DETAILED NOTES ON CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S "THE CIRCUS" (1928)

Detailed Notes on Charlie Chaplin's "The Circus" (1928)

The Buster Keaton character has his toes on the ground. He would be humiliated to parade his goodness. He employs ingenuity as opposed to divinity. Chaplin’s untidy love lifetime implies he felt he deserved whomever he preferred; Keaton in non-public everyday living seems to have been melancholic as a consequence of alcoholism, but a decent more

read more