The Vagabond is a silent film by Charlie Chaplin and his third film with Mutual Film Corporation. Released to theaters on July 10, 1916, it co-starred Edna Purviance, Eric Campbell (actor), Leo White and Lloyd Bacon. This film echoed Chaplin's work on
The Tramp, with more drama and pathos mixed in with the comedy.
Synopsis
File:The Vagabond still.jpg
File:Charlie Chaplin Covers the World.jpg
The story begins with Charlie, the Tramp, arriving at a bar, playing on a violin to raise money and exciting rivalry with competing musicians - which results in a bar room brawl and comic mayhem.
Wandering off into the vicinity of a gypsy caravan, in the country, he encounters the beautiful, though bedraggled, Edna and entertains her with his violin. She has been abducted and abused by the gypsies, chief among them Eric Campbell, who whips her mercilessly. Charlie comes to her rescue and knocks her tormentors on the head with a stick, before riding off with her in a commandeered cart. The intimacy which develops between them, as Charlie washes her face in a bowl and combs her hair, is complicated by the arrival of an artist love rival and her parents. Driving off with the latter, Edna suddenly realises that her heart belongs to Charlie and orders the car to reverse and take him along with her.
See also
- The Circus (film) (1928)
- Charlie Chaplin filmography
Category:1916 films
Category:American films
Category:American silent short films
Category:Films directed by Charlie Chaplin
Category:Black-and-white films
Category:1910s comedy films