Dictator Adenoid Hynkel tries to expand his empire while a poor Jewish barber tries to avoid persecution from Hynkel's regime.
Director: Charles Chaplin
Writer: Charles Chaplin
Stars: Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Jack Oakie
Director: Charles Chaplin
Writer: Charles Chaplin
Stars: Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Jack Oakie
Storyline
Twenty years after the end of WWI in which the nation of Tomainia was on
the losing side, Adenoid Hynkel has risen to power as the ruthless
dictator of the country. He believes in a pure Aryan state, and the
decimation of the Jews. This situation is unknown to a simple
Jewish-Tomainian barber who has since been hospitalized the result of a
WWI battle. Upon his release, the barber, who had been suffering from
memory loss about the war, is shown the new persecuted life of the Jews
by many living in the Jewish ghetto, including a washerwoman named
Hannah, with whom he begins a relationship. The barber is ultimately
spared such persecution by Commander Schultz, who he saved in that WWI
battle. The lives of all Jews in Tomainia are eventually spared with a
policy shift by Hynkel himself, who is doing so for ulterior motives.
But those motives include a want for world domination, starting with the
invasion of neighboring Osterlich, which may be threatened by Benzino
Napaloni, the dictator ... Written by
Huggo
User Reviews
A film of its time, without a modern equal
This film entered
production before WW2 began, but was not released until it was well
under way. With significant fascist-sympathy in the US, and Chaplin
himself being suspected as a communist sympathiser, The Great Dictator
was a very courageous endeavour. Such risks in film-making - thinly
veiled political statements - would be almost inconceivable today.
Imagine the fallout if someone were to make an equally satirical film
today which criticised the USA's foreign policy?
This film is hilarious, poignant and tragic. The tragedy is that Chaplin makes a plea for the madness to end, but it is already to late - for him and for us. A must see if you have any interest whatsoever in history, film-making, politics or sattire as an art-form.
This film is hilarious, poignant and tragic. The tragedy is that Chaplin makes a plea for the madness to end, but it is already to late - for him and for us. A must see if you have any interest whatsoever in history, film-making, politics or sattire as an art-form.
