An improvement on the comedy of Easy Street but a film with much more of a slapstick nature, The Cure finds Charlie Chaplin playing
an inebriate who checks into a health spa in order to get sober. His huge suitcase
though is full to bursting with bottles of liquor which find their way into the
health spa’s well with disastrous consequences. Along the way Chaplin befriends
Edna Purviance after saving her from the clutches of the wicked Eric Campbell.
This is a short that is packed full of gags, some of which
are a little repetitive but many hit the nail on the head. It also features a
larger role for Chaplin regular John Rand who appears in most of Chaplin’s Mutual Films but usually just has a walk on role. In The Cure he has almost as much screen time as Campbell and
Purviance but doesn’t make as much of an impact on the film as Chaplin’s two
main collaborators. The story is tight but not wide reaching and is a lot more
basic than many of the films from the same period, but what it lacks in story
it makes up for with laughs. Chaplin’s dizziness following his turn in the
revolving door also gave him the same symptoms as he showed nearly twenty years
later in Modern Times when he ‘took’
cocaine. His walk and spinning was almost identical and equally amusing.