首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Passage Two (1) As a child, I loved Charlie Chaplin films. I would put on my father’s shoes and wander about with a trampish ga
Passage Two (1) As a child, I loved Charlie Chaplin films. I would put on my father’s shoes and wander about with a trampish ga
admin
2023-02-27
8
问题
Passage Two
(1) As a child, I loved Charlie Chaplin films. I would put on my father’s shoes and wander about with a trampish gait. Luckily, I never boiled and ate the shoes—I would not see Chaplin do that (in The Gold Rush ) for a few years yet. I am from the last generation that found it quite normal to watch silent films on television. There was nothing arcane or archaic about it. It was an everyday part of BBC 2 programming.
(2) As I grew older, my love of Laurel and Hardy remained, but Chaplin went out of favour. The received wisdom that he was overly sentimental meant that it became unfashionable to like him. Keaton was the one to revere; he was considered a more serious clown, with a stone face of existential angst and boasting a collaboration with Samuel Beckett.
(3) Why it might be necessary to make a choice between Keaton and Chaplin I have no idea—there is time enough to celebrate both. But I find a surprising number of people who say : " I never really got Chaplin. " Each time I return to Chaplin, I find it harder to understand how anyone can dismiss him. He wrote, produced, directed, starred in and composed the music for a series of powerful, funny, philosophical and moving films. Even the first cinematic outing of the tramp, Kid Auto Races at Venice, can make me laugh 100 years on, as Chaplin repeatedly gets in the way of the news cameras and racing cars with such brazen cheek.
(4) Or there is the ludicrous image of Chaplin becoming a wooden hedgehog as he hurls 11 chairs on his back in Behind the Screen, as fresh as any visual comedy being made now.
(5) Though the bread-roll dance from The Gold Rush has been so often imitated that it may seem to have lost some of its wonder, watch the sequence again and you will see how intricate something of seeming simplicity is. Johnny Depp spoke of having to imitate it in Benny and Joon and said it took days to get everything just right. It is so much more than it at first seems.
(6) That is what makes Chaplin live on—the depth of thought behind each seemingly simple routine. It is never just falling over with a bang, it is acrobatics with aplomb, it is the grace of the chaos. As his biographer Richard Schickel noted, with Chaplin, all that seems solid melts into something else.
(7) For those who ask, "But is Chaplin really still funny?" I can promise you that a new generation of children do laugh at Chaplin attempting a tightrope walk while distracted by monkeys in The Circus. There may be many banana-skin routines, but I am pretty sure Chaplin was the first to attempt the banana skin on the tightrope.
(8) The Rink is my earliest memory of watching Chaplin. Here he is, a waiter, his face showing no servile deference as he works out a bill based on the remnants of food spattered over the diner, the furious and luxuriantly eyebrowed Eric Campbell, before pocketing an unoffered tip. He is lovable, rebellious, coquettish, both worldly and otherworldly. As for the roller-rink routine in that film, I would watch Dancing on Ice if only it were that good.
(9) Eric Campbell was also the monstrous street-fighting adversary in Easy Street. Unable to floor him, or even move him with fisticuffs, Chaplin eventually overcomes him by pulling his head into the lamp of a street light and gassing him. Woody Allen declared that Easy Street would be funny in a thousand years from now. The potency of the ridiculousness has made it last nearly a century already.
(10) Neil Brand, a fine pianist who frequently accompanies silent film performances, acknowledges that today’s audiences have to overcome the mores and attitudes of a bygone age, but says that once that is done, we can still empathize with Chaplin as he responds to overwhelming forces.
(11) City Lights, Chaplin’s most revered film and highest on the American Film Institute’s 100 greatest films list, opens on a scene of accidental rebellion. The grand unveiling of an epic statue is ruined when the drape comes off to reveal the tramp asleep in the arms of the granite god. As the US national anthem plays, the tramp attempts to stand to attention while dangling by the butt of his trousers from the sword of a carved figure.
(12) There is set piece after set piece and, though my twenty something self probably sneered at the innocent love story of tramp and blind girl, the fortysomething me is more romantic and easily moved by this tale of a tramp who will do anything for the love of a woman. It also has the best joke with an elephant in any movie I can think of.
(13) As for The Great Dictator, amid the drama, social commentary and vivid portrayal of the rising oppression of the Jewish people in Germany, there are moments of superb broad comedy. Adenoid Hynkel, a petty, preposterous dictator with delusions of monstrous grandeur, is ripe for having his pretensions punctured.
(14) The scenes of desperation as he attempts to show that he is a great dictator to rival Napaloni, played with oomph and chutzpah by Jack Oakie, continue to make me laugh. And it contains undoubtedly my favourite choking-on-hot-mustard scene. There are few greater joys than seeing those of high status fall flat on their face.
(15) And then there is Limelight. The music hall may be long dead, but Limelight still conveys what it is to be a clown, the desperation and fear of losing your audience, what it is to age and rail against age and loss.
(16) If you want to sample his magnificence with a brief scene, just look at the delicacy with which he plays drunk in Limelight, the subtlety with which he conveys an inebriate attempting to find the keyhole in a door. If that doesn’t work for you, then watch him dressed as a chicken in The Gold Rush or with his face manically covered in soup by a malfunctioning machine that is meant to be a sign of a bright new future in Modern Times.
(17) There is beauty, humour and humanity to be found here. Chaplin was and is, a cinematic clown genius.
What rhetorical device is used in the last sentence of Para. 3?
选项
答案
C
解析
语义修辞题。根据题干提示定位至第三段最后一句。阅读此句可以发现,句中使用修辞格的是make me laugh 100 years on这部分,即“够我笑一百年”,该句使用的是夸张的修辞手法,故C为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/MwQiFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
MartezaHasanifledAfghanistanin2005whenhewassixyearsold.Duringthewarthere,hefoundhisfather’sbody,infrontof
TheInternetaffordsanonymitytoitsusers,ablessingtoprivacyandfreedomofspeech.Butthatveryanonymityisalsobehind
TheInternetaffordsanonymitytoitsusers,ablessingtoprivacyandfreedomofspeech.Butthatveryanonymityisalsobehind
TheInternetaffordsanonymitytoitsusers,ablessingtoprivacyandfreedomofspeech.Butthatveryanonymityisalsobehind
TheInternetaffordsanonymitytoitsusers,ablessingtoprivacyandfreedomofspeech.Butthatveryanonymityisalsobehind
TheInternetaffordsanonymitytoitsusers,ablessingtoprivacyandfreedomofspeech.Butthatveryanonymityisalsobehind
Whichpassage(s)say(s)that….adultsputtoomuchemphasisonchildren’sintellectualdevelopment?
Whichpassage(s)say(s)that….adultsputtoomuchemphasisonchildren’sintellectualdevelopment?
Itwasasunnyday.Alittleboy’sfatherwassittingonthecouch,drinkingabeerwhilewatching【K1】________basketballmatch.
随机试题
适应型学习中,双环学习是()
心理咨询遵循的理论体系属于()
背景材料:某跨海大桥,上部结构为9m×50m+9m×50m+12m×50m三联等跨等截面预应力混凝土连续箱梁桥,横向为两个独立的单箱,梁高2.75m,单箱顶面宽为11.30m。箱梁采用移动式模架逐跨施工,整套设备从瑞士某公司引进。施工单位在施工组织设计中
下列关于发放股票股利的相关说法中。不正确的是()。
公司进行股票分割,会使原有股东的利益()。
在智力测验中,()关系会促使受测者尽最大努力发挥自己的能力。
一个盛满水的圆柱形容器,其底面半径为1,母线长为3,将该容器在水平的桌面上平稳地倾斜,水缓缓流出,当容器中剩下的水为原来的时,圆柱的母线与水平面所成的角等于()。
给定资料1.2019年3月,中共中央办公厅印发《关于解决形式主义突出问题为基层减负的通知》(以下简称《通知》),明确提出将2019年作为“基层减负年”。为落实《通知》精神,陕西省委印发《解决形式主义突出问题为基层减负十条措施》,明确2019年省委
投资银行的资金来源主要是证券的发行和交易筹集,其本源业务为()。
Thetaskofbeingacceptedandenrolledinauniversitybeginsearlyforsomestudents,longbeforetheygraduatefromhighscho
最新回复
(
0
)