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Charlie Chaplin: Exclusive Collection (Volume 2) - 8-DVD Box Set (DVD) (*)
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$33.99

Titre Original: The Star Boarder / In the Park / The New Janitor / Triple Trouble / By the Sea / Dough and Dynamite / Kid Auto Races at Venice / Mabel's Married Life / The Adventurer / The Bond / Caught in a Cabaret / Mabel's Busy Day / The Masquerader / The Rounders / T
Titre Alternatif: The Star Boarder / In the Park / The New Janitor / Triple Trouble / By the Sea / Dough and Dynamite / Kid Auto Races at Venice / Mabel's Married Life / The Adventurer / The Bond / Caught in a Cabaret / Mabel's Busy Day / The Masquerader / The Rounders / T
Examiné, concurrencé ou attribué à:
D'Autres Récompenses De Festival De Film


Langues at Sour-titres:
Anglais ( Dolby Digital 2.0 )
Finlandais ( Subtitles )
Norvégien ( Subtitles )
Suédois ( Subtitles )
Silencieux ( Dolby Digital 2.0 )


Product Origine/Format:
Denmark ( PAL/Region 0 )

Durée:
785 min

Allongement:
Fullscreen

Suppléments:
Ensemble De Boîte
Menu Interactif
Ensemble De Multi-DVD
Accès De Scène
Noir & Blanc


Film filmé et produit dedans:
États-Unis ( USA, Canada )


Un Film De:
George Nichols
Charles Chaplin
Leo White
Henry Lehrman
Mack Sennett
Mabel Normand
Joseph Maddern


Écrit Près:
Craig Hutchinson
Charles Chaplin
Leo White
Mack Sennett
Henry Lehrman
Mabel Normand
Vincent Bryan
Louella Parsons
Hugh Antoine d'Arcy
Prosper Mérimée


Acteurs:
Charles Chaplin ..... The Star Boarder
Minta Durfee ..... Landlady
Edgar Kennedy ..... Landlady's Husband
Gordon Griffith ..... The Son
Alice Davenport ..... Landlady's Friend
Charles Chaplin ..... Charlie
Leona Anderson ..... The Count's Fancy
Charles Chaplin ..... Janitor
John T. Dillon ..... Villainous Manager
Charles Chaplin ..... Charlie - The Janitor
Billy Armstrong ..... Cook
Charles Chaplin ..... Stroller
Billy Armstrong ..... Man in Straw Hat
Charles Chaplin ..... Pierre - A Waiter
Chester Conklin ..... Jacques - A Waiter
Charles Chaplin ..... Tramp
Henry Lehrman ..... Film Director
Charles Chaplin ..... Mabel's Husband
Mabel Normand ..... Mabel
Charles Chaplin ..... The Convict
Edna Purviance ..... The Girl
Edna Purviance ..... Charlie's Wife
Albert Austin ..... Friend
Charles Chaplin ..... Waiter
Mabel Normand ..... Mabel Society Girl
Charles Chaplin ..... Tipsy Nuisance
Charles Chaplin ..... Film Actor
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle ..... Film Actor
Charles Chaplin ..... Mr. Full
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle ..... Mr. Fuller
Edna Purviance ..... Stenographer
Charles Chaplin ..... Mr. Pest
Phyllis Allen ..... Lady in Audience
Charles Chaplin ..... Film Extra
Billy Armstrong ..... Extra
Charles Chaplin ..... Challenger
Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson ..... Enthusiastic Fan
Charles Chaplin ..... Artist
Cecile Arnold ..... Madeleine - A Model
Charles Chaplin ..... Gentleman
Billy Armstrong ..... Father's Friend
Eric Campbell ..... The Tailor
Charles Chaplin ..... His Assistant
Charles Chaplin ..... Clarence - the Husband
Mabel Normand ..... Mabel - the Wife
Charles Chaplin ..... The Saloon Violinist
Edna Purviance ..... The Gypsy Drudge
Charles Chaplin ..... Fireman (1)
Edna Purviance ..... Girl
Charles Chaplin ..... Mabel's Rival Suitor
Eric Campbell ..... Goliath - a Stagehand
Charles Chaplin ..... David - His Assistant
Charles Chaplin ..... Immigrant
Edna Purviance ..... Immigrant
Charles Chaplin ..... Pickpocket
Minta Durfee ..... Edgar's Girl
Charles Chaplin ..... The Inebriate
Charles Chaplin ..... Drunk
Albert Austin ..... Taxi Driver
Charles Chaplin ..... Mr. Sniffels
Phyllis Allen ..... Mrs. Sniffels
Charles Chaplin ..... Pawnbroker's Assistant
Henry Bergman ..... Pawnbroker
Charles Chaplin ..... Impecuneous Customer
Eric Campbell ..... Store Manager
Charles Chaplin ..... Weakchin
Mack Swain ..... King Lowbrow
Charles Chaplin ..... Officer Darn Hosiery
Edna Purviance ..... Carmen - the Gypsy
Charles Chaplin ..... Dentist's Assistant
Fritz Schade ..... Dr. Pain - the Dentist
Charles Chaplin ..... Lord Helpus
Edgar Kennedy ..... Lord Helpus' Butler
Charley Chase ..... Nephew
Charles Chaplin ..... Masher
Chester Conklin ..... Rival
Charles Chaplin ..... The Film Johnnie
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle ..... Self - Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle
Charles Chaplin ..... Drunken Masher
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle ..... Shabby Drunk


Synopsis:
No french review yet:
The Star Boarder: A brat's magic lantern show exposes an indiscreet moment between a landlady and her star boarder. In the Park: A tramp steals a girl's handbag, but when he tries to pick Charlie's pocket loses his cigarettes and matches. He rescues a hot dog man from a thug, but takes a few with his walking stick. When the thief tries to take some of Charlie's sausages, Charlie gets the handbag. The handbag makes its way from person to person to its owner, who is angry with her boyfriend who didn't protect her in the first place. The boyfriend goes to throw himself in the lake in despair. Charlies helps him. The New Janitor: Charlie is janitor for a firm the manager of which receives a threatening note about his gambling debts. He throws a bucket of water out the window which lands on his boss and costs him his job. The boss, attempting to steal the money heeds from the office safe, is caught by his secretary and Charlie comes to save her and the money. He is briefly accused of being the thief but ultimately triumphs. Triple Trouble: As Colonel Nutt is experimenting with explosives, a new janitor is joining his household. The inept janitor proceeds to make life difficult for the rest of staff. Meanwhile, a foreign agent arrives at the house in hopes of getting Col. Nutt's latest invention. The inventor throws him out, so the agent then employs a thug to get the formula. When police head to the Nutt home to start an investigation, a complicated fracas ensues. By the Sea: Charles Chaplin, with his big feet performing their usual mirth-provoking perambulations, wanders down to the sea shore. There is some wind blowing, so Chaplin anchors his hat to his head with a cable. He meets a pedestrian whose hat is similarly attached. The two bump, their hats fly off and they scramble for them. When the hats finally are recovered, each has the wrong one. This causes considerable embarrassment when the two cables go taut as the two men separate. Anger soon takes the place of embarrassment when the cables become hopelessly entangled, and they battle all over the beach. After they have fought themselves weary, they shake hands and decide to have a drink. They get ice cream cones and each insists the other have the honor of paying for them. This is unsatisfactory to the drug clerk and another row starts. They smear each other with ice cream and incidentally bespatter a six-foot dandy, which precipitates still more trouble. While the battle is still in progress Chaplin leaves his new-found pal in the lurch and slips off to flirt with the sweetheart of the dandy. His perfidy is discovered, however, and the result would stir the risibilities of the most forlorn gloom. Dough and Dynamite: The bakers in the employ of Monsieur La Vie go on strike. In the emergency Pierre and Jacques, the waiters, take possession of the kitchen, and as there is quite a bit of jealousy between them, on account of the female waitresses who smile impartially on both. It is not long before the dough is flying. Meanwhile, the strikers have conspired. They drill a hole in a loaf of bread and insert therein a stick of dynamite, cleverly replacing the piece of crust on the end of the loaf. Then they give it to a little girl, instructing her to carry it to the bakery and explaining that because the bread is too heavy her mother has sent it back. The wife of Monsieur La Vie returns the child's money and orders are given to the bakers to put the loaf back in the oven and bake it some more. They comply. The whole establishment is in a demoralized state. Customers in the café cannot get waited upon. The cook is in a towering temper. Pierre is clubbed on the head by the strikers, and goes about in a maudlin condition, getting himself and everybody else into all sorts of trouble. And then, the dynamited loaf explodes. The innocent victims are buried in splintered ovens, broken china an earthquake of pastry and bursting flour sacks, and huge mounds of dough heave fitfully where human hearts once throbbed. At the very end of the tragedy we see the yeasty mass churning and swelling, and then, out of the sticky lump, the unfortunate Pierre thrusts a gluey head. Kid Auto Races at Venice: Charlie, dressed as a tramp for the first time, goes to a baby-cart race in Venice, California. He causes a great deal of trouble and confusion, both on off the track (getting in the way of the cameraman) and on (interfering with the race). He succeeds in irritating both the participants and the public. Mabel's Married Life: Mabel goes home after being humiliated by a masher whom her wimpy husband won't fight. The husband goes off to a bar and gets drunk. She buys a boxing dummy hoping it will inspire her husband, but when he returns he gets in a fight with it, taking it to be the ladykiller. The Adventurer: Charlie is an escaped convict, eluding his pursuers along the rocky sea coast. He dodges back and forth, and is driven into the sea, where he swims alongside a boat in which a bather is struggling to shed his sweater. Charlie steals his bathing suit and emerges, garbed as a bather, just as Edna's mamma is struggling in the water near the pier. 'Big Eric,' boastful of his strength, has been debating the advisability of attempting mother's rescue when Edna jumps in. Charlie saves them both and Eric pushes the rescuer back into the water. Charlie is rescued and taken to Edna's home, where he dons an oversized evening suit and takes part in social events. It develops that Edna's dad is the judge who sentenced Charlie, but he bluffs his way through this obstacle. Eric finds a newspaper announcing Charlie's escape and carrying his picture. Charlie fools the rest of the family by making whiskers on the picture but Eric calls the prison warden and Charlie is pursued from one part of the house to the other until he lands in the grasp of a big guard. Edna comes onto the scene as the guard grips Charlie's shoulder. The prisoner introduces the guard to the fair miss, and as his captor reaches to take the girl's hand, Charlie slips away. The Bond: Half-reel made for the Liberty Loan Committee and distributed free throughout the country. The actors show that bonds of friendship, love and marriage are inspiring but the most important bonds of all are Liberty Bonds, the blockbuster which will knock out the Kaiser. Caught in a Cabaret: Given an hour off from his job as a cafe waiter, Charlie rescues Mabel from a thug, is given an invitation to her home, and arrives presenting a card which falsely identifies him as the Greek Ambassador. Before he can get back to work, her parents invite him to a future garden party. Her jealous lover has Charlie followed back to the cafe. Charlie is a hit at the garden party but, as he leaves to return to work, the rival invites everyone to go with him to the cafe so Charlie will be exposed. Mabel's Busy Day: A hotdog girl gives one to a policeman who then allows her into a race track. While other customers swipe her hotdogs, Charlie runs off with the whole box, pretending to sell them while actually giving them away. She calls her policeman who battles Charlie. The Masquerader: Charlie is an actor in a film studio. He messes up several scenes and is tossed out. Returning dressed as a lady, he charms the director. Even so, Charlie never makes it into film, winding up at the bottom of a well. The Rounders: Two men are mistreated by their wives in their respective rooms and chased out of the house. The two wives and the two husbands confront each other in moments of agitation. The two men go to the restaurant, behaving as if they were at home: one of them spreads his feet, the other leans on another client. One takes a tablecloth as a sheet and lies on the floor. The wives reach the husbands at the restaurant; they beat them and send them on the run. The two men reach a canoe, lie in it, and sink into the water. The Bank: Charlie enters a bank opens a large vault and brings out a mop and pail. With the mop over his shoulder he hits various people and has comic tussles with another janitor. A Night in the Show: Charles Chaplin decides to go to the show for an evening's entertainment. He wants to see it so badly that he appears in a double role, that of a 'swell' in evening clothes in the dress circle and a rowdy in the gallery. He visits many cafés on the way and arrives in a super-critical mood. His seat in the second row doesn't satisfy him and he moves to the front, mussing up other people on the way. The orchestra leader strikes him with his baton and a free-for-all fight is started. Chaplin is hurled into the lobby, where he bumps into a fat woman and knocks her into a fountain. Chaplin drops asleep and several snakes, from the 'charmer's' basket, nest in his lap. He brushes them into the orchestra and the audience stampedes. In the gallery, Chaplin, the rowdy, bombards a couple of singers with ice cream and tomatoes. Chaplin, in the box, assists by besmirching the singers with the cakes a fat boy is eating. When a fire-eater makes his bow, Chaplin, the rowdy, turns the hose on him. Chaplin, the 'swell' in the box, gets a ducking, as does most of the audience, and the show is broken up. His New Job: Charlie is trying to get a job in a movie. After causing difficulty on the set, he is told to help the carpenter. When one of the actors doesn't show, Charlie is given a chance to act but instead enters a dice game. When he does finally act, he ruins the scene, wrecks the set, and tears the skirt from the star. The Champion: Walking along with his bulldog, Charlie finds a 'good luck' horseshoe just as he passes a training camp advertising for a boxing partner 'who can take a beating.' After watching others lose, Charlie puts the horseshoe in his glove and wins. The trainer prepares Charlie to fight the world champion. A gambler wants Charlie to throw the fight. He and the trainer's daughter fall in love. The Face on the Barroom Floor: The plot is a satire derived from Hugh Antoine D'Arcy's poem of the same title. The painter courts Madeleine but loses to the wealthy client who sits for his portrait. The despairing artist draws the girl's portrait on the barroom floor and gets tossed out. Years later he sees her, her husband and their horde of children. Unrecognized by her, Charlie shakes off his troubles and walks off into the future. A Woman: Mother, Father and Daughter go to the park. The women dose off on a bench while the father plays a hide-and-seek game with a girl, blindfolded. Charlie leads him into a lake. Both dozing ladies on the bench fall for Charlie and invite him for dinner. The father returns home with a friend. Charlie rushes upstairs and dresses like a woman, shaving his moustache. Both men fall for Charlie. The Count: Charlie burns a count's trousers while ironing them and is fired. The tailor finds an invitation to dinner at Miss Moneybags and goes in place of the count. Charlie goes to the kitchen of the same house; he is attracted to the cook, and so are the butler and a policeman. Once discovered by the tailor-count, Charlie must pretend to be the count's secretary. The real count shows up. His Trysting Place: Charlie's wife sends him to the store for a baby bottle with milk. Elsewhere, Ambrose offers to post a love letter for a woman in his boarding house. The two men meet at a restaurant and each takes the other's coat by mistake. Charlie's wife thinks he has a lover; Ambrose's believes he has an illegitimate child. The Vagabond: An impoverished violinist falls for a beautiful gypsy girl. Together they meet an artist who paints the girl's portrait. Charlie, the violinist, believes the girl loves the painter. Later, when a wealthy woman recognizes her long-ago- kidnapped daughter in the painting, she tracks down the girl with the artist's help. The gypsy girl is taken back to her rightful heritage, leaving Charlie thinking she has gone off with the artist he thinks she loves. But has she? Does she? The Fireman: Charlie is a fireman who always does everything wrong. A man talks the Fire Chief into ignoring his burning home (he wants the insurance money) unaware that his daughter (the love of the Chief) is upstairs in the house. When the house next door catches fire its owner rouses Charlie who rouses the force. The Fatal Mallet: A pretty girl will be the object of affection of two desperate suitors. One of them is displaced by an opportunistic little man. Both of them will have a war, throwing themselves bricks. Charlie is throwing bricks hidden inside of a sort of shed. But Sennet will join him, when a third man appears on scene, and threatens to steal the girl's attention. However, when Charlie and Sennet begins to plan a strategy inside the shed, Charlie will play dirty and with a huge hammer, leaves Sennet unconscious. But a precocious kid, apparently will be the fourth 'man' trying to win over the girl. Charlie manages to get rid of the kid, but Sennet and Swain will have the chance of having their revenge. Behind the Screen: Three movies are being shot simultaneously and Charlie is an overworked scene shifter. The foreman is waited on hand and foot until all the shifters but Charlie go on strike. A girl looking for work pretends to be a man and helps Charlie. Charlie discovers her gender and falls in love with her. The foreman thinks they are homosexual and in the ensuing fight they become involved in a long pie throwing scene from one of the movies in production. The frustrated workers dynamite the studio. The Immigrant: Charlie is on his way to the USA. He wins in a card game, puts the money in Edna's bag (she and her sick mother have been robbed of everything). When he retrieves a little for himself he is accused of being a thief. Edna clears his name. Later, broke, Charlie finds a coin and goes into a restaurant. There he finds Edna, whose mother has died, and asks her to join him. When he reaches for the coin to pay for their meals it is missing (it has fallen through a hole in his pocket). Twenty Minutes of Love: Charlie is amidst a number of loving couples in the park. He parodies one couple by embracing a tree. A girl asks her beau for a love token. The beau steals a pocket watch from a sleeping man, Charlie gets it away from him and gives it to the girl. He later gets it back and tries to sell it to his original owner who calls a policeman. Many park visitors wind up getting tossed into the lake. The Cure: Charlie goes to a spa to dry out, but he takes a trunk of liquor with him. He tangles with another's gouty foot in a revolving door. Later he thinks the gouty man is making love signs to him (he doesn't Edna, the real object of the man's efforts), so he signs back. He interpets a massage to be a wrestling match. When management throws his liquor into the fountain, when flow the healthful waters, everyone gets drunk. Mabel's Strange Predicament: In a hotel lobby, an inebriated Charlie runs into an elegant lady, gets tied up in her dog's leash, and falls down. He later runs into her in the hotel corridor, locked out of her room. They run through various rooms. Mabel ends up in one, hiding under the bed of an elderly husband. Enter the jealous wife and Mabel's lover. One A.M.: Drunk as a skunk, Charlie arrives home by taxi after a wild night out, only to realise that he has lost his key. Now, as an open window becomes the entrance, practically every single item or piece of furniture--including a possessed Murphy bed--becomes a formidable and insurmountable obstacle standing in his way, and working against him. Can't a man find peace at 1 o'clock in the morning? A Fair Exchange: Charlie and his wife are walking in the park when they encounter Ambrose and his wife. The partners become fond of their counterparts and begin chasing each other around. A policeman looking for a professional Don Juan becomes involved, as does a Turk. The Pawnshop: Charlie, the not-so-punctual and dependable pawnbroker's assistant, starts his day with his usual duties at the pawnshop--a bit of dusting; some polishing up, and above all, a lot of quarrelling with his co-worker. Before long, a customer arrives--what a fabulous opportunity for Charlie to exhibit his subtle technical skills, and to give his critical scientific evaluation with the use of a rusty can-opener. Then, another client comes, eager to see the diamonds; however, could he be a wolf in sheep's clothing? The Floorwalker: After causing havoc on the sales floor Charlie goes to the office floor. There he runs into the store inspector (who looks exactly like him) who has just robbed the safe and knocked out the manager. Charlie thinks he is in front of a mirror till he notices he holds a stock and his 'image' the bag of loot. His Prehistoric Past: Charlie dreams he is in the Stone Age, where King Low-Brow rules a harem of wives. Charlie, in skins and a bowler, falls in love with the king's favorite wife, Sum-Babee. During a hunting trip the king is pushed over a cliff. Charlie proclaims himself king, but Ku-Ku discovers the real king alive. They return to find Charlie and Sum-Babee together. A Burlesque on Carmen: Lieutenant Darn Hosiery, Don Jose in the opera, is sent to a province in Spain to stop smuggling. The smugglers try to bribe him, but he steals their money so that they have nothing to bribe him with. Carmen tempts him. He falls prey to her blandishments. A fellow officer also loves Carmen and he and Don Jose fight a duel in which the latter is victor. The other officer is killed, but shortly afterward decides to come back to life. Don Jose flees, and inasmuch as he is no more in authority. Carmen runs away with a popular toreador. Don Jose follows her, stabs her, and then himself with a stage knife. While they are lying on the ground dead, the toreador makes Don Jose feel the toe of his boot, which quickly brings him to life, and the play ends with a laugh instead of the wonted tears. Laughing Gas: Charles Chaplin is a dentist's assistant and becomes involved with the people in the office. He flirts with the dentist's wife, and uses an enormous pair of pliers on a patient. Cruel, Cruel Love: Disappointed in love - being caught by his fiancée with the maid - Chaplin tries to end it all. However, his butler changes the poison. Chaplin tries furthur attempts but is unsuccessful in them all. His New Profession: Charlie meets a couple and agrees to care for the man's crippled uncle. After the couple breaks up, the man's new girl drops some eggs, which Charlie slips on while trying to control the wheelchair. Charlie sets up the uncle near another wheelchair on a jetty, from which he lifts a beggar's cup and 'invalid' sign; he places these with the uncle and money starts to roll in. Charlie takes the money and buys himself a drink. Returning, he gets to know the abandoned young woman. After pushing the uncle and his chair into the drink and battling the beggar and two policemen, one of whom arrests the uncle, Charlie beats up his rival and gets the girl. Those Love Pangs: As Charlie and his rival don't succeed in flirting with their landlady, they pick up girls in the park. Charlie is depressed: his rival is their favorite. While the boys fight the girls go to the movies. Charlie follows, but rivals abound. A Film Johnnie: Charlie goes to the movie and falls in love with a girl on the screen. He goes to Keystone Studios to find her. He disrupts the shooting of a film, and a fire breaks out. Charlie is blamed, gets squirted with a firehose, and is shoved by the female star. His Favorite Pastime: Charlie gets into a fight at his regular bar and finally crawls out under the door. He then boards a streetcar and follows a beautiful lady in a taxi. He breaks into her home. Her husband comes finds him trying to seduce his wife.
Cet article a été ajouté le jeudi 10 juillet, 2025.
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