20 Comedy Movies You Must See Before You Die

By Sam Hill /

4. City Lights (1931)

United Artists

Talkies were all the rage when Charlie Chaplin stubbornly stuck to his guns and decided that his next film, 1931's City Lights, would be a silent movie. The move could have backfired and potential ended Chaplin's career, marking him out as a sad relic of a forgotten era.

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And yet City Lights emerged as such a touching, funny, beautiful and seminal movie, it didn't matter; audiences lapped it up, and briefly ignored the changing trends of cinema to once again embrace Chaplin's iconic "Tramp" character in what is without a doubt his best and most affecting film. "Affecting" isn't a word we often associate with comedy, but rest assured: the laughs are here, too.

So as The Tramp falls in love with a beautiful - but blind - flower girl, he also finds himself thrown from one comical situation to another. The gags, more than 80 years old, haven't dated at all - you could find many of them in an episode of The Simpsons.

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And who would have thought, too, that a silent comedy film could contain - according to critic James Agee, anyway, writing about the famous final scene - the "greatest single piece of acting ever committed to celluloid"? Indeed.