[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":100},["ShallowReactive",2],{"movie-seo-tt0006414":3},{"movieId":4,"title":5,"year":6,"sources":7,"metadata":41,"relatedMovies":54,"similarMovies":67,"collections":96,"is_curated":97,"verified":98,"lastUpdated":99},"tt0006414","Behind the Screen",1916,[8,17,23,30,36],{"channelId":9,"sourceId":10,"id":10,"title":11,"description":12,"size":13,"addedAt":14,"year":6,"downloads":15,"type":9,"channelName":16},"archive.org","BehindTheScreen1916","Charlie Chaplin's \"Behind the Screen\" (1916)","  This gem is presented by Silent Hall of Fame.   Please visit https:\u002F\u002Fsilent-hall-of-fame.org\u002F   to support our non-profit mission and the legacy of silent movie stars by making a tax deductible contribution.   FEEL FREE TO FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @SilentFilmGems   \"Behind the Screen\" is one of Charlie Chaplin's Mutual short comedies, featuring Edna Purviance, a star of Silent Hall of Fame. Directed by               Charlie Chaplin Produced by             Lone Star Corporation Scenario by                Charlie Chaplin           Starring                     Charlie Chaplin, Eric Campbell, Edna Purviance Cinematography        Roland H. Totheroh and W.C. Foster Distributed by           Mutual Film Corporation Release date               November 13, 1916 Running time             23 min. Country                      United States Language                    Silent film, English intertitles Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976: \"Allowance is made for \"fair use\" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.\"    ",302263609,1767744374,14227,"Archive.org",{"channelId":9,"sourceId":18,"id":18,"title":19,"description":20,"size":21,"addedAt":14,"year":6,"downloads":22,"type":9,"channelName":16},"CC_1916_11_13_BehindtheScreen","Charlie Chaplin's \"Behind The Screen\"","Charlie Chaplin's 57th Film released November 13 1916. Behind the Screen, a short film written and directed by Charlie Chaplin also starring Eric Campbell and Edna Purviance. In the film which takes place in a movie studio, Chaplin plays a stagehand named David while Campbell (\"Goliath\") plays his supervisor. Much of the film is slapstick comedy but other issues are also brought up such as a stagehand strike as well as a plotline in which Purviance, unable to become an actress, dresses as a man and becomes a stagehand. The film is silent. The film is noted for having one of the first Hollywood gay jokes in it. After Chaplin learns that Purviance is really a woman, he kisses her while on the set. A male stagehand sees this and thinking that Chaplin has kissed a man, starts acting in an overtly effeminate way until Chaplin kicks him. http:\u002F\u002Fwww.imdb.com\u002Ftitle\u002Ftt0006414\u002F",374917793,72060,{"channelId":9,"sourceId":24,"id":24,"title":25,"description":26,"size":27,"addedAt":28,"year":6,"downloads":29,"type":9,"channelName":16},"behind-the-screen-1916","Behind The Screen (1916)","Behind the Screen is a 1916 American silent short comedy film written by, directed by, and starring Charlie Chaplin, and also starring Eric Campbell and Edna Purviance. The film is in the public domain. Watch on RetroFlix.org:  https:\u002F\u002Fretroflix.org\u002Fbehind-the-screen-1916\u002F",424815713,1767744451,406,{"channelId":9,"sourceId":31,"id":31,"title":32,"description":33,"size":34,"addedAt":28,"year":6,"downloads":35,"type":9,"channelName":16},"behind-the-screen-1916-directed-by-charlie-chaplin","Behind The Screen (1916) Directed By Charlie Chaplin","Theatrical poster to Behind the Screen Directed by Charlie Chaplin Edward Brewer (technical director) Written by Charlie Chaplin Vincent Bryan Maverick Terrell Produced by Henry P. Caulfield Starring Charlie Chaplin Edna Purviance Eric Campbell Cinematography Roland Totheroh George C. Zalibra Edited by Charlie Chaplin Distributed by Mutual Film Corporation Release date November 13, 1916 Running time 23 minutes Country United States Language Silent (English intertitles ) Behind the Screen is a 1916 American silent short comedy film written by, directed by, and starring Charlie Chaplin , and also starring Eric Campbell and Edna Purviance . The film is in the public domain . Plot The film takes place in a silent movie studio. Charlie Chaplin plays stagehand named David who has an enormous supervisor named Goliath (Eric Campbell). David is overworked but is still labelled as a loafer by the lazy Goliath and his supervisor. A country girl (Edna Purviance) arrives at the studio in hopes of becoming an actress, but is quickly turned away by Goliath. Most of the other stagehands go on wildcat strike to protest their sleep being interrupted during their lunch break. Only David and Goliath remain on the job. The girl returns and stealthily dresses in one of the striking stagehand's work clothes. Disguised as a man, she gets a job as a stagehand too. David discovers that the new stagehand is actually a female. When he gives her a series of quick kisses, the action is seen by Goliath who makes effeminate gestures at David. Edna overhears the strikers' plans to blow up the studio with dynamite and helps thwart their villainous plot. Much of the film is slapstick comedy involving Chaplin manhandling large props, mishandling the control to a trap door, and engaging in a raucous pie-throwing fight which spills over into another studio where a period drama is being shot. In one scene Chaplin deftly carries 11 chairs over his back in his left hand and lifts a piano in his right hand. Cast Charlie Chaplin as David (Goliath's assistant) Edna Purviance as The Girl Eric Campbell as Goliath (a stagehand) Albert Austin as Stagehand (uncredited) Production Behind the Screen was the last of Chaplin's comedies to use a movie studio as a backdrop. Earlier Chaplin films, such as A Film Johnnie , His New Job , and The Masquerader had also been set, at least partly, in a silent movie studio. In Behind the Screen , Chaplin pokes gentle fun at Keystone Studios where he broke into the movies in 1914 and worked under contract for Mack Sennett for a year. The pie-throwing sequence is an obvious allusion to the Keystone style of slapstick comedies where such skirmishes were overly common. One intertitle humorously refers to the pie-throwing gimmick as \"a new idea.\" References in documentaries The 1983 documentary series Unknown Chaplin revealed previously unseen footage from this movie, including an alternate take where Purviance's character is shown playing a harp; an outtake in which Edna, playing the guitar, starts laughing (the documentary supports the belief that Purviance and Chaplin were romantically involved at the time); and several takes of a sequence in which Chaplin's character narrowly misses having his feet chopped off by an axe (accomplished by filming the scene backwards) - this sequence was never used in the final film. The 1995 documentary The Celluloid Closet draws attention to the scene where Chaplin's character - after learning that Purviance's character is really a woman - kisses her while on the set; at this point, a male stagehand enters and, thinking that Chaplin has kissed a man, starts acting in an overtly effeminate way until Chaplin kicks him. [ 1 ] Review A reviewer for Variety penned, \"The latest Charlie Chaplin release is a two-reeler that is to be classed with one of the best laugh-producers that the world's champion high-priced film comic has done for Mutual. Most of the stunts might be classed with the earlier and most successful type of work pulled by Chaplin. Yet not once does he have possession of the bamboo cane nor does he wear that humpty-dumpty derby. The action, which in no case drags, takes place presumably on the floor of a film studio with a large chance for fun with the numerous props.\" By contrast, The Moving Picture World gave a less-than-enthusiastic review: \" While this Chaplin effort will doubtless evoke much laughter from a certain class of audience, it is not one to be strongly recommended. There is throughout a distinct vein of vulgarity which is unnecessary, even in slapstick comedy. A great deal of comedy is intended to be extracted from a pie slinging episode which occurs during the rehearsal of a couple of scenes in a moving picture studio. The funniest part of the comedy occurs during the manipulation of a trap door in one of the scenes by Chaplin. All of the action takes place in a moving picture studio.\" [ 2 ] 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. [ 3 ] References 1 The Celluloid Closet , DVD documentary (1995); Kenneth S. Lynn, Chaplin: His Life and Times (2003). 2 New York, Chalmers Publishing Company (December 1916). Moving Picture World (Oct-Dec 1916) . Media History Digital Library. New York, Chalmers Publishing Company. 3 SilentComedians entry Archived 2014-01-12 at the Wayback Machine",784729482,201,{"channelId":9,"sourceId":37,"id":37,"title":5,"size":38,"addedAt":39,"year":6,"downloads":40,"type":9,"channelName":16},"silent-behind-the-screen",2901301867,1767744650,650,{"Rated":42,"Runtime":43,"imdbRating":44,"imdbVotes":45,"Genre":46,"Plot":47,"Director":48,"Writer":49,"Actors":50,"Language":51,"Country":52,"Awards":53},"TV-G","30 min",6.9,3173,"Short, Comedy, Romance","Three movies are being shot simultaneously and Charlie is an overworked scene shifter. The foreman is waited on hand and foot until all the shifters but Charlie go on strike. A girl looking for work pretends to be a man and helps Charlie. Charlie discovers her gender and falls in love with her. The foreman thinks they are homosexual and in the ensuing fight they become involved in a long pie throwing scene from one of the movies in production. 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