Charlie Chaplin Google Video
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Charlie Chaplin Google Video
Check out the Google homepage today, which features a Charlie Chaplin tribute video in honor of Chaplin's birthday tomorrow...
Bruce Calvert
http://www.silentfilmstillarchive.com
http://www.silentfilmstillarchive.com
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Lokke Heiss
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I like the idea, but I find the short film boring. It's hard for a film crew of today to understand what it is that makes these films work. For one thing, you have to practice. Do about ten of these and you get a better sense of timing, etc. That was even true in 1918.
But these guys do it once, and it's off to some other project.
But these guys do it once, and it's off to some other project.
"You can't top pigs with pigs."
Walt Disney, responding to someone who asked him why he didn't immediately do a sequel to The Three Little Pigs
Walt Disney, responding to someone who asked him why he didn't immediately do a sequel to The Three Little Pigs
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SilentEchoes57
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SilentEchoes57
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It was filmed in Niles, which is great news.
Here is a blogpost by the creator of the clip.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/ ... oodle.html
Here is a blogpost by the creator of the clip.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/ ... oodle.html
Jeez, guys, get a grip. Yes, it would be best if the world at large just ignored silent films and left them to the experts.
Fred
"Who really cares?"
Jordan Peele, when asked what genre we should put his movies in.
http://www.nitanaldi.com"
http://www.facebook.com/NitaNaldiSilentVamp"
"Who really cares?"
Jordan Peele, when asked what genre we should put his movies in.
http://www.nitanaldi.com"
http://www.facebook.com/NitaNaldiSilentVamp"
- rogerskarsten
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Indeed, this was cute.rogerskarsten wrote:I enjoyed it, and thought they did a nice job capturing the essential physicality of Chaplin. And the best thing: no unnecessary intertitles (of the "Oh no!" or "Thank you!" variety), that so often appear in modern "homages" to silent films.
~Roger
I'm one of the few who really don't like Chaplin. Watching Chaplin (especially the Keystones that I'm currently going through) is like studying a historical artifact. I don't find throwing bricks very amusing but people of the time did and he was an enormous influence on the business and the culture.
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CNN: Charlie Chaplin gets birthday 'doodle' from Google
http://www.cnn.com/2011/TECH/web/04/15/ ... 1&iref=NS1
Charlie Chaplin gets birthday 'doodle' from Google
Doug Gross
By Doug Gross, CNN
April 15, 2011 3:54 p.m. EDT | Filed under: Web
(CNN) -- He's a comedy and cinema legend, a man still cited as an inspiration decades after his death.
And now, in honor of what would have been his 122nd birthday, Charlie Chaplin has inspired one of the most ambitious Google "doodles" ever.
On Friday, the space on Google's homepage that usually contains its multicolored logo instead featured a black-and-white YouTube tribute to Chaplin, whose birthday is Saturday.
The short "silent" film is Google's first-ever video doodle and was created with the help of the Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum.
"True pieces of art, Chaplin's films still feel fresh today even though some of them are nearly a century old," Ryan Germick, a member of Google's Doodle team, wrote on the company's official blog. "We hope that our homepage gets people talking about his work and the many virtues of silent film."
The project is the work of the Google Doodle team, which is devoted to sprucing up Google's plain search page with colorful images to commemorate holidays or other noteworthy dates or events.
For Google, doodles are oodles of fun
The art of the Google doodle
The video was shot in Niles, California, the site of several of Chaplin's iconic silent films, including "The Tramp," and features the entire Google Doodle team.
Team member Mike Dutton mimics Chaplin, who, in the two-minute video, attempts to make money by drawing his own doodle before tricking a mean police officer into buying him breakfast.
The video will remain on Google's page through Saturday, according to the blog post.
In a recent interview, Doodle team creative leader Ryan Germick told CNN that the drawings started out as a way to humanize the search page, but became more elaborate as time went on.
"It's definitely something we try to mix up and keep surprising," said Germick (who doubles as the aforementioned mean cop in the video). "Our hope is you come to the Google homepage, and we're really thankful for that. We want to give back and try something fun."
See some behind-the-scenes photos from the shoot.
Some other notable doodles in recent months have honored novelist Jules Verne, Google's 12th anniversary, the emergence of coding language HTML5 and, perhaps most notably, the 30th anniversary of Pac-Man, the '80s arcade game.
Chaplin is arguably the most iconic and recognizable star of early silent films, including such classics as "City Lights" and "Modern Times." Born in London in 1889, he was most known for his Little Tramp character, who sported a bowler hat, moustache, cane and baggy pants.
Chaplin died in Vevey, Switzerland, on December 25, 1977, at the age of 88.
CNN's Dan Simon in San Francisco contributed to this report.
Charlie Chaplin gets birthday 'doodle' from Google
Doug Gross
By Doug Gross, CNN
April 15, 2011 3:54 p.m. EDT | Filed under: Web
(CNN) -- He's a comedy and cinema legend, a man still cited as an inspiration decades after his death.
And now, in honor of what would have been his 122nd birthday, Charlie Chaplin has inspired one of the most ambitious Google "doodles" ever.
On Friday, the space on Google's homepage that usually contains its multicolored logo instead featured a black-and-white YouTube tribute to Chaplin, whose birthday is Saturday.
The short "silent" film is Google's first-ever video doodle and was created with the help of the Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum.
"True pieces of art, Chaplin's films still feel fresh today even though some of them are nearly a century old," Ryan Germick, a member of Google's Doodle team, wrote on the company's official blog. "We hope that our homepage gets people talking about his work and the many virtues of silent film."
The project is the work of the Google Doodle team, which is devoted to sprucing up Google's plain search page with colorful images to commemorate holidays or other noteworthy dates or events.
For Google, doodles are oodles of fun
The art of the Google doodle
The video was shot in Niles, California, the site of several of Chaplin's iconic silent films, including "The Tramp," and features the entire Google Doodle team.
Team member Mike Dutton mimics Chaplin, who, in the two-minute video, attempts to make money by drawing his own doodle before tricking a mean police officer into buying him breakfast.
The video will remain on Google's page through Saturday, according to the blog post.
In a recent interview, Doodle team creative leader Ryan Germick told CNN that the drawings started out as a way to humanize the search page, but became more elaborate as time went on.
"It's definitely something we try to mix up and keep surprising," said Germick (who doubles as the aforementioned mean cop in the video). "Our hope is you come to the Google homepage, and we're really thankful for that. We want to give back and try something fun."
See some behind-the-scenes photos from the shoot.
Some other notable doodles in recent months have honored novelist Jules Verne, Google's 12th anniversary, the emergence of coding language HTML5 and, perhaps most notably, the 30th anniversary of Pac-Man, the '80s arcade game.
Chaplin is arguably the most iconic and recognizable star of early silent films, including such classics as "City Lights" and "Modern Times." Born in London in 1889, he was most known for his Little Tramp character, who sported a bowler hat, moustache, cane and baggy pants.
Chaplin died in Vevey, Switzerland, on December 25, 1977, at the age of 88.
CNN's Dan Simon in San Francisco contributed to this report.
Bruce Calvert
http://www.silentfilmstillarchive.com
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Lokke Heiss
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As The Man of Steel said: "No thing as bad publicity."
But - as the news post says-this was done by the Noodle team. With the money they put into this little bit (and we know it was more than a little) it would have been nice to have someone who really had some experience in pantomime. The story is boring, and the only attribute the man playing Chaplin had was that he probably has seen more than one Chaplin movie. This has the feel of a home-movie youtube video, which is what it basically is.
But - as the news post says-this was done by the Noodle team. With the money they put into this little bit (and we know it was more than a little) it would have been nice to have someone who really had some experience in pantomime. The story is boring, and the only attribute the man playing Chaplin had was that he probably has seen more than one Chaplin movie. This has the feel of a home-movie youtube video, which is what it basically is.
"You can't top pigs with pigs."
Walt Disney, responding to someone who asked him why he didn't immediately do a sequel to The Three Little Pigs
Walt Disney, responding to someone who asked him why he didn't immediately do a sequel to The Three Little Pigs
There are no viewing statistics provided on YouTube for the film, but Google gets an estimated 620 million visits every day. Even if only a small proportion of that number clicked on the video, it would still have been viewed by tens of millions. So might this end up being one of the most watched silent films of all time?
Luke McKernan
http://www.lukemckernan.com" target="_blank
http://www.lukemckernan.com" target="_blank
- Brooksie
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I agree, I think they did a very nice job. Unlike most modern silent film parodies, it appears to have been done by someone who'd actually seen a silent film rather than relying on all of the received cliches. Bravo. Who cares if the fellow doesn't look like Chaplin. I don't either, and I've gotten along fine.rogerskarsten wrote:I enjoyed it, and thought they did a nice job capturing the essential physicality of Chaplin. And the best thing: no unnecessary intertitles (of the "Oh no!" or "Thank you!" variety), that so often appear in modern "homages" to silent films.
~Roger
Brooksie At The Movies
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CliffordWeimer
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I didn't like it - it's not funny and it's superficial and it is a wasted opportunity for something great - but I enjoyed that it features a cop, a pretty girl, and a park bench (somebody did their research). Most of all, though, last night (our weekly movie night) EVERYBODY, including teenagers, was talking about it; we actually accessed it on the TV and showed it for those who hadn't seen it yet (right after chapter 5 of UNDERSEA KINGDOM!)
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SilentEchoes57
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I thought the Chaplin homage was quite charming. It was filmed ten miles or so from Google headquarters in Niles California, literally across the street from where the former Essanay Studio used to be, and includes the same hillside backgrounds appearing in some scenes from Chaplin's original The Tramp (1915), filmed in Niles. The Tramp is the film that concludes with Charlie walking off down the lonely road for the first time. The train station appearing in the Doodle film appears briefly behind Edna Purviance during a scene in The Champion (1915).
The Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum helped with its production. The museum screens silent films every Saturday in the same small theater that originally showed Chaplin films in 1915. The Essanay Studio was only half a block further west. Can you imagine watching a Chaplin film in a theater Chaplin visited, and that is located just 200 feet away from where the film was made? Frederick Hodges, who plays at the museum frequently, played the score. The newspaper Chaplin reads at the beginning of the film includes a full mock-up of stories, including a large photo of David Kiehn. His photo did not appear because of the tight shot.
Some have complained that it was not enough "like" Chaplin – to which I say, Billy West, and several other imitators of their day, had a difficult time being "like" Chaplin as well. Being inimitable is part of Chaplin's appeal. The Chaplin imitator used here was simply one of the Google Doodle crew, not some actor hired for the role.
The film is imperfect, but to my thinking the fact that a mega corporation like Google actually encouraged a dozen or so creative people to work hard producing a sincere tribute is quite remarkable. And they actually cared enough to film it where Chaplin once filmed. How many other corporate-sponsored silent film tributes will be produced this year? Moreover, this project will have just a brief day in the sun. I suspect they posted it a day early in order to give it a bit longer play time.
So I say bravo, warts and all.
And .... Happy Birthday Charlie!
John Bengtson
The Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum helped with its production. The museum screens silent films every Saturday in the same small theater that originally showed Chaplin films in 1915. The Essanay Studio was only half a block further west. Can you imagine watching a Chaplin film in a theater Chaplin visited, and that is located just 200 feet away from where the film was made? Frederick Hodges, who plays at the museum frequently, played the score. The newspaper Chaplin reads at the beginning of the film includes a full mock-up of stories, including a large photo of David Kiehn. His photo did not appear because of the tight shot.
Some have complained that it was not enough "like" Chaplin – to which I say, Billy West, and several other imitators of their day, had a difficult time being "like" Chaplin as well. Being inimitable is part of Chaplin's appeal. The Chaplin imitator used here was simply one of the Google Doodle crew, not some actor hired for the role.
The film is imperfect, but to my thinking the fact that a mega corporation like Google actually encouraged a dozen or so creative people to work hard producing a sincere tribute is quite remarkable. And they actually cared enough to film it where Chaplin once filmed. How many other corporate-sponsored silent film tributes will be produced this year? Moreover, this project will have just a brief day in the sun. I suspect they posted it a day early in order to give it a bit longer play time.
So I say bravo, warts and all.
And .... Happy Birthday Charlie!
John Bengtson
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Man, tough crowd! This was amateur in the best sense-- done for love and with affection for the era and, clearly some study of the real thing. No, it was not as good as the best film of the late teens made by a genius who had been working steadily for a decade or more refining his comedy chops, you are correct on that. But it's no worse than Captain Celluloid Vs. The Film Pirates...
Cinema has no voice, but it speaks to us with eyes that mirror the soul. ―Ivan Mosjoukine
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The counter is turned off on the YouTube page for this video, but as of this afternoon it had "15,247 likes, 1,004 dislikes".
Bruce Calvert
http://www.silentfilmstillarchive.com
http://www.silentfilmstillarchive.com
There's just a bit more to Charlie than brick-throwing. Really. Try watching THE KID, THE GOLD RUSH, THE CIRCUS, CITY LIGHTS or MODERN TIMES sometime. (OK, the latter film does have one brief bit of brick-catapulting, but hey, nobody's perfect.)Battra92 wrote:I'm one of the few who really don't like Chaplin. Watching Chaplin (especially the Keystones that I'm currently going through) is like studying a historical artifact. I don't find throwing bricks very amusing but people of the time did and he was an enormous influence on the business and the culture.
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Richard M Roberts
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Yes it is, CAPTAIN CELLULOID is a lot of fun, apart from William K Everson's performance (he's a FILM HISTORIAN, not an ACTOR!).Mike Gebert wrote:Man, tough crowd! This was amateur in the best sense-- done for love and with affection for the era and, clearly some study of the real thing. No, it was not as good as the best film of the late teens made by a genius who had been working steadily for a decade or more refining his comedy chops, you are correct on that. But it's no worse than Captain Celluloid Vs. The Film Pirates...
RICHARD M ROBERTS
I've seen them all. My opinion still stands but I'll add "there's also a lot of 'oh look at the poor guy that even though he's an asshole we should feel sorry for him' added in to tug at the heartstrings."WaverBoy wrote:There's just a bit more to Charlie than brick-throwing. Really. Try watching THE KID, THE GOLD RUSH, THE CIRCUS, CITY LIGHTS or MODERN TIMES sometime. (OK, the latter film does have one brief bit of brick-catapulting, but hey, nobody's perfect.)Battra92 wrote:I'm one of the few who really don't like Chaplin. Watching Chaplin (especially the Keystones that I'm currently going through) is like studying a historical artifact. I don't find throwing bricks very amusing but people of the time did and he was an enormous influence on the business and the culture.
If that's all there was to Charlie's character, he wouldn't have been an enormous influence on the business and the culture.Battra92 wrote:I've seen them all. My opinion still stands but I'll add "there's also a lot of 'oh look at the poor guy that even though he's an asshole we should feel sorry for him' added in to tug at the heartstrings."WaverBoy wrote:There's just a bit more to Charlie than brick-throwing. Really. Try watching THE KID, THE GOLD RUSH, THE CIRCUS, CITY LIGHTS or MODERN TIMES sometime. (OK, the latter film does have one brief bit of brick-catapulting, but hey, nobody's perfect.)Battra92 wrote:I'm one of the few who really don't like Chaplin. Watching Chaplin (especially the Keystones that I'm currently going through) is like studying a historical artifact. I don't find throwing bricks very amusing but people of the time did and he was an enormous influence on the business and the culture.