Film Review
The Kid, the most personal and
poignant of Charlie Chaplin's films, grew out of one of the most
emotionally turbulent phases of the actor-director's career.
Chaplin had recently married the 17-year old actress Mildred Harris,
only to discover that they had nothing in common. As a result of
this intellectual mesalliance, Chaplin was struck by an acute creative
block and was unable to come up with new ideas for the films he was
contractually obliged to make for First National. Ironically, the
thing that lifted him out of this creative impasse was the tragic loss
of his first-born son, who died three days after he was born.
Within a fortnight of this personal disaster, Chaplin had his idea for
a new film - his famous Little Tramp would team up with an orphan boy
in a story which would evoke painful memories of his own
childhood.
Chaplin always chose the actors for his films carefully but he took
particular care in casting his co-star in
The Kid. He finally settled
on Jackie Coogan, the five-year-old son of a pair of musical hall
entertainers. What most attracted the director to Coogan was that
the child was a born mimic, capable of imitating perfectly any
expression that Chaplin showed him. Chaplin could not have found
a better co-star for this film than young Jackie Coogan. They
were two of a kind. The boy's father, Jack Coogan, appears in the film
in several small parts, including the pickpocket and the Devil.
Originally intended as a two-reel short,
The Kid gradually evolved into
something more substantial, ending up as a six-real feature.
Chaplin's increasing perfectionism, coupled with problems in his
personal life, resulted in the film taking almost a year to
complete. Chaplin's insistence on shooting scenes over and over
again until they were exactly as he had envisaged them meant that he
would shoot more than fifty times the length of film in the final
picture.
By the time the filming had been completed, Chaplin had become
estranged from his wife Mildred and had filed for divorce.
Anxious that her lawyers might seize the film stock for
The Kid along with his other
assets, Chaplin and his closest associates fled California with the raw
negatives and undertook the job of editing the film in absolute
secrecy, in a hotel in Salt Lake City, Utah.
When
The Kid was released in
1921, it was an immediate success around the world, becoming the second
highest grossing film of the year. This was Chaplin's first
major box office hit and the first of his great full-length films. It is often
credited as being the first film to combine comedy and drama, providing
a template for most of Chaplin's subsequent films. The film has
inspired many future filmmakers and its influence can be seen, for
example, in Vittorio De Sica's
Bicycle Thieves (1948).
The Kid transformed the
fortunes of Jackie Coogan overnight. Aged 7 when the film was
released, he instantly became a world famous celebrity. He would
enjoy a brief, highly lucrative, film career, but this fizzled out when
he reached the age of 13. As a young man, Coogan was penniless,
thanks to the mismanagement of his childhood earnings by his mother and
stepfather. It was Jackie Coogan's well-publicised and nearly
ruinous lawsuit again his parents that led the state of California to
introduce the Coogan Act, which gave protection to child
performers. After WWII, Coogan returned to acting, playing
character roles. In the 1960s, he would find fame as Uncle
Fester in the popular television series
The Addams Family.
The Kid introduced another
character into Chaplin's complex and turbulent private life: Lita
Grey. Appropriately, Grey played the temptress in the
film's dream sequence, made up to look 18 even though she was only 12
at the time. Chaplin was besotted with the young actress and
would cast her as the female lead in his later film
The
Gold Rush (1925). Things did not go as planned,
however. Having put Grey in the family way, Chaplin felt obliged
to marry her and gave her part in the film to another actress.
This second marriage would prove to be as disastrous as Chaplin's first.
Whilst the
The Kid is not as
polished and as technically sophisticated as Chaplin's subsequent
films, it is easily one of the director's most emotionally involving
works, and without the treacly sentimentality that would mar his later
films. The emotional high point is the sequence where social
workers
attempt to take the child away from the tramp. There is something
viscerally brutal in the way the tramp and the boy are separated, and
we are reminded of the fact that Chaplin himself was separated from his
mother when he was just seven years old, to be placed in a home for
destitute children. Chaplin never would forget his past.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Charles Chaplin film:
A Woman of Paris (1923)