Charlie Chaplin's "The Circus" (1928) No Further a Mystery
The Buster Keaton character has his ft on the ground. He could well be ashamed to parade his goodness. He makes use of ingenuity instead of divinity. Chaplin’s untidy like daily life implies he felt he deserved whomever he required; Keaton in personal life appears to have already been melancholic because of alcoholism, but an honest adequate form