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Home > The Great Dictator


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The Great Dictator is a film directed by and starring Charlie Chaplin. The film, first released in October 15, 1940, is a satire on fascism and in particular Adolf Hitler and Nazism.

1 Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.

We first see a rather clumsy soldier in the field, trying to help his fellow soldiers in battle, but he seems to be too friendly and nice to be suited for the battlefields of his country, Tomania. Soon, he ends up helping a wounded pilot into flying away to safety from an attack, leading to a humorous routine where the plane is upside down and the obliviousness of the wounded Commander Schultz. The plane finally crashes, leading Schultz to escape from the wreckage, but the unnamed soldier is left wounded.

Later, we discover Adenoid Hynkel (who looks surprisingly like the soldier), the dictator of Tomania, is in power. Schultz is one of Hynkel's right hand men, and initially supports Hynkel's policies of persecuting the Jews in the ghettos, by means of harassment by the stormtroopers.

Meanwhile, Hannah, a Jew in the ghetto of Tomania, tries her best on her own to stand up to the harassment of the stormtroopers who intimidate her family, and a fellow shopkeeper. We learn now that the soldier previously is in fact a poor Jewish barber, and that he has been in the hospital and suffering from amnesia. He returns to his shop, unaware of the changes and of the harassment that goes on, and begins to resist unintentionally, which inspires Hannah. This however causes the other stormtroopers to take notice, who arrive at the scene -- with Schultz.

Schultz recognizes the barber ("Pity, I always thought you were an Aryan", Schultz tells him), and decrees to the other stormtroopers to leave the people in the block with Hannah and the barber alone.

Meanwhile, Hynkel is getting ideas about taking over the world, from one of his advisors, Garbitsch. Hynkel clearly becomes infatuated with the idea, and one famous scene from the movie involves Chaplin, as the dictator, bouncing an inflatable globe dreamily, almost in a romantic manner, about the room, as the prelude to Act 1 of Wagner's Lohengrin plays. Hynkel grabs for the globe and it bursts, and he, in an almost melodromatic manner, falls over his desk in tears.

Hynkel is advised by Garbitsch that the first step in his plan is to invade free Osterlich, however the nearby country of Bacteria has troops on the border of the country. Hynkel invites the leader of Bacteria, Benzino Napaloni to Tomania in order to discuss the matter. Napaloni, however, is quite boisterous compared to the relatively cool-headed Hynkel, and we see how Hynkel tries to out-psych Napaloni, including a ridiculously low chair as organized by Garbitsch.

Later, Hynkel and Napaloni are in a private room with a buffet, with Napaloni proposing a written document that says that the Bacterian forces will retreat from the border if Hynkel signs, which leads to an argument whether Bacteria will follow through if Hynkel signs, that leads to a foodfight. Garbitsch advises Hynkel to sign anyway, and that Tomania will take Osterlich whether Napaloni's forces are there or not.

Hynkel however needs funds to take Osterlich and aims to settle a deal with a Jewish firm. Hynkel relaxes the anti-Semitic policy in order to aid the cogwheels of the deal, however the deal fails, and Hynkel again reinforces the policy. Schultz, then, informs Hynkel that his plans are "idiotic", since it "rests on the persecution of innocent people". Hynkel decrees Schultz a traitor, and he goes in hiding with the barber and the families living in the featured block of the ghetto.

A raid however occurs, aiming to find Schultz. The barber and he try to escape, but are captured and sent to a concentration camp. The barber gets letters from Hannah, who has escaped over the border to Osterlich with her family. Schultz and the barber escape from the camp in uniforms of the Double Cross (Hynkel's party) and begin to walk confidently toward the border. The alarm is raised.

Meanwhile, Garbitsch has planned for Hynkel to go hunting near the Osterlich border, then meet the Tomanian troops once they have cleared the way into the Osterlich capital. But stormtroopers, mistaking Hynkel for the barber, capture him instead.

While this is going on, the Thomanians take Osterlich, and stormtroopers raid Hannah's home. Schultz and the barber walk toward the Osterlich border and are met by Tomanian soldiers, who think the barber is Hynkel. Schultz and the barber are taken by car to a the Osterlich capital, where a gargantuan platform waits for Hynkel to make his victory speech.

Garbitsch precedes him, decrying the principles of free speech and others, declaring them as being old and causing too much trouble. Then, in an abrupt change of tone, the barber (who they think is Hynkel) instead pleads for freedom and democracy, saying that the power of any government should derive from its people.

Hannah lies on the ground outside her home, despairing after the invasion. Then, she hears on the radio the barber's speech. He addresses her directly: "Hannah, can you hear me? Lift up your head, a new day is dawning, the clouds are breaking", to which she does, and the film concludes.



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