Despite its long and difficult production history, in 1967 Charlie Chaplin told an interviewer, "I think I like City Lights the best of all my films."
Aesthetically, technologically, and culturally, City Lights is a key transitional film in Chaplin's body of work, as the director/writer/actor responded for the first time to sound films
and stepped in the direction of the social commentary that would become more overt in Modern Times (1936) and The Great Dictator (1940). Based on extensive archival research of
Chaplin's production records, Charles Maland's City Lights offers a careful history of the film's production and reception, as well as a close examination of the film itself, with
special attention to the sources of the final scene's emotional power.