City Lights photograph

City Lights

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Release date Turkey
Directors Charlie Chaplin
Featured song La Violetera
Casting director Al Ernest Garcia
Composers Charlie Chaplin
José Padilla
Alfred Newman
Arthur Johnston
A truly charming, heart‑warming, and ecstatic film, full of sincerity and hope where love truly dares to spread its wings. . . .
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Date of Upd.
ID1015971
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About City Lights


A hapless but resilient tramp (Charlie Chaplin) falls in love with a blind flower girl (Virginia Cherrill) on the tough city streets. Upon learning that she and her grandmother are to be evicted from their home, the tramp undertakes a series of attempts to provide them with the money they need, all of which end in humiliating failure. But after a drunken millionaire (Harry Myers) lavishly rewards him for saving his life, the tramp can change the flower girl's life forever.

Five planets to line up in night sky

May 1,2022 3:10 am

By Maddie MolloyBBC News Climate & Science

Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Uranus, Mars, and the Moon will align in an arc across the evening sky on Monday, with some visible to the Naked Eye .

This is often called " a planetary parade" and will be visible after sunset in The West .

A good view of the horizon and Clear Skies will offer The Best chance of spotting the alignment.

Last Summer Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn came together.

" To the Naked Eye , even from a Bright City , Jupiter, Venus, the Moon, and Mars should be easily visible. Uranus should be visible with a medium-sized telescope, and Mercury is that added challenge for the very determined, " said astronomer Jake Foster from Royal Observatory Greenwich.

He Said that such alignments were very particular to our perspective from Earth.

" The Planets aren't aligned right now, they are all spread out across the Solar System but just from our perspective, every once in a while they get close enough to each other in the sky that we're able to see quite a few at once, " He Said .

Give yourself the Best Shot at spotting them by getting away from any Bright City lights as The Sun is Going Down . Go somewhere with a clear, unobstructed view. You need to be observing early in the evening because Mercury and Jupiter will quickly disappear over the horizon.

The easiest way to know whether you're looking at planets or stars is by looking at what type of light they are emitting.

" Stars twinkle but planets don't. So if you are are seeing a bright light that is steady and not flickering or twinkling and not blinking - because that might be a Plane - Then you are almost certainly looking at one of those planets, " said Mr Foster.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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