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The
Great Dictator (1940)
In director/actor Charlie Chaplin's controversial political
(anti-war) slapstick comedy satire on world conditions and fascism
at the start of World War II (it was Chaplin's first all-talking
feature film), the lampooning of Adolf Hitler (in the role of Adenoid
Hynkel) and The Third Reich - it was Chaplin's last film with the
Little Tramp character:
- the scene of unnamed Jewish ghetto barber (Charlie
Chaplin), actually an amnesiac soldier from WWI (who spent two
decades in a military hospital) who returned to his anti-Semite
police-state (Tomainia) with storm-troopers (functioning under
a symbol of a "Double Cross"), and was seen shaving a
customer in his barber shop, in time to a radio broadcast of Brahms' Hungarian
Dance No. 5
- the early caricatured scene of an exaggerated nonsense
speech, delivered in mock-German by egomaniacal Hitler look-alike,
the tyrannical Tomainian dictator Adenoid Hynkel (also Charlie Chaplin)
with wild gestures; his confused double-talk and gutteral words were
translated briefly by an overly-concise English-speaking news voice-over
when he finished ("His Excellency has just referred to the Jewish
people")
- the comically-tense scene in which Commander Schultz
(Reginald Gardiner) instructed five Jewish locals (one of whom was
the barber) to be part of a sacrificial lottery selection process
- to pick an assassin to eliminate the fascist Adenoid Hynkel; the
individual who found a coin in one of five small pudding cakes would
face a suicide mission; the barber painfully consumed three coins
(only to hiccup them out at the last moment, like winnings spit out
from a slot machine); the joke was that all of the cakes contained
a coin and the participants kept trying to secretly pass the coins
off to the others
- the comedic scene of Hitler-like Adenoid Hynkel and
Mussolini-like Benzino Napaloni (Jack Oakie) of Bacteria, seated
adjacent to each other in adjustable barber's chairs as they competed
to be higher in their adjacent chairs
- the sublime mock ballet sequence of Herr Hynkel uniformed
in his Hitler-like outfit in his imperial palace office - an "emperor
of the world" ballet/dance performance with a giant, balloon-like
floating globe of the world; it was a visual, satirical metaphor
of the world he hoped to dominate; at the end of the dance, as he
held out the conquered world, it suddenly exploded in front of his
face - he picked up the tattered rubber rag - all that was left of
his world; distressed, he whirled around, put his head on his desk,
and with his back to the camera, he burst into tears
Hynkel Dancing With World Globe Balloon
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- in the film's infamous closing, the "Look up,
Hannah" anti-fascist, pro-democracy speech about hope and
human rights made by the Jewish barber, fakely impersonating Hynkel;
the speech was heard around the world on the radio and by now-persecuted
refugee Hannah (Paulette Goddard), the barber's Jewess-laundress
neighbor, and by her adoptive family; the passionate speech was
delivered to confront the imminent threat to world civilization
from Nazi dictatorship, and to plead for human brotherhood: ("Hannah,
can you hear me? Wherever you are, look up, Hannah! The clouds
are lifting! The sun is breaking through! We are coming out of
the darkness into the light! We are coming into a new world, a
kindlier world, where men will rise above their hate, their greed
and brutality. Look up, Hannah! The soul of man has been given
wings and at last he is beginning to fly. He is flying into the
rainbow! Into the light of hope! Into the future, the glorious
future that belongs to you, to me, and to all of us. Look up, Hannah!
Look up!"); the sequence ended with Hannah in a silhouetted
side shot, looking up heavenward
"Look up, Hannah" Final Speech
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Jewish Barber Shaving Customer
Adenoid Hynkel's Mock-German Speech
Coins in Pudding Cake Scene
Dueling Barber Chairs Between Hynkel and Napaloni
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