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SYNOPSIS The Great Dictator |
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"This is the story of the period between two
world wars--an interim
during which insanity cut loose, liberty took a nose dive, and humanity
was kicked around somewhat." With this pithy opening title, Charles
Chaplin begins his first all-talking feature film, The Great Dictator.
During World War I, a Jewish barber (Chaplin) in the army of Tomania
saves the life of high-ranking officer Schultz (Reginald Gardiner).
While Schultz survives the conflict unscathed, the barber is stricken
with amnesia and bundled off to a hospital. Twenty years pass: Tomania
has been taken over by dictator Adenoid Hynkel (Chaplin again) and his
stooges Garbitsch (Henry Daniell) and Herring (Billy Gilbert). Hynkel
despises all Jews and regularly wreaks havoc on the Tomanian Jewish
ghetto, where feisty Hannah (Paulette Goddard) lives. Meanwhile, the
little barber escapes from the hospital and instinctively heads back to
his cobweb-laden ghetto barber shop. Unaware of Hynkel's policy towards
Jews (in fact, he's unaware of Hynkel), the barber gets into a
slapstick confrontation with a gang of Aryan storm troopers. He is
rescued by his old friend Schultz, now one of Hynkel's most loyal
officers. Thanks to Schultz's protection, the ghetto receives a brief
respite from Hynkel's persecution. The barber sets up shop again,
developing a warm platonic relationship with the lovely Hannah. But
things take a sorry turn when Hynkel, angered that a Jewish banker has
refused to finance his impending war with Austerlitz, begins bearing
down again on the Ghetto. Near the end of the film, when the dictator
is expected to make another one of his hate-filled, war-mongering
speeches, the barber steps up to the microphones...and Charles Chaplin
drops character and becomes "himself," delivering an impassioned plea
for peace, tolerance, and humanity. |