In 1967, Charles Chaplin directed his remaining movie, “The Countess From Hong Kong.” An ill-fated undertaking doomed by the variations in working strategies of director Chaplin and star Marlon Brando, “Countess” broke Chaplin’s spirit — and his ankle when he tripped within the studio throughout manufacturing. By then, he not bore any resemblance to the impressed artist behind masterpieces like “The Nice Dictator,” “Monsieur Verdoux,” and “Limelight.”
But not lengthy after the creative and industrial failure of “Countess,” Chaplin’s creativeness bought fired up once more when he conceived of “The Freak,” an allegorical fantasy a couple of younger girl born with wings whose situation attracts each the very best and worst of humanity. On the age of 80, Chaplin not solely wrote an entire script for the movie however had wings constructed, designed units, oversaw a taking pictures schedule and price range, and had an artist storyboard most of the pictures.
“The Freak” bought tantalizingly near manufacturing, however Chaplin by no means shot any footage exterior of some exams of the heroine’s wings. One downside, as standard, was financing — the dwelling legend struggled to boost the required funds, at one level struggling the indignity of rejection by United Artists, the studio he had co-founded through the silent period. One other was Chaplin’s deteriorating well being; although he felt invigorated by the prospect of a brand new undertaking, his spouse Oona feared that the film’s logistical challenges would kill him and secretly labored to maintain the movie from ever shifting ahead.
Whereas it would by no means be doable to see Chaplin’s remaining dream undertaking, Sticking Place Books and the Cineteca Bologna have collaborated to offer us the subsequent neatest thing: “Charles Chaplin‘s ‘The Freak’: The Story of an Unfinished Movie,” a guide that reproduces the ultimate taking pictures script and gives context with a whole bunch of paperwork taken from the Chaplin Archives and newly found papers of producer Jerry Epstein. The quantity is a treasure trove for Chaplin lovers, containing the whole lot from the auteur’s handwritten script notes and wing designs to manufacturing paperwork and miscellania like a listing of movie prints Chaplin reserved for private viewing (amongst them “Barbarella” and “The Absent-Minded Professor”).
The archival materials is organized and annotated by Chaplin biographer David Robinson and editor Cecilia Cenciarelli, who’ve carried out important work right here detailing Chaplin’s largest remaining burst of creativity. Robinson makes use of the documentation to offer signposts for a story through which he takes the reader step-by-step by means of Chaplin’s artistic course of, a worthwhile endeavor even when associated to a never-completed movie — perhaps even particularly for a movie that was by no means accomplished, as that is the closest we’ll ever come to sharing Chaplin’s remaining dream together with him.
Anybody who has consumed the Criterion Assortment’s indispensable editions of Chaplin masterworks is aware of he was a singular director with a time-consuming strategy that yielded nice movies solely after many false begins and turns down blind alleys. “The Freak” was no exception, and Robinson clearly lays out discarded concepts whereas tracing the evolution of the script, working from 1000’s of random pages discovered amongst Chaplin’s papers.
The deep dive into Chaplin’s working strategies is compelling and illuminating, and the taking pictures script itself exhibits that the all the time politically and philosophically probing Chaplin hadn’t misplaced any of his hearth or originality in his previous age. Interviews with two individuals near the method — Chaplin’s daughter Victoria, who was slated to play the title character, and storyboard artist Gerald Larn — add a human contact to the tome and make sure the eagerness and need that “The Freak” impressed within the octogenarian filmmaker.
For these of us who revere Chaplin, “The Story of an Unfinished Movie” is a crucial and riveting work of movie historical past and scholarship — for the uninitiated, it’s an incredible introduction to the obsessive working strategies of one of many twentieth century’s true cinematic geniuses.
“Charles Chaplin’s ‘The Freak’: The Story of an Unfinished Movie” is presently accessible from Sticking Place Books.

