Charlie Chaplin
14 titles
Filmography
14 results

Modern Times
(1936)The Tramp struggles to live in a modern industrial society with the help of a young homeless woman.

The Great Dictator
(1940)A Jewish barber takes the place of a war-hungry dictator.

City Lights
(1931)The dewy-eyed tramp sweeps street manure, dodges a prizefighter in the ring, and serves a term in the clink—all for the love of a blind flower girl.

The Kid
(1921)In this silent comedy, an adoptive father schemes to keep his son.

The Gold Rush
(1925)In this silent film, a lost soul in the Yukon seeks love and wealth.

Shoulder Arms
(1918)In this silent film, a private fresh out of boot camp accepts a daring mission behind enemy lines.

The Pilgrim
(1923)The Tramp is an escaped convict who is mistaken as a pastor in a small town church.

The Circus
(1928)A little tramp accidentally falls in with a down-on-its-luck circus and his acrobatic and comedic skills start drawing audiences to the big-top in droves, but not without a bittersweet brush with romance for the gentle clown.

Limelight
(1952)A fading comedian and a suicidal despondent ballet dancer must look to each other to find meaning and hope in their lives.

Monsieur Verdoux
(1947)Henri Verdoux is a meek, mild-mannered family man in pre-World War II France, who supports himself by periodically marrying and doing away with his wealthy paramours.

The Real Charlie Chaplin
(2021)Hollywood icon Charlie Chaplin rocketed to fame from the slums of Victorian London and spent decades as one of Hollywood's most famous and beloved stars until his scandalous fall from grace. His stage persona and incendiary media portrayal defined how he was perceived, but his private life has always been shrouded in mystery - until now. Never-before-heard recordings, intimate home movies and n...

Crazy Days
(1962)1962. Comedy. Directed by James M. Anderson. Scenes from the silent era greats. Including Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin plus many more. Narrated by Hughie Green.

One to One: John & Yoko
(2025)Directed by Academy Award® winner Kevin Macdonald (HBO's One Day in September), this immersive documentary offers a rare and revelatory inside look at John Lennon and Yoko Ono's first year in New York City – a chapter of explosive creativity and political activism. In 1971, John and Yoko moved into a tiny apartment in Greenwich Village, where they watched hours of American television. Over a year of love and transformation, the couple begins to change their approach to protest and are inspired to organize a benefit concert at Madison Square Garden, Lennon's only full-length show after leaving The Beatles. Featuring a mélange of 1970s TV clips and music newly remixed by Sean Ono Lennon, One to One: John & Yoko offers a bold new take on a seminal time in the lives of two iconic artists.

Hitler: A Career
(1977)Through never-before-seen film footage from secret archives and private collections, this documentary dissects the rise and fall of Adolf Hitler.