The Cure (1917 film)

1917 film by Charlie Chaplin

  • April 16, 1917 (1917-04-16)
  • August 19, 1932 (1932-08-19) (sound release by
    Van Beuren Studios/RKO Radio Pictures)
Running time
31 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesSilent film
English intertitles
The Cure

The Cure is a 1917 short comedy film written and directed by Charlie Chaplin. The plot revolves around alcohol, being made just prior to prohibition but during a period where the politicians were debating the evils of alcohol.

Synopsis

Chaplin plays a drunkard who is attending a hydropathic hotel, presumably to dry out, but brings along a big suitcase full of alcohol. He gets trapped in a spinning revolving door then traps the foot of a large man with a bandaged foot, suffering from gout. He encounters a beautiful young woman and sits between her and a man who keeps offering him the spa water (which he keeps pouring away). The girl encourages him to stop drinking. He meets the big man again who tries to get the hotel manager to throw him out. Instead he gets taken for a Turkish massage.

When the hotel owner learns employees are getting drunk from Charlie's liquor, he orders one man to throw the liquor out. The drunk employee hurls the bottles through the window, straight into the spa's health waters. Meanwhile Charlie is not happy to be massaged by the large man in the bath house and tries to dodge this.

Outside, the well is contaminated with alcohol, sending the spa's inhabitants into a dancing stupor. Chaplin, encouraged by his new love to get sober, drinks from the spurious spa, gets drunk and offends her. She leaves him in anger and walks away. Charlie walks back to the door unsteadily, when he bumps into the large man, tripping him off his wheel chair and landing him into the alcoholic well.

The next morning there are plenty of hangovers, but Chaplin turns sober, walks out and finds the lady. Realizing what had happened, she forgives him. They walk ahead, just then he accidentally steps into the liquor-laden well.

Alternative Version

An alternative introduction which was added to the film (during prohibition) explains that in 1917 drunkenness was a serious problem in the working class, so to keep it funny Chaplin changed from his "Little Tramp" character to an upper-class fop. Gout was at the time believed to be a disease of the wealthy, which is why Eric Campbell's character has it.

Chaplin as bellhop

Clips from the documentary Unknown Chaplin show that Chaplin originally cast himself as a bellhop at the spa and shot at least one scene with him in that role. (The bellhop was directing pedestrian and wheelchair traffic in the lobby as a traffic cop would at a busy intersection.) Chaplin eventually discarded the idea, instead casting himself as a patient at the health spa.

Reviews

A reviewer from the Louisville Herald praised the film, writing, "It's a cinch that as long as pictures like The Cure are offered to make folks forget their troubles, Chaplin will always be worth the money he gets."

Similarly, a reviewer from Variety noted, "The Cure is a whole meal of laughs, not merely giggles, and ought to again emphasize that fact that Charlie is in a class by himself."

The reviewer from Motion Picture World declared The Cure "contains in the second reel some excruciatingly funny moments, particularly in the scenes at the baths."

Sound version

In 1932, Amedee Van Beuren of Van Beuren Studios, purchased Chaplin's Mutual comedies for $10,000 each, added music by Gene Rodemich and Winston Sharples and sound effects, and re-released them through RKO Radio Pictures. Chaplin had no legal recourse to stop the RKO release.[1]

Preservation status

On September 4, 2013 a missing part of the end of the film was found and will be released on a future DVD[citation needed]. A restored version of The Cure was presented at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival on January 11, 2014.

Cast

  • Charlie Chaplin as The Inebriate
  • Edna Purviance as The Girl
  • Eric Campbell as The Man with the Gout
  • Henry Bergman as Masseur
  • John Rand as Sanitarium Attendant
  • James T. Kelley as Sanitarium Attendant
  • Albert Austin as Sanitarium Attendant
  • Frank J. Coleman as Head of Sanitarium

See also

  • Charlie Chaplin filmography

References

  1. ^ SilentComedians entry Archived January 12, 2014, at the Wayback Machine

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Cure (1917 film).
  • v
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Books
  • My Autobiography
  • Chaplin: His Life and Art
  • Charlie Chaplin: Intimate Close-Ups
  • Chaplin: A Life
  • Sunnyside
Songs
  • "Smile" (1936 music, 1954 lyrics)
  • "Eternally (Terry's Theme)" (1952 music, 1953 lyrics)
  • "This Is My Song" (1967)
OtherFilms about Chaplin
Musicals about Chaplin
Films directed by Chaplin
Keystone Studios
Essanay Studios
Mutual Film Corp
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  • The Fireman (1916)
  • The Vagabond (1916)
  • One A.M. (1916)
  • The Count (1916)
  • The Pawnshop (1916)
  • Behind the Screen (1916)
  • The Rink (1916)
  • Easy Street (1917)
  • The Cure (1917)
  • The Immigrant (1917)
  • The Adventurer (1917)
First National
United Artists
Later productions
See also