I’ve said it once and I’ll say it again even though I know it makes people mad when I say it, but in my personal opinion, nobody and I mean nobody no matter how good they are can ever compare to Judy when it comes to over the rainbow.
@colegensch7872 ай бұрын
@@Leamichellefan2244 i agree with you completely 😉👍
@EMAWnstrocity2 ай бұрын
@@Leamichellefan2244I do love Lady Gaga’s Oscar tribute to Judy Garland, definitely worth checking out
@redbeetle82 ай бұрын
You caught the fact that Frank Morgan played both Professor Marvel and the Wizard, but he also played the Emerald City doorman, the coachman, and the Wizard’s guard. Also, fun fact. The coat he wore as Professor Marvel was once owned by L Frank Baum who originally wrote the book. The costume department found it in a second hand shop. One day on set, he turned out the pocket and found L Frank Baum’s name embroidered inside
@RLucas30002 ай бұрын
I’d bet every cent that story is apocryphal. It could be true, but just smacks of something from the MGM Publicity department. But there are so many stories connected to this film. And there is a book out there that explains them all. In the book, Dorothy is in Kanas for about half a page before she is whisked away to Kansas, but about a 1/5 of the movie is set there here, why? In the book (and the modern remake, The Wiz), fiend mice rescue Dorothy from the poppies, why the snowstorm here? And in the book (and the Wiz), Dorothy wears Silver Shoes, not Ruby Slippers, so where did they come from? Also, did you notice in the credits, Toto is billed above Aunt Em! That poor actress! Also, there is a 50s flop Broadway musical called Goldilocks. Margaret Hamilton is in the cast, and in the song ‘Bad Companions’ you can hear her do her full wicked witch cackle. It’s on KZbin!
@CuckooBirdWhy2 ай бұрын
@@RLucas3000do you know the name of the book that talks about the stories/lore surrounding the movie? Id love to read it!
@agerard62972 ай бұрын
Someone made a similar comment before., and got a link to a picture of said coat.
@RowanMarshmallow2 ай бұрын
@@RLucas3000 Because mice rescuing her is an impossible thing to show so snow was a clever work around the writers room came up with. The slippers were a choice change because it went with the theme of color and stood out more on screen. Bright red was a startling color to show on the big screen. They gave it a more cinematic approach which required changing the book. They also took out anything too scary and weird and things that didn’t serve the overall theme they had decided upon based on the book. It was already going to be quite a long and innovative movie for the time. Extremely expensive. Things had to be cut for it to be a tight and cohesive story. And that so much was set in Kansas was meant to draw a wide audience in to her actual world, pulling it together with the fact that everyone in her real life was represented in Oz. It also served to make a stark contrast with the color of Oz. These are all cinematic presentations of the time.
@goodowner50002 ай бұрын
@@CuckooBirdWhythere is a book detailing the making of "The Wizard of Oz" by Aljean Harmetz- it's title may be straightforward as "The Making of TWOO", but honestly can't remember.
@JulieConkle2 ай бұрын
I heard long ago that Margaret Hamilton, who played the wicked witch, when she was in a nursing home, would often be asked to do the witch cackle, and you could hear her all over in the home. How cool is that?
@majkus2 ай бұрын
On an almost unrelated note, Fred Stone, who played the Scarecrow in the 1902 stage musical, had a kind of trademark cackling laugh. There's a short recording of his voice (I think) from 1939, in which we hear his cackle, and then his voice tells us that that isn't static-it's the old, OLD Scarecrow!
@jackal592 ай бұрын
She was a kindergarten teacher before starting to act in films. She famously appeared in an episode of _Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood_ to explain about dressing up and acting in the role of the witch, but she also has a hilarious role in Robert Altman's _Brewster McCloud_ where she starts the movie caterwauling "The Star Spangled Banner"-twice.
@Idontwant12 ай бұрын
She suffered so much pain and trauma during the filming. She said in some interview towards the end of her career. That back in the early 50’s she was at a airport restaurant . And she was ordering food. And she heard a small gasp. And she turned to see where the sound came from. And she saw this little girl. And the poor kiddo look shook up. And Margret just smiled she said and introduced herself to the little girl. Then told her I keep getting mistaken for that darn wicked witch. I’m not mean like her am I??? And the just giggled.
@Kristy-do7kn2 ай бұрын
Margaret Hamilton, who played the wicked witch, used to be a kindergarten teacher and was a very sweet and nice woman.
@FantasticBabblings2 ай бұрын
A bit of trivia: Dorothy’s real life daughter (Liza Minnelli) was married for a while to the son of the Tin Man (Jack Haley, Jr.).
@taylornusteling86922 ай бұрын
That's so adorable. 💗💕
@SeekingHisWill782 ай бұрын
Was that during her gay marriage phase?
@ashtonthomas30922 ай бұрын
I never knew Liza was her daughter. That's awesome
@rosyellis142 ай бұрын
aww
@clivechiam10 күн бұрын
@@ashtonthomas3092you’re joking right?
@robertg73962 ай бұрын
I'd love to see you react to "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang." It's such a perfect movie in every way. It's funny, suspenseful, fantastical, charming, heartfelt, great music, amazing dancing, etc. It has it all. I think you'd really enjoy it! 😊
@jessfleury37612 ай бұрын
Yes!!! Please do Chitty Chitty Bang Bang! That is one of my favorite movies of all time.
@serendavies73752 ай бұрын
@@jessfleury3761 oh, yeah!
@kaleehall62712 ай бұрын
omg would LOVE to see him react to this!!!
@NylonBrony2 ай бұрын
Yessss! We need this!
@beverlydoodles2 ай бұрын
Yesss! This was one of my favorites as well!
@patilopez84942 ай бұрын
“Maybe singing another song will help” you killed me there 😂😂😂
@thomasscrace2 ай бұрын
I laughed out loud at that bit! 😂 it was so genuine though 😊
@Aiwkid2 ай бұрын
Ironically, she DID sing a sad reprise of "Over the Rainbow" in that scene, but it was cut for being too heartbreaking.
@patilopez84942 ай бұрын
@@Aiwkid I never knew that! Is it available anywhere?
@Aiwkid2 ай бұрын
@patilopez8494 The footage, unfortunately, no longer exists, but the audio from a very early take under director Richard Thorpe before he was fired survived (she did it live on set, but the final take done under the director Victor Fleming is the one they scored her vocals to is missing) along with a few stills. People have tried recreating it visually in context with the rest of the scene to give an idea of how it played out. Just type "Over the Rainbow (Reprise)" and you'll see a bunch on here.
@kathyastrom13152 ай бұрын
The Lion gets a second solo song because Bert Lahr was the biggest name in the cast. He was a huge star on stage in the 1930s.
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
You may have noticed, though, that his version of the "If I Only Had ... " song is abbreviated.
@mousetreehouse68332 ай бұрын
All three were big stars in Vaudeville. Ray Bolger (Scarecrow) had a much longer dance number, but it was unfortunately cut for time.
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
@@kathyastrom1315 Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, and Bert Lahr had all worked in vaudeville and on Broadway. Ray Bolger might have the greatest claim to Broadway stardom, because he had been the first to dance the famous "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue" ballet, as the original star of Rodgers & Hart's ON YOUR TOES (1936). Haley, perhaps, had done more films, appearing with Shirley Temple in POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL (1936) and REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM (1938), with Ethel Merman in ALEXANDER'S RAGTIME BAND (1938), and (not incidentally) with Judy Garland in her feature film debut, PIGSKIN PARADE (1936). Haley also had his own radio program, THE WONDER SHOW (sponsored by Wonder Bread), featuring future television stars Lucille Ball and Gale Gordon. Bert Lahr, however, had a major success on Broadway the same year THE WIZARD OF OZ was released, introducing the comic duet, "Friendship" with co-star Ethel Merman in Cole Porter's DUBARRY WAS A LADY (1939). As I've said elsewhere, I think "If I Were King of the Forest" was written to showcase Lahr's special skill of imitating an opera singer with an exaggerated vibrato, which I believe he'd done previously in vaudeville and/or on Broadway.
@barrybuckingham66042 ай бұрын
I think it also helped balance the film because he’s in it less than the other two characters
@thomastimlin17242 ай бұрын
@@mousetreehouse6833 You can find it somewhere on the net.
@indigonerd2 ай бұрын
I choose to believe the "witch" in Dorothy's world was taken out by the tornado and Toto is safe from now on. XD
@orphanedhanyou2 ай бұрын
Or Dorothy finale realized Toto does chase cats (like at the end of the film) and she apologizes & promises to take a new route or keep a hold of him hear her house.
@rocomedyisawesome2 ай бұрын
After the made the movie the added that bit in the stage version of the movie where they tell Dorothy she doesn’t have to worried about miss gulch coming by because died by a telephone pole falling on her.
@lornepribbeno37602 ай бұрын
@@indigonerd that's what happened in the play
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
Composer, lyricist, and performer Fred Barton amusingly speculated on Miss Gulch's life after THE WIZARD OF OZ, as well as presenting her supposedly-deleted solo number from the film, in his one-man musical, MISS GULCH RETURNS! (1979).
@FutureBereaAlumn2 ай бұрын
That’s what happened. I think there was a deleted scene where they mentioned it. I believe it was in the musical though. But I was eight years old when I was in it, so… my memory is not entirely reliable on the events.
@popsicolacherry86592 ай бұрын
When my parents were kids, every thanksgiving the wizard of oz would be played on national television and you wouldn’t see it again until next thanksgiving. So it became tradition to watch the wizard of oz every thanksgiving for my dad.
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
Same with me. I had to be home every time it aired because I couldn’t miss it. And I loved old musicals, and there was a local station that showed old movies every afternoon from 1-3, and then several local cable channels showed old movies for several hours on the weekend. And whenever a Judy Garland movie was on I had to watch it. And somehow it took me until I was almost 40 to realize I was gay 😁🏳️🌈
@PandaCitten2 ай бұрын
We always got waffles for dinner when Wizard of Oz was on! 😂
@ScientificallyStupid2 ай бұрын
Oh man, I feel old, because I was just thinking that! "I remember when this movie was only shown on tv, at Thanksgiving, and we watched it every year. It was a huge deal when it was finally released on VHS"
@AbandonedMines112 ай бұрын
When I was a kid, the Wizard of Oz was always shown on TV sometime around Easter in March or April.
@Aboz2 ай бұрын
We'd go to my cousin's house to watch because they had a color TV. My parents didn't get color until after I left for college
@JillinaChan2 ай бұрын
"Always rocking up after problems are resolved" is the best description of Glinda in this movie 😂
@michaelwinkle44802 ай бұрын
That's how a friend of mine (not a fan of LOTR) described Gandalf.
@livvioletta6902 ай бұрын
@michaelwinkle4480 it's not entirely wrong
@Shango2 ай бұрын
I think there was a Saturday Night Live skit that made fun of this. Or it could have been another similar comedy show. EDIT: It was on MadTV.
@chrisblackstock49372 ай бұрын
Margaret Hamilton, who played the wicked witch, was actually a wonderfully sweet lady. She even appeared in the 1970s on Mr. Rogers Neighborhood, which was a well known children’s show in America, and dressed up on camera into her witch costume to show children that she was a real person just playing a part in a movie so they wouldn’t be scared.
@timbuktu80692 ай бұрын
And she was funny. I loved her in the Invisible Woman as the put upon housekeeper.
@alexandrasloane2 ай бұрын
The man on the farm saying Dorothy didn't have a brain played the Scarecrow! The man telling her she needed courage was The Cowardly Lion, and the fella talking about how one day they'd make a statue of him was The Tin Man!
@jboao3 сағат бұрын
he knows lol
@kate60402 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Charley Grapewin who played Dorothy's uncle Henry, when he was a kid, he ran away to join the circus and worked as a trapeze artist for years before he got into acting. He had to come out of retirement because of the Great Depression and that's when he got his role in this movie.
@mirage128962 ай бұрын
27:35 They used Jell-O powder to color the horse! It worked out pretty well; the horse had a hard time not licking the sugary powder off his coat though while filming 😊
@MadiganinPeach2 ай бұрын
Possibly the only positive thing I've heard about the bts 😭🤣 that was probably hard to appreciate at the time with production but I bet it was adorable to watch.
@zammmerjammer2 ай бұрын
I'm sure they used sugar-free Jell-O powder (imagine how horrible and sticky and clumpy it would have gotten otherwise).
@Warlocke0002 ай бұрын
@@zammmerjammer Sugar-free Jell-O wasn't a thing back then; it didn't come out until 1984. Other than water and coffee, sugar-free or diet anything was rare back in the 1930s.
@mylesmontgomery9422 ай бұрын
I thought they just used a white horse and shined different colored stage lights on it?
@williamjones60312 ай бұрын
If they're using the Jello for color, why would they sugar it?
@Beautifullytragic62 ай бұрын
Judy Garland had one of the most beautiful voices. A true icon! Definitely her singing.😊 Also as a kid, the Margaret Hamilton turning into the witch moment=terrifying. But now, what a cool scene.🔥
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
She was great in every movie, but I think her peak was Meet Me in St Louis. She and Vincent Minelli fell in love while making the movie (her first gay husband 😀) and the way he filmed her was gorgeous. And she introduced Have Yourself A Merry Christmas in the movie
@JayR-2 ай бұрын
Margaret appeared on an episode of Mr. Rogers Neighborhood to talk to Fred and the children watching about that.
@llanitedave2 ай бұрын
When the witch gazed directly into my eyes out of that big crystal ball and cackled at me, I used to run and hide under the bed!
@TheRatsCast2 ай бұрын
As someone who's almost 60, I grew up with this movie being on TV every year and was an important part of my childhood.
@kellie-nd1yp2 ай бұрын
Very much so !
@SC-gp7kt2 ай бұрын
Same!
@sharonhoyt21332 ай бұрын
I'm 76 and one of five kids who watched this every year. To this day I can "see" us all sitting on the floor around the huge black and white tv watching this until we eventually had color tv.
@marcjennings62672 ай бұрын
It’s still on in November every year
@ManiacalBlueberry2 ай бұрын
I’m 23 and I had it on VHS and I’d watch it everyday as a child
@overdev19932 ай бұрын
the twister/tornado was made out of cloth and wire that was just rotated on a track, which is so genius and it still holds up for the scene when she exited the house black and white to color, they really painted the house in the sepia tone, dressed up a double also in these colors and then the real Dorothy stepped out of the house
@Stratelier2 ай бұрын
Yeah, that switch is _seamless._ As Dorothy opens the door, the double steps out of frame as it swings open, allowing Judy Garland (also from out of frame) to step out into the colorful world of Oz.
@mousetreehouse68332 ай бұрын
The tornado terrified me. I was 5 when it was first shown on tv, and to this day, I have a hard time watching those scenes 🫣 😬
@fantasyaj65102 ай бұрын
The fact that this movie came out a whopping 85 years ago is just incredible. Still holds up 8 decades later. And yes, 17 year old Judy Garland was actually singing Over the Rainbow. The song went on to win the Academy Award for Best Original Song. 🌈
@SirPaladin2 ай бұрын
The movie plays out like a dream but the production of this was a NIGHTMARE, especially for poor Judy Garland. Child actors went through HELL in those days...
@kolyashinkarev73662 ай бұрын
Tbh ALL actors went through hell back then and not much changed really
@lornepribbeno37602 ай бұрын
It was hell for all the actors. Margaret Hamilton (Wicked Witch) was nearly burned horribly by the fire effects during her exit from Munchkin Land. And originally, they had another actor for Tin Man because the first one got sick from the powdered makeup they used. He ended up in the hospital.
@robbinsnest61632 ай бұрын
@@lornepribbeno3760 yep! I wish Rachel Zegler would understand how good she has it if all she can complain about is "if I'm gonna stand 18 hours in a dress, of an iconic Disney princess, then I expect to be paid for every hour it's streamed online" 🥴🥴🥴🥴
@TheInvisibles19692 ай бұрын
It was the first time I saw the film, but I've heard the back scene stories before. I can't help thinking about the costs they paid for the snow scene while watching it. Couldn't enjoy it.
@MelHyde2 ай бұрын
Fr
@davidmarsden1922 ай бұрын
"Be gone! Before someone drops a house on you too!" --- one of the best burns in film history!
@colegensch7872 ай бұрын
Dorothy's rubby slippers are actually on display at the Smithsonian museum in Washington DC 😃
@오정원-t2s2 ай бұрын
Oh my god!! Thanks for the information!!
@colegensch7872 ай бұрын
@@오정원-t2syour welcome and yes they are carefully preserved to and they appeared at night at the museum 2 although I think those were replicas in the movie I don't think anyone would dare touch the originals
@prettybxy772 ай бұрын
Yes! I saw them!
@ArtamStudio2 ай бұрын
There are six known pairs, used for various scenes/purposes. Another pair is in the Hollywood Museum.
@colegensch7872 ай бұрын
@@ArtamStudio that I didn't know.
@lfovah12872 ай бұрын
The Cowardly Lion was the highlight of the movie, he always cracks me up.
@magicbrownie13572 ай бұрын
Both this film and Gone with the Wind came out, in color, in 1939. Both are considered early masterpieces in the use of color film.
@CKaffeineIVStat2 ай бұрын
Both filmed near each other, too!
@johnnehrich96012 ай бұрын
Yes and both have been lovingly restored, frame by frame. (Technicolor winds up with several different layers of film, each with a different color, that blend to become the right shade for every spot. Over the years, each layer can shrink or expand just a little, making the image out of register. To restore it, they line everything up and digitize it. Each different layer can also have scratches and blemishes so they use the info in the other layers and the preceding and following frame to make it whole again but without any changes from the original to make it better.)
@johnnehrich96012 ай бұрын
@@CKaffeineIVStat With the studio system at the time, they shuffled directors around as needed, so at least one of the guys on the Wizard got pulled to work on Gone With the Wind.
@ThiloAdamitz2 ай бұрын
I hope Oscar's gonna watch Gone with the Wind.
@TedLittle-yp7uj2 ай бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601 The "guy" who got pulled was Victor Fleming, MGM's Mr Fixit. When the original director on "The Wizard of Oz" could not get the thing organized, Fleming was put in. He had completed most of the film when he was called in to replace George Cukor on "Gone with the Wind." King Vidor completed the filming of "Oz" using Fleming's notes. As you said, this was common practice at the time.
@lindseysquire84172 ай бұрын
Judy would perform Somewhere Over the Rainbow on the radio during WW2 to give the soldiers hope of a better tomorrow. There are videos online of her doing it. It’s very emotional.
@littleogeechee2232 ай бұрын
It’s more Sepia color than black and white. I love this film! It will forever be my all-time favorite…ever! I used to wait patiently as a kid for the one time of year it aired on television. I never missed it! I fell in love with the great Margaret Hamilton who set the bar for wicked witches forever more with her brilliant performance. I thought she was every kind of cool with her castle and her flying monkeys, her big hourglass and her green skin!
@LichtdesMorgens2 ай бұрын
I loved it too until I heard how they treated Judy Garland :( can't enjoy it as much since
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
In the scene where Dorothy opens the door and the scene goes from sepia to color, the wall and door were painted sepia. Judy Garland’s double wore a sepia costume and wig. She opens her door with her back to the camera, steps out of the frame, and Judy Garland steps in wearing her color costume and into the color set.
@catbowserfantasytherapist31322 ай бұрын
Thing to remember too is that color film was a very new thing at this point. Technicolor which is what was used for this film was only 7 years old. In fact, Dorothy’s shoes were originally silver but they decided to change them to ruby to show off the technology. The scene inside the house before she opens the door was actually filmed in color but was painted in sepia , the actress dressed in sepia so when the door opened the colors would pop
@Okini_Hasa2 ай бұрын
"You have no power here!" Did that remind you of Saruman too? 😂
@adamsnavely41932 ай бұрын
Every time Glinda asks “Did you bring your broom with you” I think. “Girl, you brought your entire house! Auntie Emm doesn’t have a broom?” Also, go in and grab some provisions. Grab a loaf of bread. Raid the ice box. It’s all gonna spoil anyway. You have that basket, put something in it!
@caejones27922 ай бұрын
I think she did that in the book. I might be confusing it with the 1982 animated version, though. There was apparently fresh pie ready just before the tornado, for added convenience.
@megster1162 ай бұрын
You better believe that’s Judy Garland singing! The studio was considering Shirley Temple for the Dorothy role, but then realized Garland sing rings around her! Fun facts: Margaret Hamilton successfully scarred a generation of kids with the Wicked Witch! But the irony is she was a kindergarten teacher and love children! She and Judy Garland adored each other! Speaking of adoring, Toto was played by a female named Terry. Garland fell in love with that dog and wanted to keep her after filming but her owner/handler said no. It’s kind sad that this absolutely brilliant classic was absolutely MISERABLE for everyone involved to film!
@sianne792 ай бұрын
And that barely even scratches the surface...>.
@djgrant87612 ай бұрын
Shirley Temple was in fact considered for the role of Dorothy Gale. MGM sought to use her talents but Twentieth Century Fox whom she was under contract to wouldn’t release her to make this film so they went with Judy Garland.
@MsMicia2 ай бұрын
Another fun fact, Margaret Hamilton owned a house up in NW Washington (state) on Guemes Island.
@djgrant87612 ай бұрын
@@MsMicia Margaret Hamilton suffered during the filming of Wizard of Oz. She was burnt badly in the fiery scene in Munchkinland which caused her to be hospitalised and later to recuperate at home. She was off set for roughly 6 weeks. When she returned to set Margaret Hamilton refused to have anything to do with fire or fireworks. She didn’t sue because she knew an action like that would end her career. The green paint that covered her face was toxic as it contained copper. During filming she couldn’t eat because there was a chance the toxic paint could harm her body so they put her on a liquid diet which she had to consume through a straw.
@djgrant87612 ай бұрын
@@BobBenson-qz8lp That’s the assumption. Miss Gulch was an introduction to the film. She doesn’t appear in the book.
@Sailorgirl12072 ай бұрын
I had a wizard of Oz themed birthday when i was a kid! A lady from our church made me Dorothy's dress and my friends dressed up as characters too. My dad saved up money to rent a bouncy castle and my mom used chalk to turn the sidewalk into the yellow brick road. It was one of the best birthdays i had as a kid ❤️
@myfriendisaac2 ай бұрын
25:24 I always loved that detail; the Tinman & Scarecrow were unaffected by the poppies 🚫🌸📼 We watched this on VHS all the time as kids!
@johnnehrich96012 ай бұрын
The books were quite clear on this point. Tik-tok, the sequel Ozma of Oz, was a windup-mechanical man who "does everything but live."
@majkus2 ай бұрын
Baum repeatedly referred to biologicals like Dorothy and the Lion, perhaps a bit uncomfortably, as "meat people" to distinguish them from the grotesques.
@artsysabs2 ай бұрын
@@majkusmeat people 💀
@sparky0822 ай бұрын
Poor Judy getting sprinkled with asbestos in the snow scenes. That before they knew about how bad asbestos was but as soon as you do, you see the snooze scenes in a totally new light
@TTM96912 ай бұрын
Well, she died of a drug overdose, not cancer so no harm done, lol
@marcusd4502 ай бұрын
New sources have come to light saying it was gypsum salt and not asbestos that was used
@pennywize58602 ай бұрын
Debunked years ago. The snow was gypsum, not asbestos
@sparky0822 ай бұрын
@@pennywize5860 was it really?! I've heard all these years it was asbestos because of the way it fell and xyz. I'm happy if it's not it's only I've heard it for 20 years is was
@topfacemod2 ай бұрын
@@pennywize5860 Not much better tho
@lornepribbeno37602 ай бұрын
The tornado was a rather elaborate contraption. Made out a muslin stocking or sock wrapped around chicken wire, and maneuvered between a crane and motor. Very much high tech thinking with low tech items. Don't see that much anymore. You should add Twister and Twisters to your viewing list.
@sandimcalisterblood26752 ай бұрын
I always wondered how they did that. That tornado completely terrified me as a child and I still think it's one of the scariest on film. Considering it was 1939, I think it was an extremely impressive job. Thanks for the info!
@Warlocke0002 ай бұрын
@@sandimcalisterblood2675 I think what really sells it is that A: It was big. The tornado was over 30 feet tall. B: The top and bottom could move independently of each other, while the whole contraption spun, and C: The Fuller's Earth. They used compressed air to blast it through the top and bottom of the muslin column, creating the signature dust cloud of a tornado. Even by today's standards, that's a darn good looking twister.
@lornepribbeno37602 ай бұрын
@sandimcalisterblood2675 yes, indeed.
@rickardroach90752 ай бұрын
Also, “We’re Not Gonna Take It” by Twisted Sister.
@kurtbarlow94022 ай бұрын
@@Warlocke000 Exactly. You've done your homework. The only aspect left out in this thread is that the twister footage was filmed, then the studio used rear projection to turn the footage into the background of the shot(s)
@davidvandyken57622 күн бұрын
I was born in the mid 70s and grew up in the 80s. The Wizard of Oz would be shown on network TV a couple of times per year and it was always a big deal. Our mom would let us stay up a little later to watch it because we looked forward to seeing it each time.
@Vashjaeger2 ай бұрын
Glinda: 'Are you a good witch or a bad witch?' Glinda: '...only bad witches are ugly.' Did Glinda just call Dorothy ugly? The Wicked Witch calls her pretty.
@greywolf75772 ай бұрын
I'm surprised that in 1939 that a movie would talk about good witches. I would imagine that some Fundamentalists would say that all witches were bad and that this movie was trying to lead people away from God. Did this movie ever get picketed by protesters?
@johncheshirsky88222 ай бұрын
It still makes sense logically. "Only bad wutches are are ugly" meaning only bad witches have the capacity to be ugly. All ugly witches are bad, but not all bad witches are ugly. Maybe there are some smokeshows bad witches somewhere, we just don't get to see them inthe movie 😂
@SuperMeglen2 ай бұрын
Or maybe Glinda doesn't really think of Dorothy as especially beautiful OR ugly since she can't tell if she's a good witch or a bad witch. With Dorothy technically still being a child, I think this makes sense because although Judy Garland wasn't exactly a child, she's still playing one and so the character hasn't necessarily grown into her looks yet.
@TimberlakeTigerGirl2 ай бұрын
Well, in the movie Oz, it was revealed that bad witches can use magic to conceal their true appearance. And make themselves look beautiful and act innocent in order to not be discovered.
@GaryTongue-zn5di2 ай бұрын
@Vashjaeger That's because most girls are pretty compared to the wicked Witch, but not as much to Glenda.
@bethscott43302 ай бұрын
In 1995, Gregory Maguire wrote “Wicked: the life and times of the Wicked Witch” it’s the story of the Wizard of Oz from the Witch’s perspective.
@mantis_mads2 ай бұрын
When I was little and cried, my pop would pull out a handkerchief, wipe my tears away and say “don’t cry, you’ll rust!” and it used to make me laugh and feel better… I just now realised/remembered that it was a reference to the tin man 😂
@KyleMUC2 ай бұрын
Also, in the book she’s actually transported to Oz - the writers made the whole thing a dream sequence though to appeal to adult audiences because they thought some would think it too “far-fetched.”
@davidmarsden1922 ай бұрын
Just before Auntie Em appears in the crystal ball, Dorothy did sing a repirse of Over the Rainbow (as she's crying) - but it was cut from the movie: "Someday I'll wake and rub my eyes, And in that land beyond the skies, You'll find me". [sobbing] "Somewhere over the rainbow, Bluebirds fly, Birds fly over the rainbow, Why..." [trails off, sobbing.]
@clairecaubre15582 ай бұрын
I am so deeply moved by someone watching this for the first time. It immediately brought me back to being little and feeling this movie so powerfully the first time!
@james_fischАй бұрын
I am as well. I grew up watching it in the late 90s and early 2000s, and knew that I loved the film, but wasn't sure why until I got older. I wish there was a first time I could remember, but as close as I'll get is watching other people's firsts. I had the luck to see Oz for its 85th anniversary in the theater several months back where a decent-sized audience attended, diverse in age. There was at least one kid there who had never seen it before and they were mesmerized by it, which moved me in seeing how the movie is truly timeless.
@whatseatontim9182 ай бұрын
9:13 The beginning and ending of the movie was filmed entirely in sepia colors. When Dorothy came out of the house into color, the inside of the house was made to be sepia inside with a Dorothy double, who was dressed and painted in sepia colors to match the interior. So when the double opens the door, Judy Garland then walks out to give that illusion of her walking out from sepia into color. 😊
@nudgificator2 ай бұрын
And there was a version where the sepia sections were converted back to the black and white footage they were before they were tinted, but that meant the illusion during the transition didn't work any more.
@harmshoney2 ай бұрын
i just love the parallel of all the characters! the 3 uncles being her 3 travel partners in Oz. her uncle who said, "your head ain't full of straw you know!" being the scarecrow, the uncle who said "one day they're gonna make a statue of me!" being the tin man frozen in that position, & her uncle who courageously saved her from the hogs being the cowardly lion. so creative! also, "now being a Christian woman, i can't say it!" is something i tell myself in my head at least once a day 😆 such a nostalgic movie! so glad you loved it! ✨
@sean_b_drummer2 ай бұрын
My wife, when she was in her teens, met the smallest of the ballerina trio. She was in her Eighties and my wife said she was still adorable and really nice.
@JHowesitgoing1232 ай бұрын
Yes, Judy Garland was known for her fantastic singing voice, she really cared more for singing than acting. Most of her roles were in musicals. Another iconic movie she stars in is "Meet Me in St. Louis", which is often watched around Christmastime.
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
That’s one of my top 5 favorite movies. Judy was at her peak in that movie. Her voice was strong, she looked gorgeous in every scene and her acting was too notch. And I cry from the time she and Grandpa dance behind the Christmas tree through Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
@cyberwolf_10132 ай бұрын
I love Meet Me In St. Louis. There's also The Harvey Girls, Summer Stock, and A Star Is Born. To name a few more. (Fun tidbit: Judy also did one VA role in her career, for Gay Purree, she was the white cat in that movie)
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
@@cyberwolf_1013 love all those movies, especially The Harvey Girls because of Angels Lansbury ❤️
@janetbaker6452 ай бұрын
You could also watch Meet Me in St. Louis at Halloween..that was before going around and getting candy...
@colegensch7872 ай бұрын
The farmhouse falling into the camera was actually shot in reverse cause actually the sky was the floor of the soundstage the house dropped to the floor then the camera was put in reverse in slow motion to make it look like the house was falling into the camera. And once again using the dry ice method to make clouds this technology back in 1939 that was used and never before attempted which was successful 😃
@maryhughes63722 ай бұрын
“I love this. It’s so funny that she just murdered somebody…” 😂😂I hadn’t thought of it in those words but you’re right, little innocent Dorthy is a murderer. 🤣🤣
@leahstrother77152 ай бұрын
To quote Chowder from Monster House, "When it's an accident, they call it manslaughter."
@majkus2 ай бұрын
Only murder or manslaughter if she had any control over the house.
@alextirrellRI2 ай бұрын
There's always that TV Guide description: "Transported to a surreal landscape, a young girl kills the first person she meets and then teams up with three strangers to kill again."
@maryhughes63722 ай бұрын
@@alextirrellRI 😂😂
@KelliFranklin2 ай бұрын
That's the angelic voice of Judy Garland in real time. She's an icon for a reason.
@cog4life2 ай бұрын
So now you know. Why it has been beloved by sooo many children (including me 😊) for decades. You’ve joined the club. Congratulations! 🎈 😊
@jujubegold2 ай бұрын
Yes Judy Garland sang the song “over the rainbow.”
@serendavies73752 ай бұрын
Yes she did!
@johnmavroudis20542 ай бұрын
My friend, Rick Polito, had a humorous tv/film review column, and his review of this film got a ton of national publicity. "Transported to a surreal landscape, a young girl kills the first person she meets and then teams up with three strangers to kill again." Totally brilliant and hilarious.
@fayesouthall66042 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@jamesalexander56232 ай бұрын
Or : Teenage Girl and Older Woman fight over a pair of Red Sparkly Shoes!
@artsysabs2 ай бұрын
She didn’t really get to “meet” the wicked witch of the east lol
@KayDeeKeySull2 ай бұрын
Talking about how well this movie aged, i was SHOCKED when i learned that the sepia to color shift was done practically! They did such a great job picking a body double, designing a dress that matched the sepia tone of the blue dress, and moving the camera to allow the brown double to move back and have blue judy garland enter the full color frame. 10/10 no notes
@hawkmaster3812 ай бұрын
Tornado-induced concussions can be brutal!
@tjopj2 ай бұрын
Fun facts: 1- In the book, the slippers were actually silver, but the producers decided to make them red and call them ruby slippers to take full advantage of technicolor, and to make the shoes stand out more. 1- In the book, the good witch that welcomes Dorothy to the Munchkinland and the good witch that tells her how to go back home are two different people, which is why Dorothy couldn't have gone home from the start, because the first good witch didn't know the power of the slippers. Glinda is the second good witch, and is implied to be much more powerful than the other one. in the movie, they combined both witches into one.
@rripley622 ай бұрын
This was so enjoyable watching The Wizard of Oz, a movie I have seen countless times, through your eyes! It was like seeing it for the first time again - such a gift...so thank you! I love how engaged you were and that you did not miss a single message in the film - bravo! The great thing about this movie is that it never gets old - the over-arching story is timeless and what still blows me away to this day - is the level of special effects for a 1939 film - decades before CGI...genius!
@chrisdiokno56002 ай бұрын
Also fun fact, the original slippers in the novels were silver.
@MegaWicked892 ай бұрын
And they were changed from silver to red because they wanted to show off the Technicolor process which was still very new at the time.
@majkus2 ай бұрын
And were 'shoes' and not 'slippers', just for the record.
@JayR-2 ай бұрын
Also, if I remember right (it's been years since I've read the books) the Emerald City wasn't really green, but all the citizens were wearing goggles with green lenses. I can't remember though if it was voluntary or if the goggles were locked onto each person there.
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
@@JayR-you’re correct. The version of the book I read as a kid was illustrated, and in the Emerald City scenes the citizens are pictured wearing green glasses
@therojowo2 ай бұрын
@@JayR- It was a trick by the Wizard to make the city seem more prosperous to its residents, so it was not voluntary
@MarthaDwyer2 ай бұрын
"Wicked" the Broadway musical based on a prequel to "OZ" is set to be released in November, starring Cynthia Ervo, Arianna Grande, and Jonathan Bailey. I can't wait.
@lestrangemd2 ай бұрын
When I was a kid we played Wizard of Oz at recess. Everyone wanted to be the winged monkeys. Also we always speculated that Miss Gulch died in the tornado.
@mrgreenpickuptruck2 ай бұрын
So the thing about the color transition? that was a one take shot. They made the entire house interior in the sepia tone with a body double dressed and done up in full sepia tone and Judy Garland was in her color outfit and the set was in full color so it was completely pratical.
@james_fischАй бұрын
I've wondered for years how they did that. Wish I could have been alongside the first audiences when this premiered, I imagine they were blown away with the transition to Technicolor in that shot.
@calebbrown5512 ай бұрын
Supposedly in the original script it was not supposed to be a dream. After Dorothy says "Theres no place like home" to Auntie Em, they all go and get up and Dorothy finds that she is still wearing the Ruby Slippers. They even do a callback to that scene in the "Tom and Jerry Back to Oz" movie.
@gregyear2012 ай бұрын
Yes that transformation into color OZ is still breathtaking. Your expression at that moment is priceless.
@corvus13742 ай бұрын
Buddy Ebsen, who was the star of the Beverley Hillbillies, was the original Tin Man, but he had to drop out because he was allergic to the makeup.
@lukeleshnitzel3272 ай бұрын
9:51 I think one reason is due to that being the best adapted portion of the book. The author describes Kansas as old, gray and worn. With it looking like the sun and wind had sapped all the color from Aunt Em’s face, hair, clothes and hands. It was beautifully written, the contrast of Kansas and OZ, and the movie captured that better than most movies capture anything when adapting.
@laraduff49492 ай бұрын
35:45 fun fact: Dorothy did sing a reprise of Over The Rainbow in that scene, but it was cut
@ayesap4382 ай бұрын
cause she was making the entire film crew cry singing it.
@JoeTyria2 ай бұрын
@@ayesap438, no, that is NOT the reason the reprise was cut. She made all the kids in test audience cry when they saw it. Half of the Wicked Witch's lines were cut for this reason as well. Margaret Hamilton perhaps portrayed evil incarnate a little too well.
@Leamichellefan22442 ай бұрын
Wasn’t it because they said it was too emotional or something?
@Leamichellefan22442 ай бұрын
@@ayesap438 I heard somewhere that they actually wanted her to really cry so one way or another they made her cry which to me is disgusting.
@JoeTyria2 ай бұрын
@@Leamichellefan2244, yes. The recording still exists. It's hard to listen to, it's heart wrenching.
@Bee4Reel2 ай бұрын
Crazy how timeless judys voice is. Her tone is so mature and clear
@EmSza072 ай бұрын
This movie is wonderful. No wonder it's my favorite movie of all time🥰
@elliotfilce3042 ай бұрын
Thanks Cocoa Coach for reacting to this movie, Shrek, Jaws, Jurassic Park and The Lion King all 5 movies that means so much, a ton and a lot to me as I’ve grown up with these movies and they are all my favourite Movies, The Lion King being my favourite!!
@thecocoacouch2 ай бұрын
You’re welcome! Also thank you!! Really appreciate that ☺️
@tofersiefken2 ай бұрын
I hope you'll also consider reacting to Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968), another movie that was on television annually as many of us Gen-X and Boomers might recall. It falls into the genre of family movie with elements of fantasy. It also happens to be a wonderful musical starring Dick Van Dyke (who is currently 98 years young and spry). The original 1964 novel on which the film is based was written by Ian Flemming, creator of James Bond 007.
@Pepperwindu2 ай бұрын
I saw this at my grandma house. We didn't have a color TV. They did. I was amazed at the transformation. Yes. I'm old😅
@tofersiefken2 ай бұрын
The book includes a deep dive into the tin woodsman's backstory, it is heartbreaking. Also, the movie really only includes half of the adventures the book does, and the ending is radically different.
@GaryTongue-zn5di2 ай бұрын
Nick Chopper keeps getting his limbs cut off by The Witch and the wizard replaces them with Tin.
@gryphonvert2 ай бұрын
Really, the whole premise of the book is radically different, in that the Land of Oz is real, and Dorothy really does physically go there. It's not a dream in the book, featuring people Dorothy knows from real life. It's an actual other world. (And there are like... at least 10 Oz books. It was a really long-running and HUGELY popular series, long before the movie was made -- nearly 40 years in fact. The first book was published in 1900.
@ChanelStuff2 ай бұрын
YES. This is Judy Garland and it's her true voice. She continued to perform world wide until she passed. But she had a VERY rough life as a child actor.
@Dej246012 ай бұрын
There were numerous films with some color before this one; hand-tinted films were done throughout the 1920’s as well as an early form of Technicolor Film. By the mid 1930’s, 3-strip classic Technicolor was being used and one of the most famous was the 1938 “The Adventures of Robin Hood.” “Gone With the Wind” (1939) is probably the most well-known Technicolor film of the time. Technicolor is considered one of the best film stocks with its very saturated colors and can undergo significant conservation/restoration/preservation techniques which will maintain its quality for a long time.
@agerard62972 ай бұрын
Films in 2-strip Technicolor TOLL IF THE SEA (1922) THE BLACK PIRATE (1926) THE VIKING (1928) WHOOPEE! (1930) DOCTOR X (1932) THE MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM (1933) Black & White films that used color for scenes: THE TEN COMMANDMENTS (1923) THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1925) BEN-HUR A TALE OF THE CHRIST (1925) THE KING OF KINGS (1927) THE VAGABOND KING (1929) THE HOLLYWOOD REVUE OF 1929 THE SHOW OF SHOWS (1929) HELLS ANGELS (1930) DIXIANA (1930) THE CAT AND THE FIDDLE (1934) THE HOUSE OF ROTHSCHILD (1934) Much of Walt Disneys Silly Symphonies & Mickey Mouse cartoons used Three-color Technicolor FLOWERS AND TREES (1932) SANTAS WORKSHOP (1932) THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS (1933) etc. Films in Three-strip Technicolor BECKY SHARP (1935) THE GARDEN OF ALLAH (1936) RAMONA (1936) A STAR IS BORN (1937) NOTHING SACRED (1937) SNOW WHITE AND THR SEVEN DWARFS (1937) SWEETHEARTS (1938) THE DIVIRCE OF LADY X (1938) THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD (1938) THE ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER (1938) THE ICE FOLLIES OF 1939 THE FOUR FEATHERS (1939)
@majkus2 ай бұрын
Even Baum's 1914 silent "The Patchwork Girl of Oz" had hand-tinted prints at the time. Alas, none exist today.
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
1939 was long considered the greatest year for movies in addition to The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind, there were about a dozen other classics released
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
Disney's Technicolor SILLY SYMPHONY, "The Three Little Pigs" (1933), was a huge hit that produced one of the most iconic songs of the Depression era, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?"
@jaysverrisson15362 ай бұрын
@@agerard6297 Viennese Nights, a 1930 musical in 2-tone Technicolor, could be seen in its entirety a few years ago on YT. It's also said to have been the first (or one of the first) films to feature a short bit of action prior to the opening titles and credits--which is standard practice today.
@amethystb123452 ай бұрын
I love Judy Garland's voice - another movie i love that she's in is "Meet Me In St. Louis"
@lay-dee2 ай бұрын
It was her vocals and i saw some some sort of video comparing her vocals here to un-edited versions of popular songs today and judy had perfect or almost perfect pitch naturally
@j72862 ай бұрын
1939 was a great year for movies: Gone With The Wind (color) and the black and white films Wuthering Heights, Grapes of Wrath, and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.
@U-Gozoo2 ай бұрын
The dog was paid more than the human costars.. yes that is Judy herself singing.... And the scene with the uncles mentioning courage, brains, and a heart was foreshadowing... The actress who plays the wicked witch was actually hospitalized during that fire flash exit scene it was so bad she refused to ever film with fire again. Finally the lion suit is a real lion pelt
@LincolnDWard2 ай бұрын
"I wish I could just come up with songs for whatever circumstance I'm in" trust me, it's just as much a curse as a blessing
@kevinlechuga_2 ай бұрын
It's nice to see a modern reaction appreciate both the emotional impact and the historical importance of the change to color.
@raymacdonaldcreations5052 ай бұрын
If you look closely you'll notice the three handymen working on the farm at the start are also the scarecrow, Tinman, and cowardly lion...
@bethscott43302 ай бұрын
“The Wiz” is a fun take on The Wizard of Oz with Diana Ross as Dorothy and Michael Jackson as The Scarecrow.
@alfmerck62622 ай бұрын
For "fun" read "Dememted"
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
I wasn’t a fan of the movie (Diana Ross was about 20 years too old for the part and the movie was like a bad drug trip). But about 10 years ago there was a live version on NBC that was amazing
@cyberwolf_10132 ай бұрын
Fun Trivia: So, the main reason the first part of the movie (or the Kansas parts) is sepia tone is that in the book Dorothy's home is described as "gray" 5 or 6 times within the first page or two. MGM didn't want to do it in black/white though. Margaret Hamilton was severely burned by the pyrotechnics of the fire during the witch's exit scene in Munchkin Land. It took her weeks to recover. Also, her double on the broom went flying for real during the skywriting scene. Something went wrong with the speed or set up of the contraption and the double wound up injured from being thrown off. The coat that Professor Marvel is wearing in the movie once belonged to L. Frank Baum. The original book's author. It was chosen at random from a stash of old donated/thrift clothing the studio acquired. (Baum's widow verified it) The Munchkins are a mix of children, partially hidden adults, and around 100 or so "little people" (srry... really dont know what the pc term is anymore) When you hear the munchkin cast talk about the experience it kinda makes you teary eyed. This is a time when people like that were hidden away or institutionalized and its not like they could socialize on Twitter. The cast were bussed into the studio from all over the country and were astounded by being surround by others like themselves. The first cast of the Tin Man, Buddy Ebsen, was hospitalized and had to be recast (Jack Haley) because of the aluminum dust used in the body paint on the Tin Man. The Wizard of Oz was only greenlit by MGM because of a completely separate studio's success. When Walt Disney broke Hollywood by putting Snow White out and having it succeed MGM realized that there was an untapped market in children and fantasy movies. Thus, Oz was ok'd.
@michaelg8992 ай бұрын
In the original Oz books, Oz is a real place. Dorothy returns to Oz several times before moving there permanently, taking Uncle Henry and Aunt Em with her.
@darkur132 ай бұрын
There’s an old Mad TV sketch you can look up on KZbin that is an “alternate ending” for the Wizard of Oz where Dorothy lets Glenda have it after she learns she had the power to go home all along but Glenda didn’t tell her. 😂
@chrisdiokno56002 ай бұрын
Also, the color of the movie in the start is more sepiatone, rather than black and white. Also fun fact, IIRC, a good chunk of the Munchkins were played by people with dwarfism
@TedLittle-yp7uj2 ай бұрын
The munchkins are credited as the Singer Midgets and were more than just "a good chunk." I understand that there may have been a few children in the background during some crowd shots but child labour laws restricted the amount of time children could work each day. The main munchkins, being adults, could work adult hours.
@laurencesnee83622 ай бұрын
I guess that's why 'munchkin' became a synonym for 'dwarf' and 'midget'.
@greywolf75772 ай бұрын
@@TedLittle-yp7uj When did the child labor laws come into effect?
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
And apparently they were tiny horn dogs
@oliverbrownlow56152 ай бұрын
@@greywolf7577 Federal child labor laws were not enacted in the U.S. until the very year THE WIZARD OF OZ was filmed (1938). They set the minimum wage for children at 40 cents an hour, and limited them to working 40 hours per week.
@hannahlynn80282 ай бұрын
Judy Garland is my favorite actress. If you're open to more older musicals, I'd recommend Easter Parade (1948) . It's brilliant, it was the only movie she did with Fred Astaire.
@AstriaStarwynd2 ай бұрын
One of the random things that amuses me about this movie is when Glinda asks Dorothy if she's a good witch or a bad witch, and then a moment later declares bad witches are ugly, that means Glinda hadn't decided whether Dorothy was beautiful or ugly.
@DavidB-22682 ай бұрын
Which also implies that beauty/ugliness are internal, rather than external traits. There was a song in the eighties that summed it up pretty well: She Ain't Pretty (She just looks that way)
@DayShiftNoWknd2 ай бұрын
When I was a kid this movie was shown once a year, every year, on TV around Thanksgiving and I watched it every time. It’s my most favorite movie ever and I’m so glad people are still discovering it today.
@HuntingViolets2 ай бұрын
A hundred and fifteen little people and nine children played the Munchkins. Margaret Hamilton, who played the Wicked Witch, was a very nice lady. She was injured during the first puff of smoke disappearance when the platform she was on didn't lower at the right time, leading to her being burnt (ironically). The Scarecrow has all the good ideas. (It is also Hunk, the real-world version, who tells Dorothy to use her brain early in the film.) The Tin Woodman is very empathetic. The Cowardly Lion does the brave things (this is more the case in the books). Buddy Ebsen, who was originally cast as the Tin Woodman, was hospitalized because of the makeup and had to be replaced. Ironically, he was originally originally supposed to play the Scarecrow but Ray Bolger asked to switch. They used gelatin powder on the horses. Between takes, the horses licked it off.
@sweetwilly2 ай бұрын
Not just a great movie, but a wonderful story.
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
My uncle was a newspaper reporter. At one point we worked at the Washington Post, and he interviewed Billie Burke, who played Glinda
@TheKelJacob2 ай бұрын
umm….Bradlee or Bradley?
@chadwichterman75722 ай бұрын
Some are kids but the majority of them are dwarfs (little people). The Lollipop Guild are Jackie Gerlich (red), Jerry Maren (green) and Harry Earles (blue)...who is also in Freaks. The Munchkins voices are not the original voices, they are (i think) done by other actors.
@Dej246012 ай бұрын
Sepia tone was used for the Kansas sequences and it fits the look of the Great Depression and Dust Bowl in the American Midwest, and gives a warmth to the screen rather than the coolness of Black & White.
@majkus2 ай бұрын
The book's first chapter is emphatic about the grey Kansas environment: When Dorothy stood in the doorway and looked around, she could see nothing but the great gray prairie on every side. Not a tree nor a house broke the broad sweep of flat country that reached to the edge of the sky in all directions. The sun had baked the plowed land into a gray mass, with little cracks running through it. Even the grass was not green, for the sun had burned the tops of the long blades until they were the same gray color to be seen everywhere. Once the house had been painted, but the sun blistered the paint and the rains washed it away, and now the house was as dull and gray as everything else. When Aunt Em came there to live she was a young, pretty wife. The sun and wind had changed her, too. They had taken the sparkle from her eyes and left them a sober gray; they had taken the red from her cheeks and lips, and they were gray also. She was thin and gaunt, and never smiled now. When Dorothy, who was an orphan, first came to her, Aunt Em had been so startled by the child’s laughter that she would scream and press her hand upon her heart whenever Dorothy’s merry voice reached her ears; and she still looked at the little girl with wonder that she could find anything to laugh at. Uncle Henry never laughed. He worked hard from morning till night and did not know what joy was. He was gray also, from his long beard to his rough boots, and he looked stern and solemn, and rarely spoke.
@Noxthedunmer2 ай бұрын
Fun fact. My great aunt is a hairdresser and she would do the hair for one of Judy Garlands daughters.
@jakematthews13882 ай бұрын
Soooooo imma need you to react to "Return to Oz" followed by "Oz the Great and Powerful" in prep for the upcoming "Wicked." Puh-Leez and thank you!
@fizgig762 ай бұрын
The Horse of a Different Color was dyed with Jell-O gelatin packets. I can't recall if multiple horses were used, each dyed a different color (I think that they were iirc, but don't quote me on that). What I DO remember is that the horse(s) kept trying to lick the dessert stuff off its coat 😂
@RonWeb78042 ай бұрын
This played every year on tv when I was younger. My mom would make popcorn I would lay on the floor and watch it. There's a story that the dog Toto was paid more than the munchkins and when aunt Em yells DOROTHY during the tornado it was actually the voice of one of the male munchkins lol.
@thomasbradley45052 ай бұрын
In 1989 for the 50th anniversary of the movie, they released about 3 books about the production of the movie. The also released a vhs with extras including the Jitterbug scene. In the movie when the witch is sending the monkeys to the enchanted forest, she says “don’t worry. I’ve sent a little bug ahead of you to take the fight out of them”. The next scene you see the main characters doing a dance, and when it ends the monkeys show up. The movie was running long so they cut the scene, but left that part of the line in. They didn’t have the entire film left (some had been destroyed) so the extras had the entire audio recording, and they used still photos to fill in the missing video.
@thenerdytiger93062 ай бұрын
There's a black path that runs along the river of my hometown. My bestie and I linked arms and skipped down it, singing we're off to see the wizard
@wolfgangwolf60602 ай бұрын
The majority of Munchkins were really little people - particularly the Singer Midgets an entertainment troupe from Europe who had immigrated from Europe. There were a few child actors to help fill out the scene.
@IlNyaPasdOrchestre2 ай бұрын
Almost certain the M-word is a slur.. better not to use that.
@avaricsymphorian2 ай бұрын
@@IlNyaPasdOrchestre That may be the case today, but "The Singer Midgets" was the actual name of the troupe from back then.
@TheKrensada2 ай бұрын
This movie is the true definition of iconic. Timeless, and a masterpiece of filmmaking. The actors suffered hard for our entertainment, and this movie deserves every bit of respect that it receives. And no, you don't want the cowardly lion's onesie. Its hot, and smelly. And its an authentic lion pelt.
@justwondering56512 ай бұрын
Glinda to Dorothy: "Are you a good witch, or a bad witch?" Also Glinda: "Only bad witches are ugly." Paradox: Tin doesn't rust. But the Tin Man does. Witch melts in water. Also witch hangs random buckets of water in her castle. When the Wizard give Scarecrow a diploma, Scarecrow spouts some math. But his math is wrong, so he doesn't have a brain after all? To give the Cowardly Lion credit, courage isn't a lack of fear, it's standing up and doing the right thing in the face of fear, which he assuredly did.
@zaraevee2 ай бұрын
This movie is one of my all time favorites from childhood, so excited to see you watching it!!