The Circus 1927 1928 1929 next previous
The Circus Clippings 330/376
Robert Herring, Close Up, Territet, Switzerland, May 1928.
Charlot En „El Circo“, Chocolates Cards, Spain, ebay
„The insistent slice-of-life-iness of The Circus“
Editorial content. „A LETTER FROM LONDON“ (...)
„Then came The Circus and The Last Command. These two
pictures or rather, Chaplin and Jannings, these two actors,
desperately trying to be tragedians, draw people to the movies
who never, usually ,care for pictures‘. This is as well for
it leaves us free to go elsewhere. We who go any and every
day cannot be expected to pay the highest prices which,
contrary to the unwritten laws of the cinema as an entertainment
for the many, are in operation as soon as these are
seen to be successes – to pay for the outlay expended on the
first showing, of course.“ (...) „The American papers,
I see, have lost their heads over this new film of Jannings.
One is sorry to see them airing their ignorance of what
has been done in Europe so lamentably. As this and the Chaplin
stayed on so long, duty (and boredom) dragged
me, protesting, to The Student Prince. And I am glad. Despite
Lubitsch I should never have gone had there been
anything that sounded one degree less banal. I don‘t, didn‘t
like Ramon Novarro. Especially in a student‘s cap
drinking beer. But The Student Prince is a good film. It‘s light
and artificial, but it preserves its lightness, and it never
tries to be any thing else but artificial. It leaves the emotions
absolutely and exceedingly gracefully (I stress that point)
out of it. It is gay, at times it is wistful – it does not try to be tragic.
And its artificiality holds a reality far realer than the
insistent slice-of-life-iness of The Circus.“ (...)
„Robert Herring.“
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The Circus 1927 1928 1929 next previous