Charlie Chaplin’s 100-year-old film ‘The Gold Rush’ has timeless lessons on how to keep going
The wisest among us realize that what we normally think of as opposites are also associates. There’s life and death, joy and pain, fulfillment and absence. And, as Charlie Chaplin understood, and helped millions to understand, comedy and tragedy. Cinema was about a quarter of a century old when Chaplin’s “The Gold Rush” premiered June 26, 1925. The medium had produced its share of masterworks to stand the test of time, and Chaplin himself was already a major star, synonymous with the very concept — even the philosophy — of comedy. But the likes of “The Gold Rush” were new. As William Shakespeare had once taught people about being human, here was Chaplin to enlighten viewers on what laughter could mean. The picture features Chaplin’s Little Tramp character, as indelible a symbol of our collective pop culture consciousness as Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse, Bela Lugosi’s Dracula, a can of Coke and Elvis Presley’s swiveling hips. His thesis: Pain halts us if we don’t also find a reason to laugh, and with that reason, we become better equipped to find solutions. At 95Weiter zum vollständigen Artikel bei Korea Times
Quelle: Korea Times