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- ¾ð¾î/ÀÚ¸· : English/English
- ȸéºñ : 4:3 Black & White
- À½¼º : Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
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[SPECIAL FEATURES]
- "Gold Rush" - Interview, script draft
- "City Lights" - 2 versions of Chaplin's score, interview, prodution info
- "Modern Times" - Interview, production info, stills
- "The Great Dictator" - Outtake from Chaplin's "Sunnyside," Hitler newsreel, Story notes and script drafts
"The Gold Rush." (1925, 71 min.) - Chaplin's classic comic masterpiece about the hardships of life on the Alaskan frontier, battling blizzards, bears, killers, crazed gold miners, and even gravity.
"City Lights" (1931, 87 min.) - The touching story of a young blind woman who believes the Little Tramp to be a wealthy duke, and the series of comic adventures when he sets out to earn the money to pay for an operation to restore her sight.
"Modern Times" (1936, 103 min.) - The Little Tramp battles technology, unemployment, jail, burglars, demanding customers, bosses and "The Gamin." Chaplin's last silent film is remarkably unsilent, featuring the only time the Little Tramp's voice was heard on film.
"The Great Dictator" (1940, 125 min.) - In his first talking film, Charlie Chaplin skewers Hitler on sharp spears of ridicule, playing both the malevolent dictator Adenoid Hynkel and his lookalike, an innocent Jewish barber.