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Modern Times

Modern Times

  • Status: Released
  • 05-02-1936
  • Runtime: 87 min
  • Score: 8.282
  • Vote count: 3737

A bumbling tramp desires to build a home with a young woman, yet is thwarted time and time again by his lack of experience and habit of being in the wrong place at the wrong time..

Charlie Chaplin

The Tramp (A Factory Worker)

Paulette Goddard

A Gamin

Henry Bergman

Cafe Proprietor

Tiny Sandford

Big Bill

Chester Conklin

Mechanic

Hank Mann

Burglar

Stanley Blystone

Gamin's Father

Al Ernest Garcia

President of the Electro Steel Corp.

Richard Alexander

Prison Cellmate

Cecil Reynolds

Minister

Mira McKinney

Minister's Wife

Murdock MacQuarrie

J. Widdecombe Billows

Wilfred Lucas

Juvenile Officer

Edward LeSaint

Sheriff Couler

Fred Malatesta

Cafe Head Waiter

Sammy Stein

Turbine Operator

Juana Sutton

Woman with Buttoned Bosom

Ted Oliver

Billows' Assistant

Norman Ainsley

Billows' Silent Assistant (uncredited)

Walter Bacon

Shopkeeper (uncredited)

Bobby Barber

Worker (uncredited)

Heinie Conklin

Assembly Line Worker Next to Big Bill (uncredited)

Gloria DeHaven

Gamin's Sister (uncredited)

Gloria Delson

Gamin's Sister (uncredited)

Pat Flaherty

Jail Guard (uncredited)

Frank Hagney

Shipbuilder (uncredited)

Chuck Hamilton

Worker (uncredited)

Pat Harmon

Paddywagon Policeman (uncredited)

Lloyd Ingraham

Frustrated Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Walter James

Assembly Line Foreman (uncredited)

Edward Kimball

Doctor (uncredited)

Jack Low

Worker (uncredited)

Buddy Messinger

Cigar Counterman (uncredited)

Bruce Mitchell

Paddy Wagon Policeman (uncredited)

Frank Moran

Convict (uncredited)

James C. Morton

Assembly Line Relief Man (uncredited)

Dorothy Mueller

Woman in Crowd (uncredited)

Louis Natheaux

Burglar (uncredited)

J. C. Nugent

Department Store Section Manager (uncredited)

Russ Powell

Gypsy in Police Patrol Wagon (uncredited)

John Rand

Waiter (uncredited)

Wyn Ritchie Evans

Woman in Crowd (uncredited)

Harry Wilson

Worker (uncredited)

Andres Gomez

Really good movie from visionary and fun Charlie Chaplin in which industry literally swallows the human being.

CinemaSerf

I wonder how many people watch this nowadays and sympathise immediately with Chaplin's unskilled worker trying to keep up with the relentless march of technology? It starts with him being an unwilling guinea pig for a gadget that appears as useful for cleaning teeth as it is for feeding him - a cunning invention which allegedly saves time, money and increases productivity... Needless to say, it's a crock of the proverbial - but that's just the start with these wacky, frequently absurd, ideas that sees our hapless hero expend considerable energy and quick-wittedness trying to stay one step ahead of these "advances" - oh, and of just about everyone else he encounters as he struggles, comedically, along! Meantime, a starving, homeless, orphaned woman - Paulette Goddard - is caught pinching a loaf by a rather snooty passer-by, she bumps into Chaplin on the street whist effecting her getaway, and the pair are soon in cahoots together for more engaging escapades. Chaplin is outstanding in this film - his agility, timing and visionary direction - not just of the film, but of the portents for society at large - resonates just as soundly today as when audiences started watching it 85 years ago. It swipes at modernity, but not just for the sake of it , it's not luddite in outlook - just evaluative of what/who gets left behind - and that isn't just the blue collar workers either... The scenes on the ice skates in the department store are a delight to watch; charm, humour and agility all rolled into one - and I love his style consuming the rum! Definitely one for a big screen, there is so much going on...