worked hard and played hard. They took pride in their work, they didn't have much but they took pride in what they did have and were grateful for it too. About the pictrures-pictures where serious business and very special. Back then getting your picture taken meant something. Hence the lack of smiles.

  • @xSilyeah

    no,thay were happier,smile doesent metter.

  • The world is very deep and full of wonders...

    I am thinking about what happened to all the people in this movie including those behind the fence even little kids.

    Maybe none of them is alive now...oh

  • I thinks that's the best movie music of Chaplin shorts ;D

  • I could watch between 4:56 and 5:37 over and over. Hilarious!

  • LOL. Were those guys behind the fence even actors???

  • Does Chaplin bites the guy in his nose at 04:58 ? HAHAH :D

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