I said to myself
a hundred times that people should watch movies without knowing anything. Most
of them have an excellent ploy and I’m so sure that they’d like surprising
themselves. It’s an amazing feeling as your jaw drops down in surprise or how
you're holding your breath or when you feel your eyes dry because you almost
didn’t blink.
I thought of
that the first time I read Dracula, I thought: “My word! People
shouldn’t ever have known anything, absolutely anything, about this book. It’s
fantastic the way you’re finding out everything” Obviously I knew almost
everything about Dracula, but it doesn’t matter, I was astonished and I’d like
that it could be ever like this with everything, but I know that it’s almost
impossible. Almost…. It depends on you.
In this case, I
don’t remember whether I knew anything about the story of The Wizard of Oz or
not before I watched it, but that important change after the cyclone… when
Dorothy opens the door… I hope people at that time could find themselves
surprised.
The first we
know is that L. Frank Baum didn’t design anything new. Alice in Wonderland in
1865 knew the light before and that parallelism between reality and the
fantastic word wasn’t anything new. However, Frank showed us another word and
another way to find it, of course, with new characters and a very new story. I
could tell you a hundred things about this movie, but I’ll let you search those
things here where
you’re going to know the secrets about how they created so many things without
digital effects that they’re going to blow your mind. I admire those ages when
people used to be creative and think and think of how to put in reality those
things that are fantastic.
It’s easier to
write a book and imagine whatever you want than film a movie. You don’t need
any pc computer to create any fantastic creature or world or unreal situation.
You just write it down and that’s all. Can you imagine how to “draw” horses of
different colours? Or maybe how could they write a line in the sky? How dare
they create a twister? Well, they had
to think a lot and practice it later and film faster before anything could
happen.
I know that I'm
not talking about those details that all of you already know, that's why I
wanted to comment on other important things about the movie, things that not
everybody might know, although, as I told you before, in this page of imdb you’ll
find more and more things about the movie, I am already very amazed about the
things I was reading here of rich details, curiosities, short stories… if you
like the movie, you have to read this.
Judy Garland was
sixteen years old and represented a younger character, but I think she did
superb like the rest of all of them. It’s a movie for children and if you’re
asking yourself if they cut the book… yes an adaptation isn’t like its original
and in this case, if you read the book will find yourself things that on-screen
wouldn’t be “pretty” for the children. Maybe, the magic of reading dwells on it
is easier to feel less fear than watch the image, I don’t know...
In any case,
contrary to popular belief, the film was a failure on its initial release, yes,
believe it or not and Rick Polito, a journalist of the “Marin Independent
Journal” wrote about the movie this: “Transported to a surreal landscape, a
young girl kills the first person she meets and then teams up with three
strangers to kill again." ."
Well, it isn’t very pretty but The Wizard of Oz was reissued in 1949
(ten years later) and made more money and the critics changed radically. What
it hadn’t liked before, now people adored and if you are one of those who think The Wizard of Oz has aged badly, think twice before comparing a movie from
1939 to any other from our age, because people thought about this movie this: “The
whimsical gaiety, the lighthearted song and dance, the lavish Hollywood sets
and costumes are as fresh and beguiling today as they were ten years ago when
the picture was first released. Oldsters over ten who have seen it once will
want to see it again." Simply, don’t
compare it. It was what it was and of course, none another movie could be
similar.
The Wizard of Oz
shall like you or not, but the truth is that The Wizard of Oz cannot live under
the earth just because you may think it’s a bad oldie because people talked
and talk today and it’s an authentic symbol today for too many things, even
people quoted its lines on and on:
"Fly, my
pretties, fly"
"I'll
get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too!"
"Toto, I've
got a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore"
"There's
no place like home."
“Scarecrow: I
haven't got a brain... only straw.
Dorothy: How can you talk if you haven't got a brain?
Scarecrow: I don't know... But some people without brains do an awful lot of
talking... don't they?
Dorothy: Yes, I guess you're right.”
(This is my favourite)
Its message is splendid, The Wizard of Oz talks about friendship, determination, that we don’t know anything and have to learn every day, finding out what we have inside. For instance, those ironic situations of the Scarecrow talking all the time that he needs a brain to have good ideas (the same with rest of the team) but he proves herself throughout the film that he had already good ideas and other things, but he didn’t know, like the rest of the team.
It is, no doubt, good entertainment for each child. They will have fun and sing its songs but as a good classic book that it is, it contains double readings by all means, and that means that adults can enjoy, this book, as well, maybe more than the movie owing to the fact that the movie took only a few fragments from the book. Then again, you don't know the whole story.
Be that as it may,
we all should value this movie and re-watch it from time to time. Why not? When
it was released on TV was number one every year jumping from channel to another for nearly 40 years,
people didn’t get tired of it. Too many scenes were cut in order to get much
better production and to have memorable, yes, memorable, you have to admit it,
lines, landscapes, characters.
The song "Over the Rainbow" was ranked #1 by the American Film Institute in 2004 (2004!! 65 years later) on the 100 Greatest Songs in American Films list.
Ranked #1 on the American Film Institute's list of the 10 greatest films in the genre "Fantasy" in June 2008 (69 years later).
And on top of that, in 1989, was
added to the National Film Registry by the United States Library of Congress. Are you thinking that it is a bad oldie, yet? Think twice.
The song "Over the Rainbow" was ranked #1 by the American Film Institute in 2004 (2004!! 65 years later) on the 100 Greatest Songs in American Films list.
Ranked #1 on the American Film Institute's list of the 10 greatest films in the genre "Fantasy" in June 2008 (69 years later).
Hello and thank you for writing such a great article! It has many interesting thoughts in it.
ReplyDeleteI would like to talk about what you said: spoilers. It's true that society reveals every spoiler from every movie as something normal. And it's a shame that many people aren't be able of enyoing some movies from scratch :(. But if you avoid Internet... you can elude 90% of the spoilers.
Yeah, this movie should be great back then in 1939, because the change from sepia to color had to be amazing. I can imagine it should even be a bigger shock than the 3D effect in Avatar! People were discovering the technological advances on cinema back then.
I agree with you: this movie is amazing. And it has a great production values. It's true that people nowadays are not appreciating the old effects and it's a pity. New movies have many digital effects and great sound, but they are not taking care of the little details (as the old movies did). I love the handmade backgrounds and practical effects. I miss that era very much. I'm very fond of puppets too, and I love old movies special effects. It's a shame that producers don't use this kind of effects anymore and they use computers and more computers for everything.
This movie has a lot of values and it makes us ponder about our inner strength. It's deeper than most of the recent movies. I hope many other people like you don't forget classic cinema in the future :).