CharÂlie ChapÂlin came up in vaudeÂville, but it was silent film that made him the most famous man in the world. His masÂtery of that form primed him to feel a degree of skepÂtiÂcism about sound when it came along: in 1931, he called the silent picÂture “a uniÂverÂsal means of expresÂsion,” whereÂas the talkies, as they were then known, “necÂesÂsarÂiÂly have a limÂitÂed field.” NevÂerÂtheÂless, he was too astute a readÂer of pubÂlic tastes to believe he could stay silent forÂevÂer, though he only began to speak onscreen on his own terms — litÂerÂalÂly, in the case of ModÂern Times. In that celÂeÂbratÂed film, his iconÂic charÂacÂter the Tramp sings a song, but does so in an uninÂtelÂliÂgiÂble hash of cod French and ItalÂian, and yet still someÂhow gets his meanÂing across, just as he had in all his silent movies before.
That scene appears in the CinÂeÂmaSÂtix video essay above on “the moment the most famous silent comeÂdiÂan opens his mouth,” which comes not in ModÂern Times but The Great DicÂtaÂtor, ChapÂlin’s 1940 send-up of the then-ascenÂdant Adolf Hitler. In it, ChapÂlin plays two roles: the narÂrow-musÂtaÂchioed Hitler parÂoÂdy AdeÂnoid Hynkel who “speaks” in a tonalÂly and rhythÂmiÂcalÂly conÂvincÂing ersatz GerÂman, and a Tramp-like JewÂish BarÂber interned by Hynkel’s regime whose only lines come at the film’s very end.
Dressed as the dicÂtaÂtor in order to escape the camp, the BarÂber sudÂdenÂly finds himÂself givÂing a speech at a vicÂtoÂry parade. When he speaks, he famousÂly does so in ChapÂlin’s natÂurÂal voice, expressÂing senÂtiÂments that sound like ChapÂlin’s own: inveighÂing against “machine men with machine minds,” makÂing a plea for libÂerÂty, brothÂerÂhood, and goodÂwill toward men.
Though it may have been ChapÂlin’s biggest box-office hit, The Great DicÂtaÂtor isn’t his most critÂiÂcalÂly acclaimed picÂture. When it was made, the UnitÂed States had yet to enter the war, and the full nature of what the Nazis were doing in Europe hadÂn’t yet come to light. This film’s relaÂtionÂship with actuÂal hisÂtorÂiÂcal events thus feels uneasy, as if ChapÂlin himÂself wasÂn’t sure how light or heavy a tone to strike. Even his cliÂmacÂtic speech was only creÂatÂed as a replaceÂment for an intendÂed final dance sequence, though he did work at it, writÂing and revisÂing over a periÂod of months. It’s more than a litÂtle ironÂic that The Great DicÂtaÂtor is mainÂly rememÂbered for a scene in which a comÂic genius to whom words were nothÂing as against image and moveÂment forÂgoes all the techÂniques that made him a star — and indeed, forÂgoes comÂeÂdy itself.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
DisÂcovÂer the CinÂeÂmatÂic & Comedic Genius of CharÂlie ChapÂlin with 60+ Free Movies Online
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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