• Home
  • Blog
  • Incoming Courses
  • Print Calendar
  • Web Page
  • Social media
    • facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • youtube
  • Procedimientos y Reglamentos
  • Cursos
    Any question?
    33 3825 5838
    [email protected]
    Login
    culturalenlinea.comculturalenlinea.com
    • Home
    • Blog
    • Incoming Courses
    • Print Calendar
    • Web Page
    • Social media
      • facebook
      • Twitter
      • Instagram
      • youtube
    • Procedimientos y Reglamentos
    • Cursos

      Reading of the Day

      • Home
      • Blog
      • Reading of the Day
      • Why Do We Say ‘Cut to the Chase’?

      Why Do We Say ‘Cut to the Chase’?

      • Posted by Gustavo Cruz
      • Date March 31, 2021

      By Ellen Gutoskey │Mental Floss│3 min

      View Original

      Halfway through a meeting that so far has been full of nothing but useless chit-chat and vague ideas, you’re wishing people would get to the point—or, in other words, that they’d cut to the chase.

      Much like getting on a soapbox or pushing the envelope, cutting to the chase used to be a literal action. When silent films became popular in the early 20th century, filmmakers couldn’t rely on dialogue—jokes, arguments, emotional declarations, criminal confessions, etc.—to keep viewers engaged. Instead, they got creative with physical comedy and action sequences, which often took the form of chase scenes.

      While many chases featured cars, bicycles, or just people running for their lives, they weren’t quite as formulaic as you might be picturing. Stars like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton were masters of making their chases both surprising and funny. In 1922’s Cops, for example, Keaton ends up sitting on a ladder seesawed over a fence, while police officers on either end try to pull it down.

      In Chaplin’s 1928 film The Circus, a policeman follows him right into a circus ring, where the audience watches them run circles around each other on a rotating platform.

      Since moviegoers loved to watch an outlaw on the run, chase scenes outlived the silent film era, and “cut to the chase” was common advice for filmmakers who needed to keep their movies from losing momentum.

      “When they want to break it up a bit, the formula always is ‘cut to the chase,’” reporter Edwin C. Hill wrote in a 1939 article about the rising popularity of westerns. “There is, of course always a chase on, and it is a simple expedient to cut back to it when they think suspense has to be whipped up a bit.” Screenwriter Helen Deutsch, who penned classics like The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964) and Valley of the Dolls (1967), even had a sign in her MGM office that read “When in doubt, cut to the chase.”

      By the mid-20th century, cutting to the chase had already started to take on its modern meaning. Variety journalist Frank Scully mentioned it in his 1955 memoir Cross My Heart in reference to helping his Norwegian assistant learn English. “In teaching her, instead of going all the way back to Chaucer, I ‘cut to the chase’ and tutored her from copies of Variety,” he wrote.

      Though the phrase is most often used figuratively these days, literal chase scenes have yet to become obsolete—and judging by the ongoing success of the Fast & Furious franchise, that won’t happen anytime soon.

      Have you got a Big Question you’d like us to answer? If so, let us know by emailing us at [email protected].

      • Share:
      Admin bar avatar
      Gustavo Cruz

      Previous post

      What a Songbird Lost at Sea Taught Me About Survival
      March 31, 2021

      Next post

      150 Years Ago, a Philosopher Showed Why It’s Pointless to Start Arguments on the Internet
      April 1, 2021

      You may also like

      William Shakespeare
      Poem vs. Sonnet: What’s the Difference?
      27 May, 2023
      Technology
      Always Do This Before Letting Someone Borrow Your Phone
      18 June, 2022
      HEALTH
      Important reasons why you should be drinking lemon water every morning
      17 June, 2022

      Upcoming Courses

      Sep
      16
      -
      Sep
      16
      16 de Septiembre
      16 de Septiembre
      Instituto Cultural Mexicano Norteamericano de Jalisco A.C.

      Event

      Holiday September 16 No Class...

      Time of Event

      Start

      Sep 16, 2024

      End

      Sep 16, 2024

      Organizer

      Academic Department

      3338255838 ext. 113

      Venue

      Instituto Cultural Mexicano Norteamericano de Jalisco A.C.
      Av Enrique Díaz de León Sur 300 Guadalajara , Jalisco 44160 Mexico
      Instituto Cultural Mexicano Norteamericano de Jalisco A.C.
      • Privacy
      • Terms
      • Sitemap
      icmn_logotipo
      33 3825 5838
       
      [email protected]

      Like Us On Facebook

      facebook_face1

      Nuestros maestros

      es el activo mas valioso!

      Our Courses

      ICMNJ by https://culturalenlinea.com/ Powered by WordPress.

      Login with your site account

      Lost your password?