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TRIBUTE TO 'CHANG'

AUSTRALIAN WRITER’S PRAISE ‘ Chang/ the Paramount picture dealing with life in the Siamese jungles, is perhaps one of the finest films that have ever been produced. It lias drawn the following tribute from O. J. Dennis, the Australian writer:— “In a moving picture that has been released recently a new phase has been revealed in the art of cinematography. It may almost be said that a new page has been written in the history of the film, and that the moving picture camera has at last found its true field. “‘Chang/ a simple and absorbing picture of jungle life in Siam, has in it all the drama, all the tense situations, the glamor, the tragedy, and the humor of a laboriously-manufactured studio picture. Yet in the whole of it there is little or no conscious acting. “ Hitherto the art of the moving picture has been more or less interposed upon that of the speaking stage. By an elaborate system of pantomime, actors seek to convey what can he much more adequately conveyed upon the stage. But in a picture such as ‘ Chang ’ words are superfluous, and it is a cruelly eloquent comment on the 1 art ’ of the moving picture actor to say that Bimbo, the monkey comedian in this picture, can, by a piece of effortless acting, evoke gales of laughter. Indeed, Mr Bimbo may be cited as one of the new stars of the screen. If here and there he over-acts a little it is due to natural exuberance and to no conscious effort to win a laugh. Mr Walter Buffalo, who plays the part of the heavy tragedian, acts with a restraint that might well be copied in Hollywood, and Mr Tiger, the villain of the piece, registers hate, malice, ferocity, and baffled rage without one false note.

“The few humans in the picture, native Siamese, are, in movement and expression, so perfectly natural that no hint of acting is conveyed. The one woman in the film, in expressing such emotions as fear, contentment, and surprise, smoothly and with such little apparent effort, might well be the envy and despair of many a Hollywood star. All of which seems to indicate that much effort has been wasted hitherto in attempts to produce the perfect ‘ movie ’ artist. “ ‘ Chaug/ as a spectacle and as a drama, lacks nothing that may be found in the most stupendous superfilm. There is one almost unbelievably vivid ‘ shot ’ ,of a tiger drinking; others of bears at play, of pythons gliding through the jungle growth, of leopards seeking prey, and a tremendous spectacle of a huge herd of elephants bent upon ruthless destruction. And behind it all is the ever-present menace of the wild, of man’s grim and never-ceasing struggle with the unconquerable jungle, of his cunning and resource pitted against blind ferocity and the will of all wild tilings to live and to increase.

“As such, ‘Chang’ is an epic story of man’s struggle with the primitive. Having once been told, it can hardly be repeated; but, knowing the moving picture mind, one may look for an early outcrop of imitations, faked and otherwise.”

‘ Chang ’ has already been released in Melbourne, and will be seen in New Zealand and in every State of Australia during the present year.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19280414.2.127

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 19841, 14 April 1928, Page 18

Word Count
548

TRIBUTE TO 'CHANG' Evening Star, Issue 19841, 14 April 1928, Page 18

TRIBUTE TO 'CHANG' Evening Star, Issue 19841, 14 April 1928, Page 18