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The Gold Rush (1925)
Description
In this comedy, the Little Tramp (Charles Chaplin) heads north to join in the Klondike gold rush. But he gets even more by getting mixed up with some burly characters and falling in love with the beautiful Georgia.
In this comedy, the Little Tramp (Charles Chaplin) heads north to join in the Klondike gold rush. But he gets even more by getting mixed up with some burly characters and falling in love with the beautiful Georgia.
Actors:
Chris-Pin Martin,
John Wallace,
Mack Swain,
Tiny Sandford,
Steve Murphy,
Margarita MartĂn,
Ed Wilson,
Georgia Hale,
Al Ernest Garcia,
Albert Austin,
Charles Chaplin,
...»
Chris-Pin Martin
19 November 1893, Tucson, Arizona, USA
John Wallace
24 August 1869, Spennymoore, England UK
Mack Swain
16 February 1876, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Tiny Sandford
26 February 1894, Osage, Iowa, USA
Steve Murphy
25 December 1876, Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Margarita MartĂn
October 25, 1898
Ed Wilson
January 3, 1916
Georgia Hale
24 June 1905, St. Joseph, Missouri, USA
Al Ernest Garcia
11 March 1887, San Francisco, California, USA
Albert Austin
13 December 1882, Birmingham, England, UK
Charles Chaplin
16 April 1889, Walworth, London, England, UK
Director:
Charles Chaplin
Charles Chaplin
16 April 1889, Walworth, London, England, UK
Country:
United States
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June 17, 2012
Emotionally robust and genuinely hilarious in ways that transcend time and culture, it balances the witty and the sentimental and still finds plenty of room to inject the moments of underdog social commentary that were so crucial to Chaplin's worldview.
January 23, 2013
I prophesied that Chaplin, with his finer comedy and his less spectacular farce, would not be able to hold his popularity against it. What has happened is precisely the reverse of what I predicted.
May 10, 2012
When it hit cinemas in the summer of 1925, the Berlin-premiere audience applauded Chaplin's 'dance of the dinner rolls' for so long that the film was rewound and replayed, while the BBC recorded 10 straight minutes of audience laughter at one screening.
June 27, 2007
The Gold Rush is a distinct triumph for Charlie Chaplin from both the artistic and commercial standpoints, and is a picture certain to create a veritable riot at theatre box offices.
June 22, 2012
Even with its (likely dictated) propaganda on behalf of the now-superfluous 1942 edition, this set restores a high watermark in cinematic comedy to nearly full glory.
September 04, 2012
It shows Chaplin mixing slapstick with heartbreak like nobody else could. It's plotted in an episodic fashion, but each piece of the puzzle is also a memorable, entertaining bit in and of itself.
July 29, 2013
Chaplin is the apotheosis of the world's despised and downtrodden, and also their hope; he heralds a revolution in anarchic beauty.
indieWire
October 11, 2010
Eighty-five years young, "The Gold Rush" is still an effective tear-jerker.
July 13, 2012
No one can mix slapstick and sentimentality quite like Chaplin.
September 14, 2012
The result is a sight for sore eyes, for old-style Chaplin fans and novitiates alike.
July 20, 2012
"The Gold Rush" is wonderfully charming. The comedic bits are both memorable and humorous, the score is exquisite, and it looks pretty darn great for being as old as it is. It's timeless in the sense that it'll be enjoyable now and 100 years from now.
June 27, 2007
The blend of slapstick and pathos is seamless, although the cynicism of the final scene is still surprising. Chaplin's later films are quirkier and more personal, but this is quintessential Charlie, and unmissable.

