Chaplin and Fascism
Chaplin and Fascism
In the second decade of the twentieth century, a man named Charlie Chaplin achieved world fame through cinema. He did so even before the cinema had come of age. Chaplins contribution to the development of cinema was nothing short of enormous. The time in which Chaplins career was flourishing, was also a time when the world was experiencing many problems. Chaplins personal beliefs, in combination with the events happening in the world at the time, were a driving force in what message one of his later films carried.
Many historians note the similarity of Chaplin to Hitler. One of the most apparent facts is that they were both born within four days of each other in the year 1889. Furthermore, the two men bore a resemblance as adults, and a demand for “strict control over their subordinates when, as adults, they achieved positions of power.” (Maland, 164) In the 1940s, Chaplin chose to make a film entitled The Great Dictator, in which he played a Jewish ghetto resident under the regime of Adenoid Hynkel (also played by Chaplin). The similarity of Hynkel to Adolf Hitler wasnt exactly a coincidence. Being Chaplins first sound film