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Charlie Chaplin’s Look Up Hannah

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Presentation on theme: "Charlie Chaplin’s Look Up Hannah"— Presentation transcript:

1 Charlie Chaplin’s Look Up Hannah
Presented by: Amy Smith, Emily Brown, Lia Gosso

2 Contents Background information Plot About Charlie Purpose Audience
Structure Rhetorical devices Language Tone and Voice

3 Background Movie/speech Information
American political satire comedy drama 1940 Political speech Germany and Osterlich

4 Plot Dictators( Hynekels ) doppelganger
Hynkel orders a purge of the Jews Barber escapes from care-home many years later to go back to the ghetto with his girlfriend named Hannah Stormtroopers search the ghetto, arresting the barber, and Hannah, with her family escape to Osterlich and they become farm laborers. After a failed attempt to ally with Napaloni (Mussolini), Hynkel invades Osterlich. The family is now under Hynekels control Jewish barber escapes from camp by wearing stolen uniforms. They arrive at the Osterlich border while a parade is waiting for Hynekel to talk. Hynekel was duck hunting in regular clothes and is mistaken for the jewish barber, and arrested. The Jewish barber, forced onto the stage presented as Hynekel, delivers the famous speech

5 About Charlie Main character Jewish Barber Dictator’s twin
Girlfriend Hannah

6 About the speech Communism to democracy
Everyone is allowed their own opinion Do not let people control you Speech of hope and encouragement

7 Purpose To change Germany from communism to democracy
To inform people about the way they should be living To inform people that dictatorship is not the right way to live

8 Audience Movie= German people and soldiers
Contextually=directed to people and the government as a whole

9 Structure 1. Introducing himself (I don’t want to rule)
2. Describing Utopia (the way of life can be free and beautiful) 3. Introducing the problem (we think to much and feel to little) 4. What we could do (Soldiers- don’t give yourself to brutes) 5. Encourages them ( you the people have the power) 6. Gives hope (We are coming into a new world)

10 Rhetorical Devices Imagery Anaphora(look up) Symbolism Alliteration
Personification

11 Language Simple Easy to understand Honest From the heart

12 Tone and Voice Starts off soft and quiet Gradually becomes… Faster
Stronger Louder More body movement

13 Works Cited Wikipedia, “The Great Dictator”, 13 April 2016, Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.,


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