CITY LIGHTS: Blu-ray (UA 1931) Criterion Home Video
“He is the only person to have gone down into
cinematic history without any shadow of a doubt. The films he left behind can
never grow old.”
– Andrei Tarkovsky
– Andrei Tarkovsky
Few movies are
as inspirational as Charlie Chaplin’s City
Lights (1931). Chaplin’s revered and lyrical comic masterpiece is
uncharacteristically romantic; his iconic ‘little tramp’ effortlessly, and
quite unexpectedly, morphing into the movie’s leading man in the final reel.
Indeed, Chaplin – whose autonomy in Hollywood afforded him unprecedented
artistic freedom to experiment (it is rumored he indulged in 300 takes of the
tramp’s first ‘cute meet’ with the blind girl played by Virginia Cherrill)
allowed the movie to evolve almost by accident or at least, through trial and
error; Chaplin’s fastidious tinkering with the particulars deemed a nuisance by
some, but well worth the struggle until his creative vision was reciprocated
back at him from the screen of his projection room. For obvious financial
reasons it is unlikely that Chaplin’s perfectionism could have survived the
transition from old Hollywood into new. With the possible exception of Limelight (1952) Chaplin’s later films
reveal his increasing inability to keep up with the times. But in 1931, Chaplin
had a more pressing concern to consider. Overnight, Warner Bros. The Jazz Singer had turned the
movie-making community on end with its introduction of synchronized sound.
The public’s
insatiable appetite for talking pictures threatened many a silent star who
spoke with thick foreign accents. But Chaplin’s concern was over the
transitioning from artful wordless pantomime into this more realistic milieu
where actors were expected to emote in words.
Chaplin’s forte had been in the expressive gesturing of his entire body;
the liquidity with which his deepest emotions seemed to rise from beneath that
heavy pancake makeup and bristle mop moustache in close-up and the musical way
he moved his limbs; part contortionist/part marionette, the bounce, bump and
shuffle of his frame emitting wellsprings of descriptive byplay that no amount
of dialogue – either spoken within a movie or expounded upon herein – could
accurately articulate.
Hence, City Lights marked something of a
turning point for Chaplin and his alter ego. Although he would not utter a
syllable in his first ‘sound’ movie (delaying the inevitable until 1936’s Modern Times), Chaplin’s wicked stab at
sound – which he so clearly considered as inconsequential – is dealt with early
on; Chaplin’s proletariat snub at authority allowing his city officials to ‘speak’ with the aid of a kazoo. The
modulated intonations of the kazoo are delightfully obtuse and mimic the
pontificating address and dedication of a statue to commerce and prosperity. Chaplin further undercuts the importance of
such a ridiculous ceremony, particularly at the height of the Depression, by
unveiling his tramp fast asleep in the lap of one of the stone figures covered
beneath a heavy tarp. Maneuvering back and forth, catching the seat of his
pants on the sword of another statue, and then taking his seat on the open palm
of another, much to the chagrin of the city officials, Chaplin’s tramp
eventually bows out from this spectacle, disappearing behind a wrought iron
fence.
He is next
spotted on a street corner, taunted for his lower class appearance by a pair of
devious newsboys (Ray Erlenborn and Austen Jewell) before admiring an art deco
nude figure in a shop window, all the while unknowingly in constant threat of
plummeting through an open trap in the sidewalk. Chaplin’s faith in humanity –
and, indeed love – is restored several moments later with his first encounter
of the impoverished blind girl (Cherrill) selling flowers on a corner near the
park. To avoid confrontation with a police officer, the tramp steps in, then
out of a nearby chauffeur-driven automobile, the sound of its door closing
alerting the girl to his presence. She offers him a flower and, more
importantly, a tender kindness; Cherrill’s angelic features and exquisite
feigning of sightlessness thoroughly captivating both the tramp’s and our
hearts.
The tramp is
immediately smitten in their exchange, Chaplin’s timing superb as he quietly
observes the girl from a respectful distance. When the real occupant of the
automobile returns, slamming the car door before being driven away, the blind
girl calls out after him for his change and the tramp suddenly realizes that
she has mistaken him for a gentleman of means. For a few more quiet moments he
pensively observes the girl as she reaches to refresh her small bucket in a
nearby fountain; Chaplin baiting the audience with prospects of an even more uplifting
and kindhearted exchange that is suddenly dashed in a fit of riotous comedy
after the girl accidentally rinses out her bucket, unknowingly splashing the
tramp in his face.
Chaplin and
Cherrill did not get on. In fact, Chaplin found her frequent tardiness wholly
unprofessional and even fired Cherrill after a few scenes had already been
shot, only to realize he could not find another actress capable of extolling as
much sincerity and depth of longing as Cherrill had managed to convey with the
most modest of gestures. Reluctantly, Cherrill was rehired and the movie
completed with varying degrees of incident and temperament along the way.
After a brief
fade to black the movie’s timeline advances to evening, the tramp encountering
a drunken and depressed millionaire (Harry Myers) under a bridge about to
commit suicide by tying a rather large stone size around his neck and jumping into
the river. The tramp saves the man from several failed attempts before
convincing him that he has every reason to live. Grateful, but still wildly
inebriated, the millionaire takes the tramp home for a change of clothes before
the two set out to paint the town red. Their nightclub debaucheries are
distilled into some playful badinage with several ladies and the displacement
of chairs that leave their male counterparts without a seat at the club. The next
morning the tramp and the millionaire encounters the flower girl selling her
wares near the park and the tramp begs his new found friend for some money to buy
all of her flowers, thus providing her with liberty for the afternoon. Afterward,
the tramp has the girl driven to her home in the millionaire’s Rolls-Royce, the
girl elated at the prospect of becoming a rich man’s wife.
The girl
informs her kindly grandmother (Florence Lee) about her wealthy patron and the
tramp makes plans to ask the millionaire for enough money so that the girl can undergo
an experimental surgery that will likely restore her sight. Unfortunately, the
millionaire does not remember the tramp once he is sober and his butler (Allen
Garcia) orders the tramp out of the house. Undaunted, the tramp bides his time
until the millionaire is drunk again. But this fair weather friendship is
chronically doomed. Next, the tramp elects to take on legitimate work as a
street sweeper. Regrettably, the tramp’s work ethic leaves much to be desired.
He is chronically late, quickly fired and penniless yet again.
The tramp
decides to enter a boxing tournament; convincing the prizefighter (Hank Mann)
to split the $50 cash winnings in a fixed match. As it turns out, the fighter
is forced to flee during training when a tipster suggests the police are
looking for him. The tramp is matched with another boxer (Tom Dempsey) who
absolutely refuses to share the cash prize. Moreover, he intends to brutalize
the tramp in the ring, the tramp skillfully using the referee (Eddie Baker) as
his shield until the penultimate moment of retribution when he is knocked
unconscious in the ring, thereby losing the fight and the money.
The tramp is
reunited with the millionaire newly returned from Europe and very much
intoxicated. Learning of the tramp’s plight, the millionaire takes the tramp
back to his mansion where, unbeknownst to either, two burglars are already
waiting. The millionaire gives the tramp $1000. But the pair of burglars spring
into action, knocking the millionaire unconscious in their struggle. The tramp
valiantly telephones for help. However, when the police arrive they find only
the tramp and the millionaire; the butler accusing the tramp of attempted
theft. Finding the $1000 on the tramp’s person, the police inquire how he came
to possess it and the millionaire – newly restored from the bump on his head -
admits that he cannot remember giving the money away.
The tramp
makes a daring escape, finds the flower girl and gives her the money for the
operation before informing her that he will be going away for a while. Not long
after, he is caught by the police and sent to prison. Many months later, the
tramp emerges from the state penitentiary a changed man; careworn, bitter and
sullen. He is taunted once more by the newsboys, this time with a pee shooter;
the accosting witnessed with amusement by the flower girl, now able to see and
working in a nearby shop. The tramp is entranced by her angelic face,
approaching cautiously. The girl offers him a flower, pretending kindness until
she inadvertently touches the tramp’s hand in the exchange. She recalls from
memory the texture of his skin; her expression suddenly changing from mild
delight to poignant sadness as she declares, “You!” The tramp’s face loses all of its harshness in close up, his
eyes moist with affection and recognition as the two begin their heartfelt
acquaintance anew.
City Lights is at once Chaplin’s greatest romantic comedy and
crossover experiment into sound recording technology. Although virtually all of
the dialogue within the movie is conveyed through the use of time-honored silent
inter-titles, the film’s soundtrack features synchronized music (composed by
Alfred Newman) and scantly integrated effects. Yet Chaplin’s great restraint in
these applications of sound renders City
Lights very much more a masterpiece of the silent era (perhaps its last)
than an early ‘talkie’. And Chaplin proves unequivocally that when it came to
sound, he could just as easily do with as without. City Lights overwhelming success at the box office was not without
its critical detractors, but it ensured that Chaplin would continue to produce
films of quality that undercut the importance of integrated sound. It would not
be until 1940’s The Great Dictator
that Chaplin would speak (apart from his gibberish talk used sparingly in song
in Modern Times); the silent tramp
suddenly given his voice in jested response to Nazi Germany.
Criterion Home
Video has advertised their release of City
Lights as a ‘new digital restoration’
in 4k. Back in 2003 Warner Home Video released a substandard effort in conjunction
with Mk2 Productions that suffered from digital combing. And although Criterion’s
‘new’ release rectifies this oversight, they are still exporting from Mk2’s
digital files; the overall quality of the image not tightening up as
anticipated. A good portion of City
Lights looks remarkably soft with slightly weaker than expected contrast
levels. Close ups are the most improved. We can see Chaplin’s applications of
pancake makeup, his subtly nuanced facial tics made all the more poignant in
close up in 1080p. But the image retains streaks and modeling throughout and
film grain, at times, appears to have been scrubbed by some heavy-handed DNR.
Again, this Criterion release easily bests Warner’s old contribution. That disc
was a Frisbee even before it was out of print. But Criterion really hasn’t
given City Lights the full blown
restoration one might have hoped for and that’s a pity. The audio is monaural DTS and quite
adequately represented.
As for extras;
a goodly number (though not all) have been imported from Warner/Mk2’s old offering,
including the ‘Chaplin Today’ featurette with Peter Lord (of Wallace and
Gromit fame). We also get excerpts from The Champion – an early silent made by
Chaplin, plus deleted scenes and other outtakes. Criterion adds a new audio
commentary by Chaplin biographer Jeffrey Vance that is comprehensive and well
worth a listen; also a new interview with visual effects expert Craig Barron. City Lights also marks Criterion’s
foray into ‘combo’ disc packaging – one Blu-ray/one DVD.
Personally, I
have never understood the logic behind this marketing ploy. Consumer mentality
remains divided between those who love their DVD players and will not upgrade
to hi-def simply because they own a copy on Blu-ray disc, and those who have
already made the leap to Blu-ray and therefore couldn’t care less about owning
a standard definition copy of the same movie on DVD. If studios truly want
their consumer base to convert to hi-def altogether and leave DVD in the dust
then they should simply cease releasing new DVDs into the marketplace and
advertise these releases as ‘only on
Blu-ray’. This is the only way a true format conversion will
ever occur! Enough said. Bottom line on City
Lights: recommended – with caveats.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
4
VIDEO/AUDIO
3
EXTRAS
3.5
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