The Circus /A Day's Pleasure (1919)
Facts
| Cast | Albert Austin, Eugene Barry, Henry Bergman, Jack Bernard and Stanley Blystone |
| Theatrical Release | December 15, 1919 |
| Video Release | November 5, 1992 |
| Running Time | 92 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 086162300530 |
| Buy this item ... | 1 new from $24.75, 11 used from $3.35, 2 collectible from $19.98 |
About The Circus /A Day's Pleasure
Here, Chaplin's Tramp is taken on as a clown at the circus, having been chased into the big tent by a policeman wrongly suspected of theft and wowing the audience with his pratfalls. He falls in love with the ill-treated ringmaster's daughter (Merna Kennedy) but is swiftly rivaled by a new addition to the circus, a handsome tightrope walker. To try to win back her affections, the Tramp himself attempts the same act, culminating in the best sequence of the film, when he is assailed by monkeys as he totters amateurishly and precariously along a rope suspended high in the tent. Although The Circus is marred by the rather hackneyed and (even in 1928) stale melodramatic device of the cruel father and imploring daughter, it scores high on its slapstick content, with routines involving a hall of mirrors and a mishap with a magician's equipment demonstrating Chaplin's dazzling ability to choreograph apparently improvised mayhem. --David Stubbs Amazon.com
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for The Circus /A Day's Pleasure posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| Hilarious |
As a Chaplin aficionado, I can state that no Chaplin film goes as long- 69 minutes, with such sustained laughter. There are more memorable gags in this one film than in any other film he made- or perhaps anyone has made since, and it deservedly won him his first Academy Award at the first ceremony in 1929. It was a special award for Versatility And Genius In Writing, Acting, Directing, And Producing. Obviously, these were the days before schlock like Crash, Brokeback Mountain, Monster, and Titanic were considered `great films,' worthy of such awards. Yet, even had Chaplin not buried the film in his vault for decades, the very fact that it was made between two of his greatest critical and financial successes, The Gold Rush and City Lights, two indisputable silent film era masterpieces, may have fated the film to its nearly forgotten status anyway.
As pure comedy, perhaps the only film that has as ceaseless a run of comic gags that all work is the 1960s all-star comedy classic It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, but that film could lay no claim to great nor higher art. Perhaps the only downside to The Circus- or rather the DVD, is that it does not offer the original film from 1928, replete with a silent film organ score- say by the great silent organist Rosa Rio? Instead, we only have the overwrought, and didactic musical score Chaplin composed in 1970. His opening rendition of the saccharine Swing Little Girl, sung over the opening titles, is plain bad- both as music and as sung, but thankfully passes quickly. As with his unfortunate 1942 reissue of The Gold Rush- with added narration, this music guides the audience too much, although the film's main theme, I must admit, wins you over at the end. Fortunately, that film's DVD comes with both the 1942 reissue and the 1925 original- which is superior. Some artists never know when to leave greatness alone. Even so, The Circus is the purest and least flawed Chaplin feature film ever made, in that it distills every single aspect of his greatness and, yes, even that grossly overused term- genius. For anyone with a love of pure cinema, silent cinema, and its history, this film and DVD is a must to see and own. But, if you have heart problems, I advise you to be wary, because it is so funny it could literally hurt you....but wouldn't that be the best way to go?
September 18, 2008
| Running Away FROM the Circus |
For sheer comedy, it's hard to think of too many Chaplin film bits that top his tightrope act or the accidental sabotage of the magician's routine. Having the Little Tramp hook up with and play off of real circus clowns was a stroke of genius. The Tramp is a clown who has no need of a costume, other than his usual comic attire. He's funniest when he doesn't realize it. And that, of course, is the point. As in most Chaplin films, there are poignant moments as well, when he falls in love with a fetching young woman--in this case, the circus owner's abused acrobat daughter--who will never come to care for him in quite the same way.
One can speculate about how the typically "Chaplinesque" themes of being misunderstood, thwarted at every turn, and not fully appreciated interested reflected events in the filmmaker's own life. It was certainly a difficult film to make, and a certain melancholy comes through despite the many yuks. That's to be expected in a Chaplin film, of course, but THE CIRCUS seems especially whistful and the film's ending, with the Tramp's choosing to remain behind and to let the circus run away from HIM is haunting. February 16, 2008
| Superb...One of Chaplin's Best. |
GRADE: A-
February 18, 2007
| Possibly his most underrated |
The extras on the bonus disc are plentiful--movie trailers, a poster and picture gallery, a delightful excerpt from the cute 1923 Jackie Coogan film 'Circus Days,' three brief home movies, a whole extra sequence (26 minutes in length) that was deleted from the final cut of the film, the usual introduction by David Robinson, the trailer for all of the films in the Chaplin Collection, and the featurette on the significance and influence of the film today, footage of the Hollywood premiere in January 1928, a brief film shot by Chaplin's chief cameraman Rollie Totheroh, of 3-D test footage, and simulatenous footage from two different cameras during a scene from the deleted sequence. Unfortunately, none of these bonus films have any soundtracks, not even just some generic piano or organ accompaniment. With all of the care that went into assembling the DVDs in the Chaplin Collection, one would think that the producers would have cared enough to have found soundtracks for all of these bonus short films on the discs.
Quite possibly his most underrated silent feature, if not his most underrated feature period, this film is just as wonderful as all of his other features and, due to how it often plays like one of his shorts from the Teens instead of his more serious features, it could very well be an ideal introduction to Chaplin for a new fan. December 18, 2006
| A Friend's Photo |
Additionally, the story of the production difficulties found on disk 2 are fascinating. October 2, 2006
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





