Preview

Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
513 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times
Nhil B
BYUH

Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times

Being told that we were going to watch a 1936 Charlie Chaplin movie made me excited. I have never seen any of his films so I did not know what to expect. Seeing the movie title as “Modern Times”, however, made me think that the film is about the lives of the people during the Great Depression. As it turned out, I was correct. But aside from showing the concerns and difficulties of those who lived during a severe economic depression, the film also shows how modernization in society affects the people. What is more interesting, though, is how even more than half a century later, Chaplin’s film still mirrors the influence of modernization on the lives of many people and the world they live in.

Chaplin allows his viewers to understand the effect of modernization in the workplace through several scenes. One example is when an inventor makes his character, the Little Tramp, as a subject to present a “modern” feeding machine. In that scene, Chaplin shows how eager people are in the modern time— or at least in their modern time in 1936— to make workers do their job faster that they will venture to reform the normal way of eating during lunch break. Chaplin also shows that people are so absorbed in recreating and inventing things to achieve efficiency in what they do. One can say that this constant invention and reinvention of things that are being used in workplaces is still true today. This is evident by how companies continue to upgrade and reprogram their computers to hold more information and be better at multi-tasking.

The effect of modernization not only changes the tools people use but also changes the people who use those tool. This effect is seen when the boss of the factory asks to make the machine the workers use to run faster, requiring The Little Tramp and his colleagues to also act faster than how they can handle. The increasing demand for faster manual labor eventually makes the Little Tramp suffer a

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In the story “The Backdraft of Technology” Stephanie Alaimo and Mark Koester indicated the many disadvantages of technology in our society. Although there are many advantages to advance technology; Alaimo and Koester still warn the readers about the negative effects of technology in the present time and the future. They strictly blame corporations for bringing the technology to replace human service to earn more profit. Alaimo and Koester claim that because corporate brings the technology such as self-checkout, apps, Netflix they have eliminated the most basic job such as: bagger, cashier, bank tellers, employees of a renting videos, and gas station employee. The fast service that the technology provide will result in…

    • 1110 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This drastic change in working conditions has furthered America’s development in industries. Although manual labor in most industries have been severely reduced due to technological advancements within the past few decades, the changes made to our working conditions affected all of America, socially, politically, and economically. Hopefully, technology today will be able to further develop our society in the future to the amount that the tragedy of the Triangle Waist Factory fire did in…

    • 1317 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    4. Technological changes both helped and hurt workers by making it easier to work but making it harder by causing a need for skilled labor.…

    • 675 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Who we are is how we live our time.” An idea asserted by Todd Gitlin, author of Supersaturation, or, The Media Torrent and Disposable Feeling. Gitlin elucidates with thorough evidence and…

    • 565 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Admittedly the world we live in is the subject of our study to a certain degree, though I feel it is important to emphasize that modernity was not only an important principle of thought for those of the socially concerned mindset - which began to appear throughout its fruition - but also the artist, or the philosopher, the worker, the owner, the ruled and the ruled.…

    • 1696 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Steam powered equipment was just becoming a reality. This could greatly improve the need for laborers. The problem with this was that for the uneducated man, who would be able to learn how to operate it and maintain and fix it if most didn't even know how to read?…

    • 940 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    What you are about to see in the film City Lights (1931) is a funny and emotional motion picture. This is an extraordinary silent film; it is poetic, moving, and tender. Charlie Chaplin is a master at comedic pantomime, conveying everything he does without the necessity of actually talking, but through the universal language of movement, gestures, and reactionary expressions. The film humorously displays the misadventures of the “Little Tramp” character and the harsh reality of The Great Depression. During the 1930s, the setting of which the film takes place in, nearly every major industrialize country was experiencing “a severe worldwide economic depression, however, in most countries it started in 1929 and lasted until the late 1930s. It was the longest, deepest, and most widespread depression of the 20th century” (Wikipedia).…

    • 1270 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Modern Times is an emotional response, based always in comedy, to the circumstances of the times. In the early films, the Tramp was knocked around in a pre-war society of underprivileged among the other immigrants and vagabonds and petty miscreants. In Modern Times he is one of the millions coping with poverty, unemployment, strikes and strikebreakers, and the tyranny of the machine (Robinson 458-9).…

    • 1600 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Charlie chaplin

    • 1460 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Thesis : A sense of belonging originates from our choice in who we are and where we…

    • 1460 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Industrial Revolution was a turning point in America and Europe that affected how the people in these two areas lived for the good and bad of many. Machines during the Industrial Revolution set the standard for what the future would hold for America and Europe, but would not only would their futures be changed but the outcomes of their revolution would spread causing a global revolution. The machines brought about not only a huge growth in modernization, but a huge change in the lives of the working class throughout America and Europe. To sustain themselves, many people worked in harsh conditions and endured cruel punishments daily, which caused a massive strain on the body and mind and still had to work long hours everyday. Machines…

    • 714 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Luddite Fallacy

    • 498 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Some work to live, while others live to work. Throughout the course of history, it is seen that humans have developed tools to aid them in working less. At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, textile-workers feared their jobs would be replaced by textile machines. There…

    • 498 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Industrial Revolution greatly affected our society in both good and bad ways. It was a movement where machines changed many people’s way of life as well as the methods in which we manufactured it. In the beginning of this boom of productivity, there were many ways where the negative effects far outweighed the positive.…

    • 234 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    In 1914, Making a Living was released, and with it, the world was introduced to Sir Spencer “Charlie” Chaplin. Born in 1889, Chaplin spent his early years preparing himself for the camera in dance troupes and stage comedy routines (Charlie Chaplin, 2005). Having been born into poverty, Chaplin’s rise to fame and riches was tremendously difficult, and in no small part due to Chaplin’s revolutionary approach to cinema and comedy specifically. Chaplin redefined the comedy genre by bringing intelligence and sophistication to what was otherwise a slap-stick dominated field (Charlie Chaplin, 2005). Chaplin achieved this through refining the conventions of filming, extensive character development, portraying gender roles realistically, bringing attention…

    • 2154 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    During the 1920s, lots of rich people could enjoy their lives and in the 1930s, the war affected people´s lives and made them terribly tough. When the people´s lives changed, the literature also changed and reflected the people´s everyday lives with all their problems and joys.…

    • 408 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fritz Lang's M Essay

    • 1218 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Film, as a form of popular art, contributes greatly to various societies since its emergence for such a medium embodies the set of values and beliefs of the culture for which and within which it is made. Fritz Lang’s M (1931), which was produced during the Weimar Republic period, is an example of this role of motion pictures. In the following paragraphs, this essay will analyze the way the movie features the instability and insanity of the political and social situation through the examination of its narration and mise-en-scene. Narration, as defined in Film Art: An Introduction, is “the process through which the plot conveys or withholds story information” (Bordwell and Thompson 503). In this particular production, Fritz Lang used narration…

    • 1218 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays