Sat Dec 03, 2011 11:05 am
"The Chaplin Revue" is narrated only in the prologue, under nice footage of Los Angeles in 1918 and of building the Chaplin studio. The three films are silent with orchestral music composed by Chaplin except for "The Pilgrim" which also includes Charlie singing a song on the sound track, "Bound for Texas," about "the moo and rattle of snakes and cattle."
However, "A Dog's Life" is stretch printed to the equivalent of 16 fps throughout, there is also selective stretch printing of scenes in the others, and all are the 1940s "reconstructions" made by combining out-takes, perhaps with selected shots from various original negatives, so that the films are somewhat different from the original 1918-1923 versions. There is no alternate source for good legitimate copies of the original versions.
David Shepard