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Great Dictator
 
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Great Dictator

Starring: Charles Chaplin, Henry Bergman Director: Charles Chaplin
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)

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4 new from CDN$ 74.99 1 used from CDN$ 74.08

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Great Dictator
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Great Dictator 4.8 out of 5 stars (36)
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Product Details


Product Description

Additional Features

Kevin Brownlow and Michael Kloft's absorbing documentary, "The Tramp and the Dictator," backgrounds Chaplin and Hitler (who were born a few days apart) and gives a detailed account of The Great Dictator's production. Twenty-five minutes of color footage, shot by Chaplin's brother Sydney on the set, provides a fascinating look behind the scenes. --Robert Horton


Amazon.com Essential Video

Since Adolf Hitler had the audacity to borrow his mustache from the most famous celebrity in the world--Charlie Chaplin--it meant Hitler was fair game for Chaplin's comedy. (Strangely, the two men were born within four days of each other.) The Great Dictator, conceived in the late thirties but not released until 1940, when Hitler's war was raging across Europe, is the film that skewered the tyrant. Chaplin plays both Adenoid Hynkel, the power-mad ruler of Tomania, and a humble Jewish barber suffering under the dictator's rule. Paulette Goddard, Chaplin's wife at the time, plays the barber's beloved; and the rotund comedian Jack Oakie turns in a weirdly accurate burlesque of Mussolini, as a bellowing fellow dictator named Benzino Napaloni, Dictator of Bacteria. Chaplin himself hits one of his highest moments in the amazing sequence where he performs a dance of love with a large inflated globe of the world. Never has the hunger for world domination been more rhapsodically expressed. The slapstick is swift and sharp, but it was not enough for Chaplin. He ends the film with the barber's six-minute speech calling for peace and prophesying a hopeful future for troubled mankind. Some critics have always felt the monologue was out of place, but the lyricism and sheer humanity of it are still stirring. This was the last appearance of Chaplin's Little Tramp character, and not coincidentally it was his first all-talking picture. --Robert Horton

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Customer Reviews

36 Reviews
5 star:
 (31)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (36 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Love Charles Chaplin, Sep 23 2007
I love this movie, I've watched it so many times, and still laugh. Charlie Chaplin was/is a brillient film maker, and very clever, and a amazing comedian. Love all his pictures. I'm a Chaplin groupie. Whatch the movie and have a good chuckle.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Look up Hanna, Feb 5 2005
By bernie "xyzzy" (Arlington, Texas) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
"The soul of man has been given wings"

This movie is hyped up causing some sort of frenzy; someone calls it a classic or likes the thought that someone is mocked and the next person repeats it until everyone gives this less than mediocre film a positive spin when viewing it.

This is Chaplin way past his prime still tying to be a Keystone Cop and using mundane slapstick humor years after the film industry became more sophisticated. From the first scene you ask "This is a five star movie?" and it goes down hill from there. The sets are cardboard and the camera is still pretty much still.

If you like film that mock the era a much better production was rendered by Jack Benny and Carole Lombard in "To Be or Not to Be" (1942).

The basic story is of a dictator and a barber "that is not all there" getting their Identities crossed. Chaplin gets to play both parts. The only redeeming value of the movie is the acting of Henry Daniell who played Garbitsch. Then again he is a veteran actor and can be seen in over 60 films including "Sherlock Holmes and the Woman in Green" as Prof. Moriarty.

All the people are over exaggerated stereotypes (maybe on purpose) and this distracts from the story like having a musical with songs not related to the movie.

If you can make it to the end of the film you get a long tedious speech in the style of Ayn Rand however not quite as good. "The sun shines and the wind blows."

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5.0 out of 5 stars Serio-comic masterpiece---Hitler saw this one twice!, Jun 28 2004
By Curt Surly (Bellingham, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This film is an excellent piece of anti-axis propaganda in the guise of a hilarious satire of totalitarianism. Chaplin portays two characters who's resemblance to one another is merely coincidental. One is a Adenoid Hynkel, dictator of Tomania with a jewish name, the other a Jewish barber with impeccable instincts for sussing out trouble. Overall, "The Great Dictator" attempts to demonstrate the idiocy of war. By turning the key players into buffoons, it portays the war machine as a circus. This film is much more than a lampoon of the Nazis, however. The silliest characature of all is of Benito Mussolini. Jack Oakie's portrayal of the Dictator of Bacteria, Benzino Napaloni, is the highlight of the film. He's like a stereotype of one of those "larger-than-life" tourists who bluster with absolute authority wherever he goes. It is really hard not to picture him in the loudest hawaiian shirt know to man. It is really obscenely funny. The interaction between the two dictators provides the most sustained lunacy in the film. Their attempts to one-up one another are just brilliant.

"The Great Dictator" does have an extremely serious side. There is an attempt to portray the plight of the displaced Jews with care and much pathos. It works, more or less. The Jewish Ghetto is given enough attention that the viewer develops a connection with them as they attempt to get on with their lives. Maurice Moscovitch as Mr. Jaeckel is particularly effective. Paulette Goddard plays Hannah as a rather dim, dreamy stumblebum. She's cute, but occasionally annoying. Sometimes, it feels like Chaplin has transported Hannah back to the Wizard of Oz--she speaks in that same half-whimpering, dreamy manner as Judy Garland's Dorothy.

Finally, this film certainly transcends any single political agenda. The only agenda one can associate with it is the aim to bring laughter to a world torn asunder by the vagaries of milatary posturings. It seems telling (to me, at least), that Adolf Hitler viewed this film twice. I have always been curious as to what his thoughts were on this total classic send-up of the great men of the Blood-Axis in their own time. Perhaps by the end of the first viewing, he perceived that Mussolini got the worst of it. Then he watched it again--this time with pleasure. If you can't laugh at yourself...

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Relevant for Any Age
DVD is the perfect medium for many of Chaplin's films. He demanded a lot from his audience. Each film carries it's own message. Read more
Published on Jun 13 2004 by Brian J Hay

5.0 out of 5 stars The genius of Chaplin.
One look at Charlie Chaplin's filmography leaves little doubt as to his genius. I have to say that I thoroughly enjoy all his films, even the more obscure ones that weren't... Read more
Published on April 4 2004 by D. Knouse

3.0 out of 5 stars works only part of the time
This film does contain flashes of Chaplin's confirmed comic genius, but often gets bogged down in overt political moralizing. Read more
Published on Mar 1 2004 by Eduardo Nietzsche

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the reasons I love Charlie...
Say what you like about this film: it's too preachy, it's not focused, it's this, it's that, say whatever you like.

The facts, however, say it all. Read more

Published on Jan 18 2004 by C. Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars Mistaken Identity Comedy Pushes Historical Issue
Charles Chaplin knew how to push injustices into the light of the world before the majority were prepared to deal with such issues. Read more
Published on Jan 11 2004 by Kim Anehall

5.0 out of 5 stars Stongly Agree With Favorable Reviews
After just watching this picture I feel that this would have to be 5 STARS+. This movie was ahead of it's time in humor. Read more
Published on Dec 20 2003 by A. Valdes

5.0 out of 5 stars Chaplin's Classic
i dont usually write reviews, but i was browsing through and saw that "The Great Dictator" had 5 stars on the overall review, so i felt obligated to keep it up with the... Read more
Published on Oct 7 2003 by B. Hauck

4.0 out of 5 stars ...
I've seen few movies made before 1960 and fewer silent movies (just Haaxan, Nosferatu (because Shadow of the Vampire and the Herzog remake) and Man With the Movie Camera (because... Read more
Published on Sep 24 2003 by fat_runner

5.0 out of 5 stars Momentous, one-of-a-kind, inspired brilliance
Here, Charlie Chaplin accomplishes the impossible, by juxtaposing comedy next to horrible tragedy, and having it all work because his positive motivation and wit package the... Read more
Published on Sep 1 2003 by paul_howard

5.0 out of 5 stars Watch and marvel, watch and hear
So many others have written great reviews. What more can I add? I had wanted to see and own this film for a time, purchased it the day it became available, as did the guy next to... Read more
Published on Aug 6 2003 by Annie Kamp

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