This item has closed 1 buyer bought 1 item
View other items offered by XD Games3173

Similar products

The Charlie Chaplin Collection Volume 2  Dvd Set
Sold

The Charlie Chaplin Collection Volume 2 Dvd Set

Secondhand 1 was available
R200.00
Shipping
Free shipping is available from XD Games for all orders above R1,000.00, using one of our trusted couriers.
Check my rate
Free collection is available from various lockers and counter collection points across South Africa, for all orders above R1,000.00 from XD Games
View locations
The seller has indicated that they will usually have this item ready to ship within 5 business days. Shipping time depends on your delivery address. The most accurate delivery time will be calculated at checkout, but in general, the following shipping times apply:
 
Standard Delivery
Main centres:  1-3 business days
Regional areas: 3-4 business days
Remote areas: 3-5 business days
Buyer protection
Get it now, pay later

Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Format
DVD
Region Code
Region 2
Genre
Comedy
Bob Shop ID
669860412

Good condition discs. 

The second magnificent collection of Charlie Chaplin's work is even more stuffed with goodies than the first: six feature films, a round-up of two-reelers, and a new documentary, plus a cornucopia of deleted scenes and context. Each feature is accompanied by a half-hour "Chaplin Today" featurette, in which a filmmaker comments from a 21st-century perspective. Claude Chabrol extols the wicked virtues of Monsieur Verdoux and calls Chaplin "a thoroughly modern director," while Jim Jarmusch speaks gallantly on the political satire of the problematic A King in New York.

The Kid (1921), Chaplin's first feature, relates directly to Chaplin's own hard upbringing. The Tramp adopts a street kid (Jackie Coogan), in a seamless blend of slapstick and sentiment.

For A Woman of Paris (1923), Chaplin experimented: straight, adult melodrama, with no Charlie onscreen (save for a brief cameo).

1927's The Circus is prized by many Chaplin critics as pure sublime comedy, less burdened by sentiment or politics than subsequent films.

City Lights (1931) is an undisputed masterpiece; the Tramp befriends a blind girl, leading to one of the great bittersweet endings in film history.


Among the extras: a priceless seven-minute deleted scene involving little more than Chaplin and a piece of wood stuck in a grate.) With Monsieur Verdoux (1947), Chaplin turned his back on the Tramp and invented an elegant lady killer (literally); audiences disapproved, but the film stands as a fascinating essay on himself. Finally, after his exile from the United States, Chaplin made A King in New York (1957), which is mostly flat, except as autobiography.