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Dough and Dynamite ()


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Charlie and another waiter must become bakers when the regular bakers go out on strike. The strikers put dynamite in a piece of bread which is delivered to the cake counter. It winds up in the oven and explodes.

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Pierre - A Waiter
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Jacques - A Waiter
Fritz Schade ...
Monsieur La Vie - Bakery Owner
Norma Nichols ...
Mme. La Vie - The Baker's Wife
Peggy Page ...
Waitress (as Miss Page)
Cecile Arnold ...
Waitress
Jess Dandy ...
Female Cook
Vivian Edwards ...
First Customer
Phyllis Allen ...
Second Customer
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Head Striking Baker
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
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Angry Customer (uncredited)
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Customer at Table (uncredited)
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Striking Baker (uncredited)
Ted Edwards ...
Striking Baker (uncredited)
Edwin Frazee ...
Striking Baker (uncredited)
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Kicking Customer (uncredited)
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Striking Baker (uncredited)

Directed by

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Charles Chaplin ... (uncredited)

Written by

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Charles Chaplin ... () (uncredited)
 
Mack Sennett ... ()

Produced by

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Mack Sennett ... producer

Cinematography by

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Frank D. Williams

Editing by

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Syd Chaplin ... (as Sidney Chaplin)
Charles Chaplin ... (uncredited)

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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Dan Albert ... assistant director (uncredited)

Production Companies

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Special Effects

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

The bakers in the employ of Monsieur La Vie go on strike. In the emergency Pierre and Jacques, the waiters, take possession of the kitchen, and as there is quite a bit of jealousy between them, on account of the female waitresses who smile impartially on both. It is not long before the dough is flying. Meanwhile, the strikers have conspired. They drill a hole in a loaf of bread and insert therein a stick of dynamite, cleverly replacing the piece of crust on the end of the loaf. Then they give it to a little girl, instructing her to carry it to the bakery and explaining that because the bread is too heavy her mother has sent it back. The wife of Monsieur La Vie returns the child's money and orders are given to the bakers to put the loaf back in the oven and bake it some more. They comply. The whole establishment is in a demoralized state. Customers in the café cannot get waited upon. The cook is in a towering temper. Pierre is clubbed on the head by the strikers, and goes about in a maudlin condition, getting himself and everybody else into all sorts of trouble. And then, the dynamited loaf explodes. The innocent victims are buried in splintered ovens, broken china an earthquake of pastry and bursting flour sacks, and huge mounds of dough heave fitfully where human hearts once throbbed. At the very end of the tragedy we see the yeasty mass churning and swelling, and then, out of the sticky lump, the unfortunate Pierre thrusts a gluey head. Written by Moving Picture World synopsis

Plot Keywords
Taglines The funniest picture ever shown on a screen. A scream from start to finish. (Print Ad- Hempstead Sentinel, ((Hempstead, NY)) 1 April 1915) See more »
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Parents Guide Add content advisory for parents »
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Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • The Cook (United States)
  • The Doughnut Designers (United States)
  • Charlot mitron (France)
  • Charlot, panadero (Spain)
  • Charlot, cocinero (Spain)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 33 min
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Did You Know?

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Trivia This film was one of several Charles Chaplin comedies scheduled to be shown at the New York Historical Society in September 2001. In the wake of the terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center, however, this film and one other, Work (1915), were pulled from the program because each ends with Charlie emerging from the rubble of a destroyed building. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in Charlie: The Life and Art of Charles Chaplin (2003). See more »
Quotes Title Card: The strikers plot revenge.
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